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-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/abort.sgml112
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/allfiles.sgml224
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_aggregate.sgml202
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_collation.sgml203
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_conversion.sgml127
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_database.sgml243
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_default_privileges.sgml255
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_domain.sgml365
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_event_trigger.sgml105
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_extension.sgml334
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_foreign_data_wrapper.sgml188
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_foreign_table.sgml556
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_function.sgml392
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_group.sgml135
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_index.sgml323
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_language.sgml91
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_large_object.sgml86
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_materialized_view.sgml185
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_opclass.sgml124
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_operator.sgml160
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_opfamily.sgml360
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_policy.sgml143
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_procedure.sgml289
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_publication.sgml166
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_role.sgml354
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_routine.sgml103
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_rule.sgml105
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_schema.sgml100
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_sequence.sgml351
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_server.sgml144
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_statistics.sgml135
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_subscription.sgml259
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_system.sgml143
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_table.sgml1735
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_tablespace.sgml140
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_trigger.sgml135
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_tsconfig.sgml189
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_tsdictionary.sgml170
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_tsparser.sgml93
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_tstemplate.sgml93
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_type.sgml494
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_user.sgml81
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_user_mapping.sgml124
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_view.sgml219
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/analyze.sgml329
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/begin.sgml161
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/call.sgml133
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/checkpoint.sgml67
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/close.sgml132
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/cluster.sgml252
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/clusterdb.sgml352
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/comment.sgml366
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/commit.sgml112
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/commit_prepared.sgml107
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/copy.sgml1075
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_access_method.sgml122
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_aggregate.sgml805
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_cast.sgml424
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_collation.sgml263
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_conversion.sgml189
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_database.sgml359
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_domain.sgml288
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_event_trigger.sgml170
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_extension.sgml247
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_foreign_data_wrapper.sgml183
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_foreign_table.sgml455
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_function.sgml935
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_group.sgml72
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_index.sgml982
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_language.sgml250
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_materialized_view.sgml185
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_opclass.sgml330
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_operator.sgml299
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_opfamily.sgml118
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_policy.sgml640
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_procedure.sgml411
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_publication.sgml254
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_role.sgml504
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_rule.sgml305
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_schema.sgml228
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_sequence.sgml391
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_server.sgml167
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_statistics.sgml323
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_subscription.sgml322
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_table.sgml2384
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_table_as.sgml363
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_tablespace.sgml187
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_transform.sgml214
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_trigger.sgml779
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_tsconfig.sgml126
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_tsdictionary.sgml141
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_tsparser.sgml153
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_tstemplate.sgml126
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_type.sgml1029
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_user.sgml78
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_user_mapping.sgml132
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/create_view.sgml502
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/createdb.sgml396
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/createuser.sgml498
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/deallocate.sgml98
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/declare.sgml361
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/delete.sgml289
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/discard.sgml118
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/do.sgml135
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_access_method.sgml111
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_aggregate.sgml184
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_cast.sgml117
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_collation.sgml114
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_conversion.sgml107
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_database.sgml126
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_domain.sgml114
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_event_trigger.sgml115
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_extension.sgml126
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_foreign_data_wrapper.sgml114
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_foreign_table.sgml115
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_function.sgml192
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_group.sgml53
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_index.sgml143
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_language.sgml125
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_materialized_view.sgml116
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_opclass.sgml149
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_operator.sgml146
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_opfamily.sgml138
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_owned.sgml126
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_policy.sgml119
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_procedure.sgml232
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_publication.sgml105
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_role.sgml124
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_routine.sgml123
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_rule.sgml123
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_schema.sgml131
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_sequence.sgml115
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_server.sgml114
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_statistics.sgml108
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_subscription.sgml132
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_table.sgml129
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_tablespace.sgml110
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_transform.sgml128
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_trigger.sgml127
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_tsconfig.sgml121
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_tsdictionary.sgml120
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_tsparser.sgml118
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_tstemplate.sgml119
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_type.sgml116
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_user.sgml55
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_user_mapping.sgml110
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_view.sgml114
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/dropdb.sgml317
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/dropuser.sgml294
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/ecpg-ref.sgml278
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/end.sgml112
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/execute.sgml121
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/explain.sgml484
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/fetch.sgml418
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/grant.sgml471
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/import_foreign_schema.sgml166
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/initdb.sgml539
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/insert.sgml783
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/listen.sgml153
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/load.sgml81
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/lock.sgml261
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/move.sgml124
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/notify.sgml233
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_amcheck.sgml649
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_basebackup.sgml926
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_checksums.sgml228
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_config-ref.sgml332
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_controldata.sgml84
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_ctl-ref.sgml713
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml1543
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dumpall.sgml813
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_isready.sgml217
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_receivewal.sgml494
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_recvlogical.sgml437
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_resetwal.sgml386
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_restore.sgml1033
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_rewind.sgml403
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_verifybackup.sgml289
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_waldump.sgml273
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/pgarchivecleanup.sgml208
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/pgbench.sgml2436
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/pgtestfsync.sgml127
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/pgtesttiming.sgml303
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/pgupgrade.sgml849
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/postgres-ref.sgml837
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/postmaster.sgml44
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/prepare.sgml257
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/prepare_transaction.sgml181
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/psql-ref.sgml5063
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/reassign_owned.sgml123
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/refresh_materialized_view.sgml143
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/reindex.sgml555
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/reindexdb.sgml476
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/release_savepoint.sgml131
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/reset.sgml113
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/revoke.sgml325
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/rollback.sgml112
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/rollback_prepared.sgml107
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/rollback_to.sgml158
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/savepoint.sgml165
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/security_label.sgml218
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/select.sgml2195
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/select_into.sgml156
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/set.sgml329
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/set_constraints.sgml125
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/set_role.sgml155
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/set_session_auth.sgml130
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/set_transaction.sgml287
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/show.sgml200
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/start_transaction.sgml97
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/truncate.sgml233
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/unlisten.sgml133
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/update.sgml468
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/vacuum.sgml463
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/vacuumdb.sgml628
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/ref/values.sgml251
216 files changed, 69711 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/abort.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/abort.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..16b5602
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/abort.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,112 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/abort.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-abort">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-abort">
+ <primary>ABORT</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ABORT</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ABORT</refname>
+ <refpurpose>abort the current transaction</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ABORT [ WORK | TRANSACTION ] [ AND [ NO ] CHAIN ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ABORT</command> rolls back the current transaction and causes
+ all the updates made by the transaction to be discarded.
+ This command is identical
+ in behavior to the standard <acronym>SQL</acronym> command
+ <link linkend="sql-rollback"><command>ROLLBACK</command></link>,
+ and is present only for historical reasons.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>WORK</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>TRANSACTION</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Optional key words. They have no effect.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>AND CHAIN</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If <literal>AND CHAIN</literal> is specified, a new transaction is
+ immediately started with the same transaction characteristics (see <link
+ linkend="sql-set-transaction"><command>SET TRANSACTION</command></link>) as the just finished one. Otherwise,
+ no new transaction is started.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Use <link linkend="sql-commit"><command>COMMIT</command></link> to
+ successfully terminate a transaction.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Issuing <command>ABORT</command> outside of a transaction block
+ emits a warning and otherwise has no effect.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To abort all changes:
+<programlisting>
+ABORT;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This command is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension
+ present for historical reasons. <command>ROLLBACK</command> is the
+ equivalent standard SQL command.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-begin"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-commit"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-rollback"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/allfiles.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/allfiles.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d67270c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/allfiles.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,224 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/allfiles.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+Complete list of usable sgml source files in this directory.
+-->
+
+<!-- SQL commands -->
+<!ENTITY abort SYSTEM "abort.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterAggregate SYSTEM "alter_aggregate.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterCollation SYSTEM "alter_collation.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterConversion SYSTEM "alter_conversion.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterDatabase SYSTEM "alter_database.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterDefaultPrivileges SYSTEM "alter_default_privileges.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterDomain SYSTEM "alter_domain.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterEventTrigger SYSTEM "alter_event_trigger.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterExtension SYSTEM "alter_extension.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterForeignDataWrapper SYSTEM "alter_foreign_data_wrapper.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterForeignTable SYSTEM "alter_foreign_table.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterFunction SYSTEM "alter_function.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterGroup SYSTEM "alter_group.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterIndex SYSTEM "alter_index.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterLanguage SYSTEM "alter_language.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterLargeObject SYSTEM "alter_large_object.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterMaterializedView SYSTEM "alter_materialized_view.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterOperator SYSTEM "alter_operator.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterOperatorClass SYSTEM "alter_opclass.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterOperatorFamily SYSTEM "alter_opfamily.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterPolicy SYSTEM "alter_policy.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterProcedure SYSTEM "alter_procedure.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterPublication SYSTEM "alter_publication.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterRole SYSTEM "alter_role.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterRoutine SYSTEM "alter_routine.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterRule SYSTEM "alter_rule.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterSchema SYSTEM "alter_schema.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterServer SYSTEM "alter_server.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterSequence SYSTEM "alter_sequence.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterSubscription SYSTEM "alter_subscription.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterSystem SYSTEM "alter_system.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterStatistics SYSTEM "alter_statistics.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterTable SYSTEM "alter_table.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterTableSpace SYSTEM "alter_tablespace.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterTSConfig SYSTEM "alter_tsconfig.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterTSDictionary SYSTEM "alter_tsdictionary.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterTSParser SYSTEM "alter_tsparser.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterTSTemplate SYSTEM "alter_tstemplate.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterTrigger SYSTEM "alter_trigger.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterType SYSTEM "alter_type.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterUser SYSTEM "alter_user.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterUserMapping SYSTEM "alter_user_mapping.sgml">
+<!ENTITY alterView SYSTEM "alter_view.sgml">
+<!ENTITY analyze SYSTEM "analyze.sgml">
+<!ENTITY begin SYSTEM "begin.sgml">
+<!ENTITY call SYSTEM "call.sgml">
+<!ENTITY checkpoint SYSTEM "checkpoint.sgml">
+<!ENTITY close SYSTEM "close.sgml">
+<!ENTITY cluster SYSTEM "cluster.sgml">
+<!ENTITY commentOn SYSTEM "comment.sgml">
+<!ENTITY commit SYSTEM "commit.sgml">
+<!ENTITY commitPrepared SYSTEM "commit_prepared.sgml">
+<!ENTITY copyTable SYSTEM "copy.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createAccessMethod SYSTEM "create_access_method.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createAggregate SYSTEM "create_aggregate.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createCast SYSTEM "create_cast.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createCollation SYSTEM "create_collation.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createConversion SYSTEM "create_conversion.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createDatabase SYSTEM "create_database.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createDomain SYSTEM "create_domain.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createEventTrigger SYSTEM "create_event_trigger.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createExtension SYSTEM "create_extension.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createForeignDataWrapper SYSTEM "create_foreign_data_wrapper.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createForeignTable SYSTEM "create_foreign_table.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createFunction SYSTEM "create_function.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createGroup SYSTEM "create_group.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createIndex SYSTEM "create_index.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createLanguage SYSTEM "create_language.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createMaterializedView SYSTEM "create_materialized_view.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createOperator SYSTEM "create_operator.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createOperatorClass SYSTEM "create_opclass.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createOperatorFamily SYSTEM "create_opfamily.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createPolicy SYSTEM "create_policy.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createProcedure SYSTEM "create_procedure.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createPublication SYSTEM "create_publication.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createRole SYSTEM "create_role.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createRule SYSTEM "create_rule.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createSchema SYSTEM "create_schema.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createSequence SYSTEM "create_sequence.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createServer SYSTEM "create_server.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createStatistics SYSTEM "create_statistics.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createSubscription SYSTEM "create_subscription.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createTable SYSTEM "create_table.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createTableAs SYSTEM "create_table_as.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createTableSpace SYSTEM "create_tablespace.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createTransform SYSTEM "create_transform.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createTrigger SYSTEM "create_trigger.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createTSConfig SYSTEM "create_tsconfig.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createTSDictionary SYSTEM "create_tsdictionary.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createTSParser SYSTEM "create_tsparser.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createTSTemplate SYSTEM "create_tstemplate.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createType SYSTEM "create_type.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createUser SYSTEM "create_user.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createUserMapping SYSTEM "create_user_mapping.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createView SYSTEM "create_view.sgml">
+<!ENTITY deallocate SYSTEM "deallocate.sgml">
+<!ENTITY declare SYSTEM "declare.sgml">
+<!ENTITY delete SYSTEM "delete.sgml">
+<!ENTITY discard SYSTEM "discard.sgml">
+<!ENTITY do SYSTEM "do.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropAccessMethod SYSTEM "drop_access_method.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropAggregate SYSTEM "drop_aggregate.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropCast SYSTEM "drop_cast.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropCollation SYSTEM "drop_collation.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropConversion SYSTEM "drop_conversion.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropDatabase SYSTEM "drop_database.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropDomain SYSTEM "drop_domain.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropEventTrigger SYSTEM "drop_event_trigger.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropExtension SYSTEM "drop_extension.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropForeignDataWrapper SYSTEM "drop_foreign_data_wrapper.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropForeignTable SYSTEM "drop_foreign_table.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropFunction SYSTEM "drop_function.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropGroup SYSTEM "drop_group.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropIndex SYSTEM "drop_index.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropLanguage SYSTEM "drop_language.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropMaterializedView SYSTEM "drop_materialized_view.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropOperator SYSTEM "drop_operator.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropOperatorClass SYSTEM "drop_opclass.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropOperatorFamily SYSTEM "drop_opfamily.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropOwned SYSTEM "drop_owned.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropPolicy SYSTEM "drop_policy.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropProcedure SYSTEM "drop_procedure.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropPublication SYSTEM "drop_publication.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropRole SYSTEM "drop_role.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropRoutine SYSTEM "drop_routine.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropRule SYSTEM "drop_rule.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropSchema SYSTEM "drop_schema.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropSequence SYSTEM "drop_sequence.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropServer SYSTEM "drop_server.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropStatistics SYSTEM "drop_statistics.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropSubscription SYSTEM "drop_subscription.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropTable SYSTEM "drop_table.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropTableSpace SYSTEM "drop_tablespace.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropTransform SYSTEM "drop_transform.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropTrigger SYSTEM "drop_trigger.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropTSConfig SYSTEM "drop_tsconfig.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropTSDictionary SYSTEM "drop_tsdictionary.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropTSParser SYSTEM "drop_tsparser.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropTSTemplate SYSTEM "drop_tstemplate.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropType SYSTEM "drop_type.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropUser SYSTEM "drop_user.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropUserMapping SYSTEM "drop_user_mapping.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropView SYSTEM "drop_view.sgml">
+<!ENTITY end SYSTEM "end.sgml">
+<!ENTITY execute SYSTEM "execute.sgml">
+<!ENTITY explain SYSTEM "explain.sgml">
+<!ENTITY fetch SYSTEM "fetch.sgml">
+<!ENTITY grant SYSTEM "grant.sgml">
+<!ENTITY importForeignSchema SYSTEM "import_foreign_schema.sgml">
+<!ENTITY insert SYSTEM "insert.sgml">
+<!ENTITY listen SYSTEM "listen.sgml">
+<!ENTITY load SYSTEM "load.sgml">
+<!ENTITY lock SYSTEM "lock.sgml">
+<!ENTITY move SYSTEM "move.sgml">
+<!ENTITY notify SYSTEM "notify.sgml">
+<!ENTITY prepare SYSTEM "prepare.sgml">
+<!ENTITY prepareTransaction SYSTEM "prepare_transaction.sgml">
+<!ENTITY reassignOwned SYSTEM "reassign_owned.sgml">
+<!ENTITY refreshMaterializedView SYSTEM "refresh_materialized_view.sgml">
+<!ENTITY reindex SYSTEM "reindex.sgml">
+<!ENTITY releaseSavepoint SYSTEM "release_savepoint.sgml">
+<!ENTITY reset SYSTEM "reset.sgml">
+<!ENTITY revoke SYSTEM "revoke.sgml">
+<!ENTITY rollback SYSTEM "rollback.sgml">
+<!ENTITY rollbackPrepared SYSTEM "rollback_prepared.sgml">
+<!ENTITY rollbackTo SYSTEM "rollback_to.sgml">
+<!ENTITY savepoint SYSTEM "savepoint.sgml">
+<!ENTITY securityLabel SYSTEM "security_label.sgml">
+<!ENTITY select SYSTEM "select.sgml">
+<!ENTITY selectInto SYSTEM "select_into.sgml">
+<!ENTITY set SYSTEM "set.sgml">
+<!ENTITY setConstraints SYSTEM "set_constraints.sgml">
+<!ENTITY setRole SYSTEM "set_role.sgml">
+<!ENTITY setSessionAuth SYSTEM "set_session_auth.sgml">
+<!ENTITY setTransaction SYSTEM "set_transaction.sgml">
+<!ENTITY show SYSTEM "show.sgml">
+<!ENTITY startTransaction SYSTEM "start_transaction.sgml">
+<!ENTITY truncate SYSTEM "truncate.sgml">
+<!ENTITY unlisten SYSTEM "unlisten.sgml">
+<!ENTITY update SYSTEM "update.sgml">
+<!ENTITY vacuum SYSTEM "vacuum.sgml">
+<!ENTITY values SYSTEM "values.sgml">
+
+<!-- applications and utilities -->
+<!ENTITY clusterdb SYSTEM "clusterdb.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createdb SYSTEM "createdb.sgml">
+<!ENTITY createuser SYSTEM "createuser.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropdb SYSTEM "dropdb.sgml">
+<!ENTITY dropuser SYSTEM "dropuser.sgml">
+<!ENTITY ecpgRef SYSTEM "ecpg-ref.sgml">
+<!ENTITY initdb SYSTEM "initdb.sgml">
+<!ENTITY pgamcheck SYSTEM "pg_amcheck.sgml">
+<!ENTITY pgarchivecleanup SYSTEM "pgarchivecleanup.sgml">
+<!ENTITY pgBasebackup SYSTEM "pg_basebackup.sgml">
+<!ENTITY pgbench SYSTEM "pgbench.sgml">
+<!ENTITY pgChecksums SYSTEM "pg_checksums.sgml">
+<!ENTITY pgConfig SYSTEM "pg_config-ref.sgml">
+<!ENTITY pgControldata SYSTEM "pg_controldata.sgml">
+<!ENTITY pgCtl SYSTEM "pg_ctl-ref.sgml">
+<!ENTITY pgDump SYSTEM "pg_dump.sgml">
+<!ENTITY pgDumpall SYSTEM "pg_dumpall.sgml">
+<!ENTITY pgIsready SYSTEM "pg_isready.sgml">
+<!ENTITY pgReceivewal SYSTEM "pg_receivewal.sgml">
+<!ENTITY pgRecvlogical SYSTEM "pg_recvlogical.sgml">
+<!ENTITY pgResetwal SYSTEM "pg_resetwal.sgml">
+<!ENTITY pgRestore SYSTEM "pg_restore.sgml">
+<!ENTITY pgRewind SYSTEM "pg_rewind.sgml">
+<!ENTITY pgVerifyBackup SYSTEM "pg_verifybackup.sgml">
+<!ENTITY pgtestfsync SYSTEM "pgtestfsync.sgml">
+<!ENTITY pgtesttiming SYSTEM "pgtesttiming.sgml">
+<!ENTITY pgupgrade SYSTEM "pgupgrade.sgml">
+<!ENTITY pgwaldump SYSTEM "pg_waldump.sgml">
+<!ENTITY postgres SYSTEM "postgres-ref.sgml">
+<!ENTITY postmaster SYSTEM "postmaster.sgml">
+<!ENTITY psqlRef SYSTEM "psql-ref.sgml">
+<!ENTITY reindexdb SYSTEM "reindexdb.sgml">
+<!ENTITY vacuumdb SYSTEM "vacuumdb.sgml">
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_aggregate.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_aggregate.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..aee10a5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_aggregate.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,202 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_aggregate.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-alteraggregate">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-alteraggregate">
+ <primary>ALTER AGGREGATE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER AGGREGATE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER AGGREGATE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of an aggregate function</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER AGGREGATE <replaceable>name</replaceable> ( <replaceable>aggregate_signature</replaceable> ) RENAME TO <replaceable>new_name</replaceable>
+ALTER AGGREGATE <replaceable>name</replaceable> ( <replaceable>aggregate_signature</replaceable> )
+ OWNER TO { <replaceable>new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+ALTER AGGREGATE <replaceable>name</replaceable> ( <replaceable>aggregate_signature</replaceable> ) SET SCHEMA <replaceable>new_schema</replaceable>
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable>aggregate_signature</replaceable> is:</phrase>
+
+* |
+[ <replaceable>argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable>argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable>argtype</replaceable> [ , ... ] |
+[ [ <replaceable>argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable>argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable>argtype</replaceable> [ , ... ] ] ORDER BY [ <replaceable>argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable>argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable>argtype</replaceable> [ , ... ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER AGGREGATE</command> changes the definition of an
+ aggregate function.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must own the aggregate function to use <command>ALTER AGGREGATE</command>.
+ To change the schema of an aggregate function, you must also have
+ <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on the new schema.
+ To alter the owner, you must also be a direct or indirect member of the new
+ owning role, and that role must have <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on
+ the aggregate function's schema. (These restrictions enforce that altering
+ the owner doesn't do anything you couldn't do by dropping and recreating
+ the aggregate function. However, a superuser can alter ownership of any
+ aggregate function anyway.)
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing aggregate function.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The mode of an argument: <literal>IN</literal> or <literal>VARIADIC</literal>.
+ If omitted, the default is <literal>IN</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an argument.
+ Note that <command>ALTER AGGREGATE</command> does not actually pay
+ any attention to argument names, since only the argument data
+ types are needed to determine the aggregate function's identity.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An input data type on which the aggregate function operates.
+ To reference a zero-argument aggregate function, write <literal>*</literal>
+ in place of the list of argument specifications.
+ To reference an ordered-set aggregate function, write
+ <literal>ORDER BY</literal> between the direct and aggregated argument
+ specifications.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name of the aggregate function.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new owner of the aggregate function.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new schema for the aggregate function.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The recommended syntax for referencing an ordered-set aggregate
+ is to write <literal>ORDER BY</literal> between the direct and aggregated
+ argument specifications, in the same style as in
+ <link linkend="sql-createaggregate"><command>CREATE AGGREGATE</command></link>. However, it will also work to
+ omit <literal>ORDER BY</literal> and just run the direct and aggregated
+ argument specifications into a single list. In this abbreviated form,
+ if <literal>VARIADIC "any"</literal> was used in both the direct and
+ aggregated argument lists, write <literal>VARIADIC "any"</literal> only once.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To rename the aggregate function <literal>myavg</literal> for type
+ <type>integer</type> to <literal>my_average</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER AGGREGATE myavg(integer) RENAME TO my_average;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To change the owner of the aggregate function <literal>myavg</literal> for type
+ <type>integer</type> to <literal>joe</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER AGGREGATE myavg(integer) OWNER TO joe;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To move the ordered-set aggregate <literal>mypercentile</literal> with
+ direct argument of type <type>float8</type> and aggregated argument
+ of type <type>integer</type> into schema <literal>myschema</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER AGGREGATE mypercentile(float8 ORDER BY integer) SET SCHEMA myschema;
+</programlisting>
+ This will work too:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER AGGREGATE mypercentile(float8, integer) SET SCHEMA myschema;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>ALTER AGGREGATE</command> statement in the SQL
+ standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createaggregate"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropaggregate"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_collation.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_collation.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9bcb91e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_collation.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,203 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_collation.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-altercollation">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-altercollation">
+ <primary>ALTER COLLATION</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER COLLATION</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER COLLATION</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of a collation</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER COLLATION <replaceable>name</replaceable> REFRESH VERSION
+
+ALTER COLLATION <replaceable>name</replaceable> RENAME TO <replaceable>new_name</replaceable>
+ALTER COLLATION <replaceable>name</replaceable> OWNER TO { <replaceable>new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+ALTER COLLATION <replaceable>name</replaceable> SET SCHEMA <replaceable>new_schema</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER COLLATION</command> changes the definition of a
+ collation.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must own the collation to use <command>ALTER COLLATION</command>.
+ To alter the owner, you must also be a direct or indirect member of the new
+ owning role, and that role must have <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on
+ the collation's schema. (These restrictions enforce that altering the
+ owner doesn't do anything you couldn't do by dropping and recreating the
+ collation. However, a superuser can alter ownership of any collation
+ anyway.)
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing collation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name of the collation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new owner of the collation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new schema for the collation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>REFRESH VERSION</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Update the collation's version.
+ See <xref linkend="sql-altercollation-notes"/> below.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-altercollation-notes" xreflabel="Notes">
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ When using collations provided by the ICU library, the ICU-specific version
+ of the collator is recorded in the system catalog when the collation object
+ is created. When the collation is used, the current version is
+ checked against the recorded version, and a warning is issued when there is
+ a mismatch, for example:
+<screen>
+WARNING: collation "xx-x-icu" has version mismatch
+DETAIL: The collation in the database was created using version 1.2.3.4, but the operating system provides version 2.3.4.5.
+HINT: Rebuild all objects affected by this collation and run ALTER COLLATION pg_catalog."xx-x-icu" REFRESH VERSION, or build PostgreSQL with the right library version.
+</screen>
+ A change in collation definitions can lead to corrupt indexes and other
+ problems because the database system relies on stored objects having a
+ certain sort order. Generally, this should be avoided, but it can happen
+ in legitimate circumstances, such as when
+ using <command>pg_upgrade</command> to upgrade to server binaries linked
+ with a newer version of ICU. When this happens, all objects depending on
+ the collation should be rebuilt, for example,
+ using <command>REINDEX</command>. When that is done, the collation version
+ can be refreshed using the command <literal>ALTER COLLATION ... REFRESH
+ VERSION</literal>. This will update the system catalog to record the
+ current collator version and will make the warning go away. Note that this
+ does not actually check whether all affected objects have been rebuilt
+ correctly.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ When using collations provided by <literal>libc</literal>, version
+ information is recorded on systems using the GNU C library (most Linux
+ systems), FreeBSD and Windows.
+ </para>
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ When using the GNU C library for collations, the C library's version
+ is used as a proxy for the collation version. Many Linux distributions
+ change collation definitions only when upgrading the C library, but this
+ approach is imperfect as maintainers are free to back-port newer
+ collation definitions to older C library releases.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ When using Windows for collations, version information is only available
+ for collations defined with BCP 47 language tags such as
+ <literal>en-US</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ <para>
+ Currently, there is no version tracking for the database default collation.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The following query can be used to identify all collations in the current
+ database that need to be refreshed and the objects that depend on them:
+<programlisting><![CDATA[
+SELECT pg_describe_object(refclassid, refobjid, refobjsubid) AS "Collation",
+ pg_describe_object(classid, objid, objsubid) AS "Object"
+ FROM pg_depend d JOIN pg_collation c
+ ON refclassid = 'pg_collation'::regclass AND refobjid = c.oid
+ WHERE c.collversion <> pg_collation_actual_version(c.oid)
+ ORDER BY 1, 2;
+]]></programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To rename the collation <literal>de_DE</literal> to
+ <literal>german</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER COLLATION "de_DE" RENAME TO german;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To change the owner of the collation <literal>en_US</literal> to
+ <literal>joe</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER COLLATION "en_US" OWNER TO joe;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>ALTER COLLATION</command> statement in the SQL
+ standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createcollation"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropcollation"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_conversion.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_conversion.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a128f20
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_conversion.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,127 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_conversion.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-alterconversion">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-alterconversion">
+ <primary>ALTER CONVERSION</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER CONVERSION</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER CONVERSION</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of a conversion</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER CONVERSION <replaceable>name</replaceable> RENAME TO <replaceable>new_name</replaceable>
+ALTER CONVERSION <replaceable>name</replaceable> OWNER TO { <replaceable>new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+ALTER CONVERSION <replaceable>name</replaceable> SET SCHEMA <replaceable>new_schema</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER CONVERSION</command> changes the definition of a
+ conversion.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must own the conversion to use <command>ALTER CONVERSION</command>.
+ To alter the owner, you must also be a direct or indirect member of the new
+ owning role, and that role must have <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on
+ the conversion's schema. (These restrictions enforce that altering the
+ owner doesn't do anything you couldn't do by dropping and recreating the
+ conversion. However, a superuser can alter ownership of any conversion
+ anyway.)
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing conversion.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name of the conversion.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new owner of the conversion.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new schema for the conversion.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To rename the conversion <literal>iso_8859_1_to_utf8</literal> to
+ <literal>latin1_to_unicode</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER CONVERSION iso_8859_1_to_utf8 RENAME TO latin1_to_unicode;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To change the owner of the conversion <literal>iso_8859_1_to_utf8</literal> to
+ <literal>joe</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER CONVERSION iso_8859_1_to_utf8 OWNER TO joe;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>ALTER CONVERSION</command> statement in the SQL
+ standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createconversion"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropconversion"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_database.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_database.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..81e3753
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_database.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,243 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_database.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-alterdatabase">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-alterdatabase">
+ <primary>ALTER DATABASE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER DATABASE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER DATABASE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change a database</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER DATABASE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ [ WITH ] <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> [ ... ] ]
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> can be:</phrase>
+
+ ALLOW_CONNECTIONS <replaceable class="parameter">allowconn</replaceable>
+ CONNECTION LIMIT <replaceable class="parameter">connlimit</replaceable>
+ IS_TEMPLATE <replaceable class="parameter">istemplate</replaceable>
+
+ALTER DATABASE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> RENAME TO <replaceable>new_name</replaceable>
+
+ALTER DATABASE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> OWNER TO { <replaceable>new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+
+ALTER DATABASE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> SET TABLESPACE <replaceable class="parameter">new_tablespace</replaceable>
+
+ALTER DATABASE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> SET <replaceable>configuration_parameter</replaceable> { TO | = } { <replaceable>value</replaceable> | DEFAULT }
+ALTER DATABASE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> SET <replaceable>configuration_parameter</replaceable> FROM CURRENT
+ALTER DATABASE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> RESET <replaceable>configuration_parameter</replaceable>
+ALTER DATABASE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> RESET ALL
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER DATABASE</command> changes the attributes
+ of a database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The first form changes certain per-database settings. (See below for
+ details.) Only the database owner or a superuser can change these settings.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The second form changes the name of the database. Only the database
+ owner or a superuser can rename a database; non-superuser owners must
+ also have the
+ <literal>CREATEDB</literal> privilege. The current database cannot
+ be renamed. (Connect to a different database if you need to do
+ that.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The third form changes the owner of the database.
+ To alter the owner, you must own the database and also be a direct or
+ indirect member of the new owning role, and you must have the
+ <literal>CREATEDB</literal> privilege.
+ (Note that superusers have all these privileges automatically.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The fourth form changes the default tablespace of the database.
+ Only the database owner or a superuser can do this; you must also have
+ create privilege for the new tablespace.
+ This command physically moves any tables or indexes in the database's old
+ default tablespace to the new tablespace. The new default tablespace
+ must be empty for this database, and no one can be connected to
+ the database. Tables and indexes in non-default tablespaces are
+ unaffected.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The remaining forms change the session default for a run-time
+ configuration variable for a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ database. Whenever a new session is subsequently started in that
+ database, the specified value becomes the session default value.
+ The database-specific default overrides whatever setting is present
+ in <filename>postgresql.conf</filename> or has been received from the
+ <command>postgres</command> command line. Only the database
+ owner or a superuser can change the session defaults for a
+ database. Certain variables cannot be set this way, or can only be
+ set by a superuser.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the database whose attributes are to be altered.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">allowconn</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If false then no one can connect to this database.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">connlimit</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ How many concurrent connections can be made
+ to this database. -1 means no limit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">istemplate</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If true, then this database can be cloned by any user with <literal>CREATEDB</literal>
+ privileges; if false, then only superusers or the owner of the
+ database can clone it.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name of the database.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new owner of the database.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_tablespace</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new default tablespace of the database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This form of the command cannot be executed inside a transaction block.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>configuration_parameter</replaceable></term>
+ <term><replaceable>value</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Set this database's session default for the specified configuration
+ parameter to the given value. If
+ <replaceable>value</replaceable> is <literal>DEFAULT</literal>
+ or, equivalently, <literal>RESET</literal> is used, the
+ database-specific setting is removed, so the system-wide default
+ setting will be inherited in new sessions. Use <literal>RESET
+ ALL</literal> to clear all database-specific settings.
+ <literal>SET FROM CURRENT</literal> saves the session's current value of
+ the parameter as the database-specific value.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ See <xref linkend="sql-set"/> and <xref linkend="runtime-config"/>
+ for more information about allowed parameter names
+ and values.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ It is also possible to tie a session default to a specific role
+ rather than to a database; see
+ <xref linkend="sql-alterrole"/>.
+ Role-specific settings override database-specific
+ ones if there is a conflict.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To disable index scans by default in the database
+ <literal>test</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+ALTER DATABASE test SET enable_indexscan TO off;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>ALTER DATABASE</command> statement is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createdatabase"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropdatabase"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-set"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createtablespace"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_default_privileges.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_default_privileges.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f1d54f5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_default_privileges.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,255 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_default_privileges.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-alterdefaultprivileges">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-alterdefaultprivileges">
+ <primary>ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define default access privileges</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES
+ [ FOR { ROLE | USER } <replaceable>target_role</replaceable> [, ...] ]
+ [ IN SCHEMA <replaceable>schema_name</replaceable> [, ...] ]
+ <replaceable class="parameter">abbreviated_grant_or_revoke</replaceable>
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">abbreviated_grant_or_revoke</replaceable> is one of:</phrase>
+
+GRANT { { SELECT | INSERT | UPDATE | DELETE | TRUNCATE | REFERENCES | TRIGGER }
+ [, ...] | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON TABLES
+ TO { [ GROUP ] <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> | PUBLIC } [, ...] [ WITH GRANT OPTION ]
+
+GRANT { { USAGE | SELECT | UPDATE }
+ [, ...] | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON SEQUENCES
+ TO { [ GROUP ] <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> | PUBLIC } [, ...] [ WITH GRANT OPTION ]
+
+GRANT { EXECUTE | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON { FUNCTIONS | ROUTINES }
+ TO { [ GROUP ] <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> | PUBLIC } [, ...] [ WITH GRANT OPTION ]
+
+GRANT { USAGE | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON TYPES
+ TO { [ GROUP ] <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> | PUBLIC } [, ...] [ WITH GRANT OPTION ]
+
+GRANT { USAGE | CREATE | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON SCHEMAS
+ TO { [ GROUP ] <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> | PUBLIC } [, ...] [ WITH GRANT OPTION ]
+
+REVOKE [ GRANT OPTION FOR ]
+ { { SELECT | INSERT | UPDATE | DELETE | TRUNCATE | REFERENCES | TRIGGER }
+ [, ...] | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON TABLES
+ FROM { [ GROUP ] <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> | PUBLIC } [, ...]
+ [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+
+REVOKE [ GRANT OPTION FOR ]
+ { { USAGE | SELECT | UPDATE }
+ [, ...] | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON SEQUENCES
+ FROM { [ GROUP ] <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> | PUBLIC } [, ...]
+ [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+
+REVOKE [ GRANT OPTION FOR ]
+ { EXECUTE | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON { FUNCTIONS | ROUTINES }
+ FROM { [ GROUP ] <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> | PUBLIC } [, ...]
+ [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+
+REVOKE [ GRANT OPTION FOR ]
+ { USAGE | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON TYPES
+ FROM { [ GROUP ] <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> | PUBLIC } [, ...]
+ [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+
+REVOKE [ GRANT OPTION FOR ]
+ { USAGE | CREATE | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON SCHEMAS
+ FROM { [ GROUP ] <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> | PUBLIC } [, ...]
+ [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-alterdefaultprivileges-description">
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES</command> allows you to set the privileges
+ that will be applied to objects created in the future. (It does not
+ affect privileges assigned to already-existing objects.) Currently,
+ only the privileges for schemas, tables (including views and foreign
+ tables), sequences, functions, and types (including domains) can be
+ altered. For this command, functions include aggregates and procedures.
+ The words <literal>FUNCTIONS</literal> and <literal>ROUTINES</literal> are
+ equivalent in this command. (<literal>ROUTINES</literal> is preferred
+ going forward as the standard term for functions and procedures taken
+ together. In earlier PostgreSQL releases, only the
+ word <literal>FUNCTIONS</literal> was allowed. It is not possible to set
+ default privileges for functions and procedures separately.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You can change default privileges only for objects that will be created by
+ yourself or by roles that you are a member of. The privileges can be set
+ globally (i.e., for all objects created in the current database),
+ or just for objects created in specified schemas.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ As explained in <xref linkend="ddl-priv"/>,
+ the default privileges for any object type normally grant all grantable
+ permissions to the object owner, and may grant some privileges to
+ <literal>PUBLIC</literal> as well. However, this behavior can be changed by
+ altering the global default privileges with
+ <command>ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES</command>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Default privileges that are specified per-schema are added to whatever
+ the global default privileges are for the particular object type.
+ This means you cannot revoke privileges per-schema if they are granted
+ globally (either by default, or according to a previous <command>ALTER
+ DEFAULT PRIVILEGES</command> command that did not specify a schema).
+ Per-schema <literal>REVOKE</literal> is only useful to reverse the
+ effects of a previous per-schema <literal>GRANT</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>target_role</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an existing role of which the current role is a member.
+ If <literal>FOR ROLE</literal> is omitted, the current role is assumed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>schema_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an existing schema. If specified, the default privileges
+ are altered for objects later created in that schema.
+ If <literal>IN SCHEMA</literal> is omitted, the global default privileges
+ are altered.
+ <literal>IN SCHEMA</literal> is not allowed when setting privileges
+ for schemas, since schemas can't be nested.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>role_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an existing role to grant or revoke privileges for.
+ This parameter, and all the other parameters in
+ <replaceable class="parameter">abbreviated_grant_or_revoke</replaceable>,
+ act as described under
+ <xref linkend="sql-grant"/> or
+ <xref linkend="sql-revoke"/>,
+ except that one is setting permissions for a whole class of objects
+ rather than specific named objects.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-alterdefaultprivileges-notes">
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Use <xref linkend="app-psql"/>'s <command>\ddp</command> command
+ to obtain information about existing assignments of default privileges.
+ The meaning of the privilege display is the same as explained for
+ <command>\dp</command> in <xref linkend="ddl-priv"/>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If you wish to drop a role for which the default privileges have been
+ altered, it is necessary to reverse the changes in its default privileges
+ or use <command>DROP OWNED BY</command> to get rid of the default privileges entry
+ for the role.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-alterdefaultprivileges-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Grant SELECT privilege to everyone for all tables (and views) you
+ subsequently create in schema <literal>myschema</literal>, and allow
+ role <literal>webuser</literal> to INSERT into them too:
+
+<programlisting>
+ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES IN SCHEMA myschema GRANT SELECT ON TABLES TO PUBLIC;
+ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES IN SCHEMA myschema GRANT INSERT ON TABLES TO webuser;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Undo the above, so that subsequently-created tables won't have any
+ more permissions than normal:
+
+<programlisting>
+ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES IN SCHEMA myschema REVOKE SELECT ON TABLES FROM PUBLIC;
+ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES IN SCHEMA myschema REVOKE INSERT ON TABLES FROM webuser;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Remove the public EXECUTE permission that is normally granted on functions,
+ for all functions subsequently created by role <literal>admin</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES FOR ROLE admin REVOKE EXECUTE ON FUNCTIONS FROM PUBLIC;
+</programlisting>
+ Note however that you <emphasis>cannot</emphasis> accomplish that effect
+ with a command limited to a single schema. This command has no effect,
+ unless it is undoing a matching <literal>GRANT</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES IN SCHEMA public REVOKE EXECUTE ON FUNCTIONS FROM PUBLIC;
+</programlisting>
+ That's because per-schema default privileges can only add privileges to
+ the global setting, not remove privileges granted by it.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES</command> statement in the SQL
+ standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-grant"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-revoke"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_domain.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_domain.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2db5372
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_domain.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,365 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_domain.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-alterdomain">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-alterdomain">
+ <primary>ALTER DOMAIN</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER DOMAIN</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER DOMAIN</refname>
+ <refpurpose>
+ change the definition of a domain
+ </refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER DOMAIN <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ { SET DEFAULT <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> | DROP DEFAULT }
+ALTER DOMAIN <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ { SET | DROP } NOT NULL
+ALTER DOMAIN <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ ADD <replaceable class="parameter">domain_constraint</replaceable> [ NOT VALID ]
+ALTER DOMAIN <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ DROP CONSTRAINT [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">constraint_name</replaceable> [ RESTRICT | CASCADE ]
+ALTER DOMAIN <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ RENAME CONSTRAINT <replaceable class="parameter">constraint_name</replaceable> TO <replaceable class="parameter">new_constraint_name</replaceable>
+ALTER DOMAIN <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ VALIDATE CONSTRAINT <replaceable class="parameter">constraint_name</replaceable>
+ALTER DOMAIN <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ OWNER TO { <replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+ALTER DOMAIN <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ RENAME TO <replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable>
+ALTER DOMAIN <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ SET SCHEMA <replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER DOMAIN</command> changes the definition of an existing domain.
+ There are several sub-forms:
+ </para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET</literal>/<literal>DROP DEFAULT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These forms set or remove the default value for a domain. Note
+ that defaults only apply to subsequent <command>INSERT</command>
+ commands; they do not affect rows already in a table using the domain.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET</literal>/<literal>DROP NOT NULL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These forms change whether a domain is marked to allow NULL
+ values or to reject NULL values. You can only <literal>SET NOT NULL</literal>
+ when the columns using the domain contain no null values.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ADD <replaceable class="parameter">domain_constraint</replaceable> [ NOT VALID ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form adds a new constraint to a domain using the same syntax as
+ <link linkend="sql-createdomain"><command>CREATE DOMAIN</command></link>.
+ When a new constraint is added to a domain, all columns using that
+ domain will be checked against the newly added constraint. These
+ checks can be suppressed by adding the new constraint using the
+ <literal>NOT VALID</literal> option; the constraint can later be made
+ valid using <command>ALTER DOMAIN ... VALIDATE CONSTRAINT</command>.
+ Newly inserted or updated rows are always checked against all
+ constraints, even those marked <literal>NOT VALID</literal>.
+ <literal>NOT VALID</literal> is only accepted for <literal>CHECK</literal> constraints.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DROP CONSTRAINT [ IF EXISTS ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form drops constraints on a domain.
+ If <literal>IF EXISTS</literal> is specified and the constraint
+ does not exist, no error is thrown. In this case a notice is issued instead.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RENAME CONSTRAINT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form changes the name of a constraint on a domain.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>VALIDATE CONSTRAINT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form validates a constraint previously added as
+ <literal>NOT VALID</literal>, that is, it verifies that all values in
+ table columns of the domain type satisfy the specified constraint.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>OWNER</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form changes the owner of the domain to the specified user.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RENAME</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form changes the name of the domain.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET SCHEMA</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form changes the schema of the domain. Any constraints
+ associated with the domain are moved into the new schema as well.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ You must own the domain to use <command>ALTER DOMAIN</command>.
+ To change the schema of a domain, you must also have
+ <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on the new schema.
+ To alter the owner, you must also be a direct or indirect member of the new
+ owning role, and that role must have <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on
+ the domain's schema. (These restrictions enforce that altering the owner
+ doesn't do anything you couldn't do by dropping and recreating the domain.
+ However, a superuser can alter ownership of any domain anyway.)
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (possibly schema-qualified) of an existing domain to
+ alter.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">domain_constraint</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ New domain constraint for the domain.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">constraint_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Name of an existing constraint to drop or rename.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>NOT VALID</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not verify existing stored data for constraint validity.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the constraint,
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the constraint if there are any dependent
+ objects. This is the default behavior.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name for the domain.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_constraint_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name for the constraint.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The user name of the new owner of the domain.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new schema for the domain.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Although <command>ALTER DOMAIN ADD CONSTRAINT</command> attempts to verify
+ that existing stored data satisfies the new constraint, this check is not
+ bulletproof, because the command cannot <quote>see</quote> table rows that
+ are newly inserted or updated and not yet committed. If there is a hazard
+ that concurrent operations might insert bad data, the way to proceed is to
+ add the constraint using the <literal>NOT VALID</literal> option, commit
+ that command, wait until all transactions started before that commit have
+ finished, and then issue <command>ALTER DOMAIN VALIDATE
+ CONSTRAINT</command> to search for data violating the constraint. This
+ method is reliable because once the constraint is committed, all new
+ transactions are guaranteed to enforce it against new values of the domain
+ type.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Currently, <command>ALTER DOMAIN ADD CONSTRAINT</command>, <command>ALTER
+ DOMAIN VALIDATE CONSTRAINT</command>, and <command>ALTER DOMAIN SET NOT
+ NULL</command> will fail if the named domain or any derived domain is used
+ within a container-type column (a composite, array, or range column) in
+ any table in the database. They should eventually be improved to be able
+ to verify the new constraint for such nested values.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To add a <literal>NOT NULL</literal> constraint to a domain:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER DOMAIN zipcode SET NOT NULL;
+</programlisting>
+ To remove a <literal>NOT NULL</literal> constraint from a domain:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER DOMAIN zipcode DROP NOT NULL;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To add a check constraint to a domain:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER DOMAIN zipcode ADD CONSTRAINT zipchk CHECK (char_length(VALUE) = 5);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To remove a check constraint from a domain:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER DOMAIN zipcode DROP CONSTRAINT zipchk;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To rename a check constraint on a domain:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER DOMAIN zipcode RENAME CONSTRAINT zipchk TO zip_check;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To move the domain into a different schema:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER DOMAIN zipcode SET SCHEMA customers;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-alterdomain-compatibility">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER DOMAIN</command> conforms to the <acronym>SQL</acronym>
+ standard, except for the <literal>OWNER</literal>, <literal>RENAME</literal>, <literal>SET SCHEMA</literal>, and
+ <literal>VALIDATE CONSTRAINT</literal> variants, which are
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extensions. The <literal>NOT VALID</literal>
+ clause of the <literal>ADD CONSTRAINT</literal> variant is also a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-alterdomain-see-also">
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createdomain"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropdomain"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_event_trigger.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_event_trigger.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ef5253b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_event_trigger.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,105 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_event_trigger.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-altereventtrigger">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-altereventtrigger">
+ <primary>ALTER EVENT TRIGGER</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER EVENT TRIGGER</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER EVENT TRIGGER</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of an event trigger</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER EVENT TRIGGER <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> DISABLE
+ALTER EVENT TRIGGER <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> ENABLE [ REPLICA | ALWAYS ]
+ALTER EVENT TRIGGER <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> OWNER TO { <replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+ALTER EVENT TRIGGER <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> RENAME TO <replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER EVENT TRIGGER</command> changes properties of an
+ existing event trigger.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must be superuser to alter an event trigger.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an existing trigger to alter.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The user name of the new owner of the event trigger.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name of the event trigger.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DISABLE</literal>/<literal>ENABLE [ REPLICA | ALWAYS ] TRIGGER</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These forms configure the firing of event triggers. A disabled trigger
+ is still known to the system, but is not executed when its triggering
+ event occurs. See also <xref linkend="guc-session-replication-role"/>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-alterventtrigger-compatibility">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>ALTER EVENT TRIGGER</command> statement in the
+ SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createeventtrigger"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropeventtrigger"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_extension.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_extension.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c819c7b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_extension.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,334 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_extension.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-alterextension">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-alterextension">
+ <primary>ALTER EXTENSION</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER EXTENSION</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER EXTENSION</refname>
+ <refpurpose>
+ change the definition of an extension
+ </refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER EXTENSION <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> UPDATE [ TO <replaceable class="parameter">new_version</replaceable> ]
+ALTER EXTENSION <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> SET SCHEMA <replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable>
+ALTER EXTENSION <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> ADD <replaceable class="parameter">member_object</replaceable>
+ALTER EXTENSION <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> DROP <replaceable class="parameter">member_object</replaceable>
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">member_object</replaceable> is:</phrase>
+
+ ACCESS METHOD <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ AGGREGATE <replaceable class="parameter">aggregate_name</replaceable> ( <replaceable>aggregate_signature</replaceable> ) |
+ CAST (<replaceable>source_type</replaceable> AS <replaceable>target_type</replaceable>) |
+ COLLATION <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ CONVERSION <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ DOMAIN <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ EVENT TRIGGER <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ FOREIGN TABLE <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ FUNCTION <replaceable class="parameter">function_name</replaceable> [ ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) ] |
+ MATERIALIZED VIEW <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ OPERATOR <replaceable class="parameter">operator_name</replaceable> (<replaceable class="parameter">left_type</replaceable>, <replaceable class="parameter">right_type</replaceable>) |
+ OPERATOR CLASS <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> USING <replaceable class="parameter">index_method</replaceable> |
+ OPERATOR FAMILY <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> USING <replaceable class="parameter">index_method</replaceable> |
+ [ PROCEDURAL ] LANGUAGE <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ PROCEDURE <replaceable class="parameter">procedure_name</replaceable> [ ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) ] |
+ ROUTINE <replaceable class="parameter">routine_name</replaceable> [ ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) ] |
+ SCHEMA <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ SEQUENCE <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ SERVER <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ TABLE <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ TEXT SEARCH PARSER <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ TEXT SEARCH TEMPLATE <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ TRANSFORM FOR <replaceable>type_name</replaceable> LANGUAGE <replaceable>lang_name</replaceable> |
+ TYPE <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ VIEW <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable>
+
+<phrase>and <replaceable>aggregate_signature</replaceable> is:</phrase>
+
+* |
+[ <replaceable>argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable>argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable>argtype</replaceable> [ , ... ] |
+[ [ <replaceable>argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable>argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable>argtype</replaceable> [ , ... ] ] ORDER BY [ <replaceable>argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable>argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable>argtype</replaceable> [ , ... ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER EXTENSION</command> changes the definition of an installed
+ extension. There are several subforms:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>UPDATE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form updates the extension to a newer version. The extension
+ must supply a suitable update script (or series of scripts) that can
+ modify the currently-installed version into the requested version.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET SCHEMA</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form moves the extension's objects into another schema. The
+ extension has to be <firstterm>relocatable</firstterm> for this command to
+ succeed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ADD <replaceable class="parameter">member_object</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form adds an existing object to the extension. This is mainly
+ useful in extension update scripts. The object will subsequently
+ be treated as a member of the extension; notably, it can only be
+ dropped by dropping the extension.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DROP <replaceable class="parameter">member_object</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form removes a member object from the extension. This is mainly
+ useful in extension update scripts. The object is not dropped, only
+ disassociated from the extension.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ See <xref linkend="extend-extensions"/> for more information about these
+ operations.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must own the extension to use <command>ALTER EXTENSION</command>.
+ The <literal>ADD</literal>/<literal>DROP</literal> forms require ownership of the
+ added/dropped object as well.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an installed extension.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_version</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The desired new version of the extension. This can be written as
+ either an identifier or a string literal. If not specified,
+ <command>ALTER EXTENSION UPDATE</command> attempts to update to whatever is
+ shown as the default version in the extension's control file.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new schema for the extension.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable></term>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">aggregate_name</replaceable></term>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">function_name</replaceable></term>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">operator_name</replaceable></term>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">procedure_name</replaceable></term>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">routine_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an object to be added to or removed from the extension.
+ Names of tables,
+ aggregates, domains, foreign tables, functions, operators,
+ operator classes, operator families, procedures, routines, sequences, text search objects,
+ types, and views can be schema-qualified.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>source_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the source data type of the cast.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>target_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the target data type of the cast.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The mode of a function, procedure, or aggregate
+ argument: <literal>IN</literal>, <literal>OUT</literal>,
+ <literal>INOUT</literal>, or <literal>VARIADIC</literal>.
+ If omitted, the default is <literal>IN</literal>.
+ Note that <command>ALTER EXTENSION</command> does not actually pay
+ any attention to <literal>OUT</literal> arguments, since only the input
+ arguments are needed to determine the function's identity.
+ So it is sufficient to list the <literal>IN</literal>, <literal>INOUT</literal>,
+ and <literal>VARIADIC</literal> arguments.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a function, procedure, or aggregate argument.
+ Note that <command>ALTER EXTENSION</command> does not actually pay
+ any attention to argument names, since only the argument data
+ types are needed to determine the function's identity.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The data type of a function, procedure, or aggregate argument.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">left_type</replaceable></term>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">right_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The data type(s) of the operator's arguments (optionally
+ schema-qualified). Write <literal>NONE</literal> for the missing argument
+ of a prefix operator.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>PROCEDURAL</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This is a noise word.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>type_name</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the data type of the transform.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>lang_name</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the language of the transform.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To update the <literal>hstore</literal> extension to version 2.0:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER EXTENSION hstore UPDATE TO '2.0';
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To change the schema of the <literal>hstore</literal> extension
+ to <literal>utils</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER EXTENSION hstore SET SCHEMA utils;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To add an existing function to the <literal>hstore</literal> extension:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER EXTENSION hstore ADD FUNCTION populate_record(anyelement, hstore);
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER EXTENSION</command> is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-alterextension-see-also">
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createextension"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropextension"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_foreign_data_wrapper.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_foreign_data_wrapper.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..54f34c2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_foreign_data_wrapper.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,188 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_foreign_data_wrapper.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-alterforeigndatawrapper">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-alterforeigndatawrapper">
+ <primary>ALTER FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of a foreign-data wrapper</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ [ HANDLER <replaceable class="parameter">handler_function</replaceable> | NO HANDLER ]
+ [ VALIDATOR <replaceable class="parameter">validator_function</replaceable> | NO VALIDATOR ]
+ [ OPTIONS ( [ ADD | SET | DROP ] <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> ['<replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>'] [, ... ]) ]
+ALTER FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> OWNER TO { <replaceable>new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+ALTER FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> RENAME TO <replaceable>new_name</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER</command> changes the
+ definition of a foreign-data wrapper. The first form of the
+ command changes the support functions or the generic options of the
+ foreign-data wrapper (at least one clause is required). The second
+ form changes the owner of the foreign-data wrapper.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Only superusers can alter foreign-data wrappers. Additionally,
+ only superusers can own foreign-data wrappers.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an existing foreign-data wrapper.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>HANDLER <replaceable class="parameter">handler_function</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies a new handler function for the foreign-data wrapper.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>NO HANDLER</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This is used to specify that the foreign-data wrapper should no
+ longer have a handler function.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Note that foreign tables that use a foreign-data wrapper with no
+ handler cannot be accessed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>VALIDATOR <replaceable class="parameter">validator_function</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies a new validator function for the foreign-data wrapper.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Note that it is possible that pre-existing options of the foreign-data
+ wrapper, or of dependent servers, user mappings, or foreign tables, are
+ invalid according to the new validator. <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> does
+ not check for this. It is up to the user to make sure that these
+ options are correct before using the modified foreign-data wrapper.
+ However, any options specified in this <command>ALTER FOREIGN DATA
+ WRAPPER</command> command will be checked using the new validator.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>NO VALIDATOR</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This is used to specify that the foreign-data wrapper should no
+ longer have a validator function.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>OPTIONS ( [ ADD | SET | DROP ] <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> ['<replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>'] [, ... ] )</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Change options for the foreign-data
+ wrapper. <literal>ADD</literal>, <literal>SET</literal>, and <literal>DROP</literal>
+ specify the action to be performed. <literal>ADD</literal> is assumed
+ if no operation is explicitly specified. Option names must be
+ unique; names and values are also validated using the foreign
+ data wrapper's validator function, if any.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The user name of the new owner of the foreign-data wrapper.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name for the foreign-data wrapper.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Change a foreign-data wrapper <literal>dbi</literal>, add
+ option <literal>foo</literal>, drop <literal>bar</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER dbi OPTIONS (ADD foo '1', DROP 'bar');
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Change the foreign-data wrapper <literal>dbi</literal> validator
+ to <literal>bob.myvalidator</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER dbi VALIDATOR bob.myvalidator;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER</command> conforms to ISO/IEC
+ 9075-9 (SQL/MED), except that the <literal>HANDLER</literal>,
+ <literal>VALIDATOR</literal>, <literal>OWNER TO</literal>, and <literal>RENAME</literal>
+ clauses are extensions.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createforeigndatawrapper"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropforeigndatawrapper"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_foreign_table.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_foreign_table.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7ca03f3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_foreign_table.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,556 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/rel/alter_foreign_table.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-alterforeigntable">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-alterforeigntable">
+ <primary>ALTER FOREIGN TABLE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER FOREIGN TABLE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER FOREIGN TABLE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of a foreign table</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER FOREIGN TABLE [ IF EXISTS ] [ ONLY ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ * ]
+ <replaceable class="parameter">action</replaceable> [, ... ]
+ALTER FOREIGN TABLE [ IF EXISTS ] [ ONLY ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ * ]
+ RENAME [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> TO <replaceable class="parameter">new_column_name</replaceable>
+ALTER FOREIGN TABLE [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ RENAME TO <replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable>
+ALTER FOREIGN TABLE [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ SET SCHEMA <replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable>
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">action</replaceable> is one of:</phrase>
+
+ ADD [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> <replaceable class="parameter">data_type</replaceable> [ COLLATE <replaceable class="parameter">collation</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">column_constraint</replaceable> [ ... ] ]
+ DROP [ COLUMN ] [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [ RESTRICT | CASCADE ]
+ ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [ SET DATA ] TYPE <replaceable class="parameter">data_type</replaceable> [ COLLATE <replaceable class="parameter">collation</replaceable> ]
+ ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> SET DEFAULT <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable>
+ ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> DROP DEFAULT
+ ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> { SET | DROP } NOT NULL
+ ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> SET STATISTICS <replaceable class="parameter">integer</replaceable>
+ ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> SET ( <replaceable class="parameter">attribute_option</replaceable> = <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> [, ... ] )
+ ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> RESET ( <replaceable class="parameter">attribute_option</replaceable> [, ... ] )
+ ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> SET STORAGE { PLAIN | EXTERNAL | EXTENDED | MAIN }
+ ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> OPTIONS ( [ ADD | SET | DROP ] <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> ['<replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>'] [, ... ])
+ ADD <replaceable class="parameter">table_constraint</replaceable> [ NOT VALID ]
+ VALIDATE CONSTRAINT <replaceable class="parameter">constraint_name</replaceable>
+ DROP CONSTRAINT [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">constraint_name</replaceable> [ RESTRICT | CASCADE ]
+ DISABLE TRIGGER [ <replaceable class="parameter">trigger_name</replaceable> | ALL | USER ]
+ ENABLE TRIGGER [ <replaceable class="parameter">trigger_name</replaceable> | ALL | USER ]
+ ENABLE REPLICA TRIGGER <replaceable class="parameter">trigger_name</replaceable>
+ ENABLE ALWAYS TRIGGER <replaceable class="parameter">trigger_name</replaceable>
+ SET WITHOUT OIDS
+ INHERIT <replaceable class="parameter">parent_table</replaceable>
+ NO INHERIT <replaceable class="parameter">parent_table</replaceable>
+ OWNER TO { <replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+ OPTIONS ( [ ADD | SET | DROP ] <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> ['<replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>'] [, ... ])
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER FOREIGN TABLE</command> changes the definition of an
+ existing foreign table. There are several subforms:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ADD COLUMN</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form adds a new column to the foreign table, using the same syntax as
+ <link linkend="sql-createforeigntable"><command>CREATE FOREIGN TABLE</command></link>.
+ Unlike the case when adding a column to a regular table, nothing happens
+ to the underlying storage: this action simply declares that
+ some new column is now accessible through the foreign table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DROP COLUMN [ IF EXISTS ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form drops a column from a foreign table.
+ You will need to say <literal>CASCADE</literal> if
+ anything outside the table depends on the column; for example,
+ views.
+ If <literal>IF EXISTS</literal> is specified and the column
+ does not exist, no error is thrown. In this case a notice
+ is issued instead.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET DATA TYPE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form changes the type of a column of a foreign table.
+ Again, this has no effect on any underlying storage: this action simply
+ changes the type that <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> believes the column to
+ have.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET</literal>/<literal>DROP DEFAULT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These forms set or remove the default value for a column.
+ Default values only apply in subsequent <command>INSERT</command>
+ or <command>UPDATE</command> commands; they do not cause rows already in the
+ table to change.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET</literal>/<literal>DROP NOT NULL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Mark a column as allowing, or not allowing, null values.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET STATISTICS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form
+ sets the per-column statistics-gathering target for subsequent
+ <link linkend="sql-analyze"><command>ANALYZE</command></link> operations.
+ See the similar form of <link linkend="sql-altertable"><command>ALTER TABLE</command></link>
+ for more details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET ( <replaceable class="parameter">attribute_option</replaceable> = <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> [, ... ] )</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>RESET ( <replaceable class="parameter">attribute_option</replaceable> [, ... ] )</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form sets or resets per-attribute options.
+ See the similar form of <link linkend="sql-altertable"><command>ALTER TABLE</command></link>
+ for more details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term>
+ <literal>SET STORAGE</literal>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form sets the storage mode for a column.
+ See the similar form of <link linkend="sql-altertable"><command>ALTER TABLE</command></link>
+ for more details.
+ Note that the storage mode has no effect unless the table's
+ foreign-data wrapper chooses to pay attention to it.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ADD <replaceable class="parameter">table_constraint</replaceable> [ NOT VALID ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form adds a new constraint to a foreign table, using the same
+ syntax as <link linkend="sql-createforeigntable"><command>CREATE FOREIGN TABLE</command></link>.
+ Currently only <literal>CHECK</literal> constraints are supported.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Unlike the case when adding a constraint to a regular table, nothing is
+ done to verify the constraint is correct; rather, this action simply
+ declares that some new condition should be assumed to hold for all rows
+ in the foreign table. (See the discussion
+ in <link linkend="sql-createforeigntable"><command>CREATE FOREIGN TABLE</command></link>.)
+ If the constraint is marked <literal>NOT VALID</literal>, then it isn't
+ assumed to hold, but is only recorded for possible future use.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>VALIDATE CONSTRAINT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form marks as valid a constraint that was previously marked
+ as <literal>NOT VALID</literal>. No action is taken to verify the
+ constraint, but future queries will assume that it holds.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DROP CONSTRAINT [ IF EXISTS ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form drops the specified constraint on a foreign table.
+ If <literal>IF EXISTS</literal> is specified and the constraint
+ does not exist, no error is thrown.
+ In this case a notice is issued instead.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DISABLE</literal>/<literal>ENABLE [ REPLICA | ALWAYS ] TRIGGER</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These forms configure the firing of trigger(s) belonging to the foreign
+ table. See the similar form of <link linkend="sql-altertable"><command>ALTER TABLE</command></link> for more
+ details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET WITHOUT OIDS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Backward compatibility syntax for removing the <literal>oid</literal>
+ system column. As <literal>oid</literal> system columns cannot be added
+ anymore, this never has an effect.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>INHERIT <replaceable class="parameter">parent_table</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form adds the target foreign table as a new child of the specified
+ parent table.
+ See the similar form of <link linkend="sql-altertable"><command>ALTER TABLE</command></link>
+ for more details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>NO INHERIT <replaceable class="parameter">parent_table</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form removes the target foreign table from the list of children of
+ the specified parent table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>OWNER</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form changes the owner of the foreign table to the
+ specified user.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>OPTIONS ( [ ADD | SET | DROP ] <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> ['<replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>'] [, ... ] )</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Change options for the foreign table or one of its columns.
+ <literal>ADD</literal>, <literal>SET</literal>, and <literal>DROP</literal>
+ specify the action to be performed. <literal>ADD</literal> is assumed
+ if no operation is explicitly specified. Duplicate option names are not
+ allowed (although it's OK for a table option and a column option to have
+ the same name). Option names and values are also validated using the
+ foreign data wrapper library.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RENAME</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>RENAME</literal> forms change the name of a foreign table
+ or the name of an individual column in a foreign table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET SCHEMA</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form moves the foreign table into another schema.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ All the actions except <literal>RENAME</literal> and <literal>SET SCHEMA</literal>
+ can be combined into
+ a list of multiple alterations to apply in parallel. For example, it
+ is possible to add several columns and/or alter the type of several
+ columns in a single command.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the command is written as <literal>ALTER FOREIGN TABLE IF EXISTS ...</literal>
+ and the foreign table does not exist, no error is thrown. A notice is
+ issued in this case.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must own the table to use <command>ALTER FOREIGN TABLE</command>.
+ To change the schema of a foreign table, you must also have
+ <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on the new schema.
+ To alter the owner, you must also be a direct or indirect member of the new
+ owning role, and that role must have <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on
+ the table's schema. (These restrictions enforce that altering the owner
+ doesn't do anything you couldn't do by dropping and recreating the table.
+ However, a superuser can alter ownership of any table anyway.)
+ To add a column or alter a column type, you must also
+ have <literal>USAGE</literal> privilege on the data type.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (possibly schema-qualified) of an existing foreign table to
+ alter. If <literal>ONLY</literal> is specified before the table name, only
+ that table is altered. If <literal>ONLY</literal> is not specified, the table
+ and all its descendant tables (if any) are altered. Optionally,
+ <literal>*</literal> can be specified after the table name to explicitly
+ indicate that descendant tables are included.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Name of a new or existing column.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_column_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ New name for an existing column.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ New name for the table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">data_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Data type of the new column, or new data type for an existing
+ column.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">table_constraint</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ New table constraint for the foreign table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">constraint_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Name of an existing constraint to drop.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the dropped column
+ or constraint (for example, views referencing the column),
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the column or constraint if there are any dependent
+ objects. This is the default behavior.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">trigger_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Name of a single trigger to disable or enable.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ALL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Disable or enable all triggers belonging to the foreign table. (This
+ requires superuser privilege if any of the triggers are internally
+ generated triggers. The core system does not add such triggers to
+ foreign tables, but add-on code could do so.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>USER</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Disable or enable all triggers belonging to the foreign table except
+ for internally generated triggers.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">parent_table</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A parent table to associate or de-associate with this foreign table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The user name of the new owner of the table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the schema to which the table will be moved.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The key word <literal>COLUMN</literal> is noise and can be omitted.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Consistency with the foreign server is not checked when a column is added
+ or removed with <literal>ADD COLUMN</literal> or
+ <literal>DROP COLUMN</literal>, a <literal>NOT NULL</literal>
+ or <literal>CHECK</literal> constraint is added, or a column type is changed
+ with <literal>SET DATA TYPE</literal>. It is the user's responsibility to ensure
+ that the table definition matches the remote side.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Refer to <link linkend="sql-createforeigntable"><command>CREATE FOREIGN TABLE</command></link> for a further description of valid
+ parameters.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To mark a column as not-null:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER FOREIGN TABLE distributors ALTER COLUMN street SET NOT NULL;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To change options of a foreign table:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER FOREIGN TABLE myschema.distributors OPTIONS (ADD opt1 'value', SET opt2 'value2', DROP opt3 'value3');
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The forms <literal>ADD</literal>, <literal>DROP</literal>,
+ and <literal>SET DATA TYPE</literal>
+ conform with the SQL standard. The other forms are
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extensions of the SQL standard.
+ Also, the ability to specify more than one manipulation in a single
+ <command>ALTER FOREIGN TABLE</command> command is an extension.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER FOREIGN TABLE DROP COLUMN</command> can be used to drop the only
+ column of a foreign table, leaving a zero-column table. This is an
+ extension of SQL, which disallows zero-column foreign tables.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createforeigntable"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropforeigntable"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_function.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_function.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2e8e116
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_function.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,392 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_function.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-alterfunction">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-alterfunction">
+ <primary>ALTER FUNCTION</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER FUNCTION</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER FUNCTION</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of a function</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER FUNCTION <replaceable>name</replaceable> [ ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) ]
+ <replaceable class="parameter">action</replaceable> [ ... ] [ RESTRICT ]
+ALTER FUNCTION <replaceable>name</replaceable> [ ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) ]
+ RENAME TO <replaceable>new_name</replaceable>
+ALTER FUNCTION <replaceable>name</replaceable> [ ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) ]
+ OWNER TO { <replaceable>new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+ALTER FUNCTION <replaceable>name</replaceable> [ ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) ]
+ SET SCHEMA <replaceable>new_schema</replaceable>
+ALTER FUNCTION <replaceable>name</replaceable> [ ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) ]
+ [ NO ] DEPENDS ON EXTENSION <replaceable>extension_name</replaceable>
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">action</replaceable> is one of:</phrase>
+
+ CALLED ON NULL INPUT | RETURNS NULL ON NULL INPUT | STRICT
+ IMMUTABLE | STABLE | VOLATILE
+ [ NOT ] LEAKPROOF
+ [ EXTERNAL ] SECURITY INVOKER | [ EXTERNAL ] SECURITY DEFINER
+ PARALLEL { UNSAFE | RESTRICTED | SAFE }
+ COST <replaceable class="parameter">execution_cost</replaceable>
+ ROWS <replaceable class="parameter">result_rows</replaceable>
+ SUPPORT <replaceable class="parameter">support_function</replaceable>
+ SET <replaceable class="parameter">configuration_parameter</replaceable> { TO | = } { <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> | DEFAULT }
+ SET <replaceable class="parameter">configuration_parameter</replaceable> FROM CURRENT
+ RESET <replaceable class="parameter">configuration_parameter</replaceable>
+ RESET ALL
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER FUNCTION</command> changes the definition of a
+ function.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must own the function to use <command>ALTER FUNCTION</command>.
+ To change a function's schema, you must also have <literal>CREATE</literal>
+ privilege on the new schema.
+ To alter the owner, you must also be a direct or indirect member of the new
+ owning role, and that role must have <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on
+ the function's schema. (These restrictions enforce that altering the owner
+ doesn't do anything you couldn't do by dropping and recreating the function.
+ However, a superuser can alter ownership of any function anyway.)
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing function. If no
+ argument list is specified, the name must be unique in its schema.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The mode of an argument: <literal>IN</literal>, <literal>OUT</literal>,
+ <literal>INOUT</literal>, or <literal>VARIADIC</literal>.
+ If omitted, the default is <literal>IN</literal>.
+ Note that <command>ALTER FUNCTION</command> does not actually pay
+ any attention to <literal>OUT</literal> arguments, since only the input
+ arguments are needed to determine the function's identity.
+ So it is sufficient to list the <literal>IN</literal>, <literal>INOUT</literal>,
+ and <literal>VARIADIC</literal> arguments.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an argument.
+ Note that <command>ALTER FUNCTION</command> does not actually pay
+ any attention to argument names, since only the argument data
+ types are needed to determine the function's identity.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The data type(s) of the function's arguments (optionally
+ schema-qualified), if any.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name of the function.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new owner of the function. Note that if the function is
+ marked <literal>SECURITY DEFINER</literal>, it will subsequently
+ execute as the new owner.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new schema for the function.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DEPENDS ON EXTENSION <replaceable class="parameter">extension_name</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <term><literal>NO DEPENDS ON EXTENSION <replaceable class="parameter">extension_name</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form marks the function as dependent on the extension, or no longer
+ dependent on that extension if <literal>NO</literal> is specified.
+ A function that's marked as dependent on an extension is dropped when the
+ extension is dropped, even if <literal>CASCADE</literal> is not specified.
+ A function can depend upon multiple extensions, and will be dropped when
+ any one of those extensions is dropped.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CALLED ON NULL INPUT</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>RETURNS NULL ON NULL INPUT</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>STRICT</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para><literal>CALLED ON NULL INPUT</literal> changes the function so
+ that it will be invoked when some or all of its arguments are
+ null. <literal>RETURNS NULL ON NULL INPUT</literal> or
+ <literal>STRICT</literal> changes the function so that it is not
+ invoked if any of its arguments are null; instead, a null result
+ is assumed automatically. See <xref linkend="sql-createfunction"/>
+ for more information.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IMMUTABLE</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>STABLE</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>VOLATILE</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Change the volatility of the function to the specified setting.
+ See <xref linkend="sql-createfunction"/> for details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal><optional> EXTERNAL </optional> SECURITY INVOKER</literal></term>
+ <term><literal><optional> EXTERNAL </optional> SECURITY DEFINER</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Change whether the function is a security definer or not. The
+ key word <literal>EXTERNAL</literal> is ignored for SQL
+ conformance. See <xref linkend="sql-createfunction"/> for more information about
+ this capability.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>PARALLEL</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Change whether the function is deemed safe for parallelism.
+ See <xref linkend="sql-createfunction"/> for details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>LEAKPROOF</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Change whether the function is considered leakproof or not.
+ See <xref linkend="sql-createfunction"/> for more information about
+ this capability.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>COST</literal> <replaceable class="parameter">execution_cost</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Change the estimated execution cost of the function.
+ See <xref linkend="sql-createfunction"/> for more information.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ROWS</literal> <replaceable class="parameter">result_rows</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Change the estimated number of rows returned by a set-returning
+ function. See <xref linkend="sql-createfunction"/> for more information.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SUPPORT</literal> <replaceable class="parameter">support_function</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Set or change the planner support function to use for this function.
+ See <xref linkend="xfunc-optimization"/> for details. You must be
+ superuser to use this option.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This option cannot be used to remove the support function altogether,
+ since it must name a new support function. Use <command>CREATE OR
+ REPLACE FUNCTION</command> if you need to do that.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>configuration_parameter</replaceable></term>
+ <term><replaceable>value</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Add or change the assignment to be made to a configuration parameter
+ when the function is called. If
+ <replaceable>value</replaceable> is <literal>DEFAULT</literal>
+ or, equivalently, <literal>RESET</literal> is used, the function-local
+ setting is removed, so that the function executes with the value
+ present in its environment. Use <literal>RESET
+ ALL</literal> to clear all function-local settings.
+ <literal>SET FROM CURRENT</literal> saves the value of the parameter that
+ is current when <command>ALTER FUNCTION</command> is executed as the value
+ to be applied when the function is entered.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ See <xref linkend="sql-set"/> and
+ <xref linkend="runtime-config"/>
+ for more information about allowed parameter names and values.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Ignored for conformance with the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To rename the function <literal>sqrt</literal> for type
+ <type>integer</type> to <literal>square_root</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER FUNCTION sqrt(integer) RENAME TO square_root;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To change the owner of the function <literal>sqrt</literal> for type
+ <type>integer</type> to <literal>joe</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER FUNCTION sqrt(integer) OWNER TO joe;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To change the schema of the function <literal>sqrt</literal> for type
+ <type>integer</type> to <literal>maths</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER FUNCTION sqrt(integer) SET SCHEMA maths;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To mark the function <literal>sqrt</literal> for type
+ <type>integer</type> as being dependent on the extension
+ <literal>mathlib</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER FUNCTION sqrt(integer) DEPENDS ON EXTENSION mathlib;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To adjust the search path that is automatically set for a function:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER FUNCTION check_password(text) SET search_path = admin, pg_temp;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To disable automatic setting of <varname>search_path</varname> for a function:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER FUNCTION check_password(text) RESET search_path;
+</programlisting>
+ The function will now execute with whatever search path is used by its
+ caller.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This statement is partially compatible with the <command>ALTER
+ FUNCTION</command> statement in the SQL standard. The standard allows more
+ properties of a function to be modified, but does not provide the
+ ability to rename a function, make a function a security definer,
+ attach configuration parameter values to a function,
+ or change the owner, schema, or volatility of a function. The standard also
+ requires the <literal>RESTRICT</literal> key word, which is optional in
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createfunction"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropfunction"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterprocedure"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterroutine"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_group.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_group.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..fa4a8df
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_group.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,135 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_group.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-altergroup">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-altergroup">
+ <primary>ALTER GROUP</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER GROUP</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER GROUP</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change role name or membership</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER GROUP <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ADD USER <replaceable class="parameter">user_name</replaceable> [, ... ]
+ALTER GROUP <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> DROP USER <replaceable class="parameter">user_name</replaceable> [, ... ]
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> can be:</phrase>
+
+ <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable>
+ | CURRENT_ROLE
+ | CURRENT_USER
+ | SESSION_USER
+
+ALTER GROUP <replaceable class="parameter">group_name</replaceable> RENAME TO <replaceable>new_name</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER GROUP</command> changes the attributes of a user group.
+ This is an obsolete command, though still accepted for backwards
+ compatibility, because groups (and users too) have been superseded by the
+ more general concept of roles.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The first two variants add users to a group or remove them from a group.
+ (Any role can play the part of either a <quote>user</quote> or a
+ <quote>group</quote> for this purpose.) These variants are effectively
+ equivalent to granting or revoking membership in the role named as the
+ <quote>group</quote>; so the preferred way to do this is to use
+ <link linkend="sql-grant"><command>GRANT</command></link> or
+ <link linkend="sql-revoke"><command>REVOKE</command></link>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The third variant changes the name of the group. This is exactly
+ equivalent to renaming the role with
+ <link linkend="sql-alterrole"><command>ALTER ROLE</command></link>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">group_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the group (role) to modify.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">user_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Users (roles) that are to be added to or removed from the group.
+ The users must already exist; <command>ALTER GROUP</command> does not
+ create or drop users.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name of the group.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+ <para>
+ Add users to a group:
+
+<programlisting>
+ALTER GROUP staff ADD USER karl, john;
+</programlisting>
+
+ Remove a user from a group:
+
+<programlisting>
+ALTER GROUP workers DROP USER beth;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>ALTER GROUP</command> statement in the SQL
+ standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-grant"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-revoke"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterrole"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_index.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_index.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e26efec
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_index.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,323 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_index.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-alterindex">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-alterindex">
+ <primary>ALTER INDEX</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER INDEX</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER INDEX</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of an index</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER INDEX [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> RENAME TO <replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable>
+ALTER INDEX [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> SET TABLESPACE <replaceable class="parameter">tablespace_name</replaceable>
+ALTER INDEX <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> ATTACH PARTITION <replaceable class="parameter">index_name</replaceable>
+ALTER INDEX <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ NO ] DEPENDS ON EXTENSION <replaceable class="parameter">extension_name</replaceable>
+ALTER INDEX [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> SET ( <replaceable class="parameter">storage_parameter</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>] [, ... ] )
+ALTER INDEX [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> RESET ( <replaceable class="parameter">storage_parameter</replaceable> [, ... ] )
+ALTER INDEX [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_number</replaceable>
+ SET STATISTICS <replaceable class="parameter">integer</replaceable>
+ALTER INDEX ALL IN TABLESPACE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ OWNED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> [, ... ] ]
+ SET TABLESPACE <replaceable class="parameter">new_tablespace</replaceable> [ NOWAIT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER INDEX</command> changes the definition of an existing index.
+ There are several subforms described below. Note that the lock level required
+ may differ for each subform. An <literal>ACCESS EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock is held
+ unless explicitly noted. When multiple subcommands are listed, the lock
+ held will be the strictest one required from any subcommand.
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RENAME</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>RENAME</literal> form changes the name of the index.
+ If the index is associated with a table constraint (either
+ <literal>UNIQUE</literal>, <literal>PRIMARY KEY</literal>,
+ or <literal>EXCLUDE</literal>), the constraint is renamed as well.
+ There is no effect on the stored data.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Renaming an index acquires a <literal>SHARE UPDATE EXCLUSIVE</literal>
+ lock.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET TABLESPACE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form changes the index's tablespace to the specified tablespace and
+ moves the data file(s) associated with the index to the new tablespace.
+ To change the tablespace of an index, you must own the index and have
+ <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on the new tablespace.
+ All indexes in the current database in a tablespace can be moved by using
+ the <literal>ALL IN TABLESPACE</literal> form, which will lock all
+ indexes to be moved and then move each one. This form also supports
+ <literal>OWNED BY</literal>, which will only move indexes owned by the
+ roles specified. If the <literal>NOWAIT</literal> option is specified
+ then the command will fail if it is unable to acquire all of the locks
+ required immediately. Note that system catalogs will not be moved by
+ this command, use <command>ALTER DATABASE</command> or explicit
+ <command>ALTER INDEX</command> invocations instead if desired.
+ See also
+ <link linkend="sql-createtablespace"><command>CREATE TABLESPACE</command></link>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ATTACH PARTITION</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Causes the named index to become attached to the altered index.
+ The named index must be on a partition of the table containing the
+ index being altered, and have an equivalent definition. An attached
+ index cannot be dropped by itself, and will automatically be dropped
+ if its parent index is dropped.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DEPENDS ON EXTENSION <replaceable class="parameter">extension_name</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <term><literal>NO DEPENDS ON EXTENSION <replaceable class="parameter">extension_name</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form marks the index as dependent on the extension, or no longer
+ dependent on that extension if <literal>NO</literal> is specified.
+ An index that's marked as dependent on an extension is automatically
+ dropped when the extension is dropped.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET ( <replaceable class="parameter">storage_parameter</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>] [, ... ] )</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form changes one or more index-method-specific storage parameters
+ for the index. See
+ <link linkend="sql-createindex"><command>CREATE INDEX</command></link>
+ for details on the available parameters. Note that the index contents
+ will not be modified immediately by this command; depending on the
+ parameter you might need to rebuild the index with
+ <link linkend="sql-reindex"><command>REINDEX</command></link>
+ to get the desired effects.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESET ( <replaceable class="parameter">storage_parameter</replaceable> [, ... ] )</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form resets one or more index-method-specific storage parameters to
+ their defaults. As with <literal>SET</literal>, a <literal>REINDEX</literal>
+ might be needed to update the index entirely.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_number</replaceable> SET STATISTICS <replaceable class="parameter">integer</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form sets the per-column statistics-gathering target for
+ subsequent <link linkend="sql-analyze"><command>ANALYZE</command></link> operations, though can
+ be used only on index columns that are defined as an expression.
+ Since expressions lack a unique name, we refer to them using the
+ ordinal number of the index column.
+ The target can be set in the range 0 to 10000; alternatively, set it
+ to -1 to revert to using the system default statistics
+ target (<xref linkend="guc-default-statistics-target"/>).
+ For more information on the use of statistics by the
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> query planner, refer to
+ <xref linkend="planner-stats"/>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the index does not exist. A notice is issued
+ in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">column_number</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The ordinal number refers to the ordinal (left-to-right) position
+ of the index column.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (possibly schema-qualified) of an existing index to
+ alter.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name for the index.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">tablespace_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The tablespace to which the index will be moved.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">extension_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the extension that the index is to depend on.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">storage_parameter</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an index-method-specific storage parameter.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new value for an index-method-specific storage parameter.
+ This might be a number or a word depending on the parameter.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ These operations are also possible using
+ <link linkend="sql-altertable"><command>ALTER TABLE</command></link>.
+ <command>ALTER INDEX</command> is in fact just an alias for the forms
+ of <command>ALTER TABLE</command> that apply to indexes.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ There was formerly an <command>ALTER INDEX OWNER</command> variant, but
+ this is now ignored (with a warning). An index cannot have an owner
+ different from its table's owner. Changing the table's owner
+ automatically changes the index as well.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Changing any part of a system catalog index is not permitted.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+ <para>
+ To rename an existing index:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER INDEX distributors RENAME TO suppliers;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To move an index to a different tablespace:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER INDEX distributors SET TABLESPACE fasttablespace;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To change an index's fill factor (assuming that the index method
+ supports it):
+<programlisting>
+ALTER INDEX distributors SET (fillfactor = 75);
+REINDEX INDEX distributors;
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ <para>
+ Set the statistics-gathering target for an expression index:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE INDEX coord_idx ON measured (x, y, (z + t));
+ALTER INDEX coord_idx ALTER COLUMN 3 SET STATISTICS 1000;
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER INDEX</command> is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createindex"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-reindex"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_language.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_language.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0b61c18
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_language.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,91 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_language.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-alterlanguage">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-alterlanguage">
+ <primary>ALTER LANGUAGE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER LANGUAGE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER LANGUAGE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of a procedural language</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER [ PROCEDURAL ] LANGUAGE <replaceable>name</replaceable> RENAME TO <replaceable>new_name</replaceable>
+ALTER [ PROCEDURAL ] LANGUAGE <replaceable>name</replaceable> OWNER TO { <replaceable>new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER LANGUAGE</command> changes the definition of a
+ procedural language. The only functionality is to rename the language or
+ assign a new owner. You must be superuser or owner of the language to
+ use <command>ALTER LANGUAGE</command>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Name of a language
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name of the language
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>new_owner</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new owner of the language
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>ALTER LANGUAGE</command> statement in the SQL
+ standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createlanguage"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droplanguage"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_large_object.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_large_object.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..17ea149
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_large_object.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,86 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_large_object.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-alterlargeobject">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-alterlargeobject">
+ <primary>ALTER LARGE OBJECT</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER LARGE OBJECT</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER LARGE OBJECT</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of a large object</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER LARGE OBJECT <replaceable class="parameter">large_object_oid</replaceable> OWNER TO { <replaceable>new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER LARGE OBJECT</command> changes the definition of a
+ large object.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must own the large object to use <command>ALTER LARGE OBJECT</command>.
+ To alter the owner, you must also be a direct or indirect member of the new
+ owning role. (However, a superuser can alter any large object anyway.)
+ Currently, the only functionality is to assign a new owner, so both
+ restrictions always apply.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>large_object_oid</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ OID of the large object to be altered
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>new_owner</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new owner of the large object
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>ALTER LARGE OBJECT</command> statement in the SQL
+ standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="largeobjects"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_materialized_view.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_materialized_view.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c6a132d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_materialized_view.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,185 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_materialized_view.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-altermaterializedview">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-altermaterializedview">
+ <primary>ALTER MATERIALIZED VIEW</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER MATERIALIZED VIEW</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER MATERIALIZED VIEW</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of a materialized view</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER MATERIALIZED VIEW [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ <replaceable class="parameter">action</replaceable> [, ... ]
+ALTER MATERIALIZED VIEW <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ [ NO ] DEPENDS ON EXTENSION <replaceable class="parameter">extension_name</replaceable>
+ALTER MATERIALIZED VIEW [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ RENAME [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> TO <replaceable class="parameter">new_column_name</replaceable>
+ALTER MATERIALIZED VIEW [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ RENAME TO <replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable>
+ALTER MATERIALIZED VIEW [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ SET SCHEMA <replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable>
+ALTER MATERIALIZED VIEW ALL IN TABLESPACE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ OWNED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> [, ... ] ]
+ SET TABLESPACE <replaceable class="parameter">new_tablespace</replaceable> [ NOWAIT ]
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">action</replaceable> is one of:</phrase>
+
+ ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> SET STATISTICS <replaceable class="parameter">integer</replaceable>
+ ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> SET ( <replaceable class="parameter">attribute_option</replaceable> = <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> [, ... ] )
+ ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> RESET ( <replaceable class="parameter">attribute_option</replaceable> [, ... ] )
+ ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> SET STORAGE { PLAIN | EXTERNAL | EXTENDED | MAIN }
+ ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> SET COMPRESSION <replaceable class="parameter">compression_method</replaceable>
+ CLUSTER ON <replaceable class="parameter">index_name</replaceable>
+ SET WITHOUT CLUSTER
+ SET TABLESPACE <replaceable class="parameter">new_tablespace</replaceable>
+ SET ( <replaceable class="parameter">storage_parameter</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>] [, ... ] )
+ RESET ( <replaceable class="parameter">storage_parameter</replaceable> [, ... ] )
+ OWNER TO { <replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER MATERIALIZED VIEW</command> changes various auxiliary
+ properties of an existing materialized view.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must own the materialized view to use <command>ALTER MATERIALIZED
+ VIEW</command>. To change a materialized view's schema, you must also have
+ <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on the new schema.
+ To alter the owner, you must also be a direct or indirect member of the new
+ owning role, and that role must have <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on
+ the materialized view's schema. (These restrictions enforce that altering
+ the owner doesn't do anything you couldn't do by dropping and recreating the
+ materialized view. However, a superuser can alter ownership of any view
+ anyway.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The statement subforms and actions available for
+ <command>ALTER MATERIALIZED VIEW</command> are a subset of those available
+ for <command>ALTER TABLE</command>, and have the same meaning when used for
+ materialized views. See the descriptions for
+ <link linkend="sql-altertable"><command>ALTER TABLE</command></link>
+ for details.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing materialized view.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Name of a new or existing column.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">extension_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the extension that the materialized view is to depend on (or no longer
+ dependent on, if <literal>NO</literal> is specified). A materialized view
+ that's marked as dependent on an extension is automatically dropped when
+ the extension is dropped.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_column_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ New name for an existing column.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The user name of the new owner of the materialized view.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name for the materialized view.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new schema for the materialized view.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To rename the materialized view <literal>foo</literal> to
+ <literal>bar</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER MATERIALIZED VIEW foo RENAME TO bar;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER MATERIALIZED VIEW</command> is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-creatematerializedview"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropmaterializedview"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-refreshmaterializedview"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_opclass.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_opclass.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b1db459
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_opclass.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,124 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_opclass.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-alteropclass">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-alteropclass">
+ <primary>ALTER OPERATOR CLASS</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER OPERATOR CLASS</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER OPERATOR CLASS</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of an operator class</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER OPERATOR CLASS <replaceable>name</replaceable> USING <replaceable class="parameter">index_method</replaceable>
+ RENAME TO <replaceable>new_name</replaceable>
+
+ALTER OPERATOR CLASS <replaceable>name</replaceable> USING <replaceable class="parameter">index_method</replaceable>
+ OWNER TO { <replaceable>new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+
+ALTER OPERATOR CLASS <replaceable>name</replaceable> USING <replaceable class="parameter">index_method</replaceable>
+ SET SCHEMA <replaceable>new_schema</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER OPERATOR CLASS</command> changes the definition of
+ an operator class.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must own the operator class to use <command>ALTER OPERATOR CLASS</command>.
+ To alter the owner, you must also be a direct or indirect member of the new
+ owning role, and that role must have <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on
+ the operator class's schema. (These restrictions enforce that altering the
+ owner doesn't do anything you couldn't do by dropping and recreating the
+ operator class. However, a superuser can alter ownership of any operator
+ class anyway.)
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing operator
+ class.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">index_method</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the index method this operator class is for.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name of the operator class.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new owner of the operator class.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new schema for the operator class.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>ALTER OPERATOR CLASS</command> statement in
+ the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createopclass"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropopclass"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alteropfamily"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_operator.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_operator.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ad90c13
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_operator.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,160 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_operator.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-alteroperator">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-alteroperator">
+ <primary>ALTER OPERATOR</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER OPERATOR</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER OPERATOR</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of an operator</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER OPERATOR <replaceable>name</replaceable> ( { <replaceable>left_type</replaceable> | NONE } , <replaceable>right_type</replaceable> )
+ OWNER TO { <replaceable>new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+
+ALTER OPERATOR <replaceable>name</replaceable> ( { <replaceable>left_type</replaceable> | NONE } , <replaceable>right_type</replaceable> )
+ SET SCHEMA <replaceable>new_schema</replaceable>
+
+ALTER OPERATOR <replaceable>name</replaceable> ( { <replaceable>left_type</replaceable> | NONE } , <replaceable>right_type</replaceable> )
+ SET ( { RESTRICT = { <replaceable class="parameter">res_proc</replaceable> | NONE }
+ | JOIN = { <replaceable class="parameter">join_proc</replaceable> | NONE }
+ } [, ... ] )
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER OPERATOR</command> changes the definition of
+ an operator.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must own the operator to use <command>ALTER OPERATOR</command>.
+ To alter the owner, you must also be a direct or indirect member of the new
+ owning role, and that role must have <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on
+ the operator's schema. (These restrictions enforce that altering the owner
+ doesn't do anything you couldn't do by dropping and recreating the operator.
+ However, a superuser can alter ownership of any operator anyway.)
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing operator.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">left_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The data type of the operator's left operand; write
+ <literal>NONE</literal> if the operator has no left operand.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">right_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The data type of the operator's right operand.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new owner of the operator.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new schema for the operator.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">res_proc</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The restriction selectivity estimator function for this operator; write NONE to remove existing selectivity estimator.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">join_proc</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The join selectivity estimator function for this operator; write NONE to remove existing selectivity estimator.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Change the owner of a custom operator <literal>a @@ b</literal> for type <type>text</type>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER OPERATOR @@ (text, text) OWNER TO joe;
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ <para>
+ Change the restriction and join selectivity estimator functions of a custom operator <literal>a &amp;&amp; b</literal> for type <type>int[]</type>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER OPERATOR &amp;&amp; (_int4, _int4) SET (RESTRICT = _int_contsel, JOIN = _int_contjoinsel);
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>ALTER OPERATOR</command> statement in
+ the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createoperator"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropoperator"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_opfamily.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_opfamily.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b2e5b9b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_opfamily.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,360 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_opfamily.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-alteropfamily">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-alteropfamily">
+ <primary>ALTER OPERATOR FAMILY</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER OPERATOR FAMILY</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER OPERATOR FAMILY</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of an operator family</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER OPERATOR FAMILY <replaceable>name</replaceable> USING <replaceable class="parameter">index_method</replaceable> ADD
+ { OPERATOR <replaceable class="parameter">strategy_number</replaceable> <replaceable class="parameter">operator_name</replaceable> ( <replaceable class="parameter">op_type</replaceable>, <replaceable class="parameter">op_type</replaceable> )
+ [ FOR SEARCH | FOR ORDER BY <replaceable class="parameter">sort_family_name</replaceable> ]
+ | FUNCTION <replaceable class="parameter">support_number</replaceable> [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">op_type</replaceable> [ , <replaceable class="parameter">op_type</replaceable> ] ) ]
+ <replaceable class="parameter">function_name</replaceable> [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">argument_type</replaceable> [, ...] ) ]
+ } [, ... ]
+
+ALTER OPERATOR FAMILY <replaceable>name</replaceable> USING <replaceable class="parameter">index_method</replaceable> DROP
+ { OPERATOR <replaceable class="parameter">strategy_number</replaceable> ( <replaceable class="parameter">op_type</replaceable> [ , <replaceable class="parameter">op_type</replaceable> ] )
+ | FUNCTION <replaceable class="parameter">support_number</replaceable> ( <replaceable class="parameter">op_type</replaceable> [ , <replaceable class="parameter">op_type</replaceable> ] )
+ } [, ... ]
+
+ALTER OPERATOR FAMILY <replaceable>name</replaceable> USING <replaceable class="parameter">index_method</replaceable>
+ RENAME TO <replaceable>new_name</replaceable>
+
+ALTER OPERATOR FAMILY <replaceable>name</replaceable> USING <replaceable class="parameter">index_method</replaceable>
+ OWNER TO { <replaceable>new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+
+ALTER OPERATOR FAMILY <replaceable>name</replaceable> USING <replaceable class="parameter">index_method</replaceable>
+ SET SCHEMA <replaceable>new_schema</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER OPERATOR FAMILY</command> changes the definition of
+ an operator family. You can add operators and support functions
+ to the family, remove them from the family,
+ or change the family's name or owner.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When operators and support functions are added to a family with
+ <command>ALTER OPERATOR FAMILY</command>, they are not part of any
+ specific operator class within the family, but are just <quote>loose</quote>
+ within the family. This indicates that these operators and functions
+ are compatible with the family's semantics, but are not required for
+ correct functioning of any specific index. (Operators and functions
+ that are so required should be declared as part of an operator class,
+ instead; see <xref linkend="sql-createopclass"/>.)
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> will allow loose members of a
+ family to be dropped from the family at any time, but members of an
+ operator class cannot be dropped without dropping the whole class and
+ any indexes that depend on it.
+ Typically, single-data-type operators
+ and functions are part of operator classes because they are needed to
+ support an index on that specific data type, while cross-data-type
+ operators and functions are made loose members of the family.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must be a superuser to use <command>ALTER OPERATOR FAMILY</command>.
+ (This restriction is made because an erroneous operator family definition
+ could confuse or even crash the server.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER OPERATOR FAMILY</command> does not presently check
+ whether the operator family definition includes all the operators and
+ functions required by the index method, nor whether the operators and
+ functions form a self-consistent set. It is the user's
+ responsibility to define a valid operator family.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Refer to <xref linkend="xindex"/> for further information.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing operator
+ family.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">index_method</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the index method this operator family is for.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">strategy_number</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The index method's strategy number for an operator
+ associated with the operator family.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">operator_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an operator associated
+ with the operator family.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">op_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ In an <literal>OPERATOR</literal> clause,
+ the operand data type(s) of the operator, or <literal>NONE</literal> to
+ signify a prefix operator. Unlike the comparable
+ syntax in <command>CREATE OPERATOR CLASS</command>, the operand data types
+ must always be specified.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In an <literal>ADD FUNCTION</literal> clause, the operand data type(s) the
+ function is intended to support, if different from
+ the input data type(s) of the function. For B-tree comparison functions
+ and hash functions it is not necessary to specify <replaceable
+ class="parameter">op_type</replaceable> since the function's input
+ data type(s) are always the correct ones to use. For B-tree sort
+ support functions, B-Tree equal image functions, and all
+ functions in GiST, SP-GiST and GIN operator classes, it is
+ necessary to specify the operand data type(s) the function is to
+ be used with.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In a <literal>DROP FUNCTION</literal> clause, the operand data type(s) the
+ function is intended to support must be specified.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">sort_family_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing <literal>btree</literal> operator
+ family that describes the sort ordering associated with an ordering
+ operator.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If neither <literal>FOR SEARCH</literal> nor <literal>FOR ORDER BY</literal> is
+ specified, <literal>FOR SEARCH</literal> is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">support_number</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The index method's support function number for a
+ function associated with the operator family.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">function_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of a function that is an index
+ method support function for the operator family. If no argument list
+ is specified, the name must be unique in its schema.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argument_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The parameter data type(s) of the function.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name of the operator family.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new owner of the operator family.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new schema for the operator family.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>OPERATOR</literal> and <literal>FUNCTION</literal>
+ clauses can appear in any order.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Notice that the <literal>DROP</literal> syntax only specifies the <quote>slot</quote>
+ in the operator family, by strategy or support number and input data
+ type(s). The name of the operator or function occupying the slot is not
+ mentioned. Also, for <literal>DROP FUNCTION</literal> the type(s) to specify
+ are the input data type(s) the function is intended to support; for
+ GiST, SP-GiST and GIN indexes this might have nothing to do with the actual
+ input argument types of the function.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Because the index machinery does not check access permissions on functions
+ before using them, including a function or operator in an operator family
+ is tantamount to granting public execute permission on it. This is usually
+ not an issue for the sorts of functions that are useful in an operator
+ family.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The operators should not be defined by SQL functions. An SQL function
+ is likely to be inlined into the calling query, which will prevent
+ the optimizer from recognizing that the query matches an index.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Before <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 8.4, the <literal>OPERATOR</literal>
+ clause could include a <literal>RECHECK</literal> option. This is no longer
+ supported because whether an index operator is <quote>lossy</quote> is now
+ determined on-the-fly at run time. This allows efficient handling of
+ cases where an operator might or might not be lossy.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The following example command adds cross-data-type operators and
+ support functions to an operator family that already contains B-tree
+ operator classes for data types <type>int4</type> and <type>int2</type>.
+ </para>
+
+<programlisting>
+ALTER OPERATOR FAMILY integer_ops USING btree ADD
+
+ -- int4 vs int2
+ OPERATOR 1 &lt; (int4, int2) ,
+ OPERATOR 2 &lt;= (int4, int2) ,
+ OPERATOR 3 = (int4, int2) ,
+ OPERATOR 4 &gt;= (int4, int2) ,
+ OPERATOR 5 &gt; (int4, int2) ,
+ FUNCTION 1 btint42cmp(int4, int2) ,
+
+ -- int2 vs int4
+ OPERATOR 1 &lt; (int2, int4) ,
+ OPERATOR 2 &lt;= (int2, int4) ,
+ OPERATOR 3 = (int2, int4) ,
+ OPERATOR 4 &gt;= (int2, int4) ,
+ OPERATOR 5 &gt; (int2, int4) ,
+ FUNCTION 1 btint24cmp(int2, int4) ;
+</programlisting>
+
+ <para>
+ To remove these entries again:
+ </para>
+
+<programlisting>
+ALTER OPERATOR FAMILY integer_ops USING btree DROP
+
+ -- int4 vs int2
+ OPERATOR 1 (int4, int2) ,
+ OPERATOR 2 (int4, int2) ,
+ OPERATOR 3 (int4, int2) ,
+ OPERATOR 4 (int4, int2) ,
+ OPERATOR 5 (int4, int2) ,
+ FUNCTION 1 (int4, int2) ,
+
+ -- int2 vs int4
+ OPERATOR 1 (int2, int4) ,
+ OPERATOR 2 (int2, int4) ,
+ OPERATOR 3 (int2, int4) ,
+ OPERATOR 4 (int2, int4) ,
+ OPERATOR 5 (int2, int4) ,
+ FUNCTION 1 (int2, int4) ;
+</programlisting>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>ALTER OPERATOR FAMILY</command> statement in
+ the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createopfamily"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropopfamily"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createopclass"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alteropclass"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropopclass"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_policy.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_policy.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..fbc262b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_policy.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,143 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_policy.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-alterpolicy">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-alterpolicy">
+ <primary>ALTER POLICY</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER POLICY</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER POLICY</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of a row-level security policy</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER POLICY <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> ON <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> RENAME TO <replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable>
+
+ALTER POLICY <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> ON <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable>
+ [ TO { <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> | PUBLIC | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER } [, ...] ]
+ [ USING ( <replaceable class="parameter">using_expression</replaceable> ) ]
+ [ WITH CHECK ( <replaceable class="parameter">check_expression</replaceable> ) ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER POLICY</command> changes the definition of an existing
+ row-level security policy. Note that <command>ALTER POLICY</command>
+ only allows the set of roles to which the policy applies and the
+ <literal>USING</literal> and <literal>WITH CHECK</literal> expressions to
+ be modified. To change other properties of a policy, such as the command
+ to which it applies or whether it is permissive or restrictive, the policy
+ must be dropped and recreated.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To use <command>ALTER POLICY</command>, you must own the table that
+ the policy applies to.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In the second form of <command>ALTER POLICY</command>, the role list,
+ <replaceable class="parameter">using_expression</replaceable>, and
+ <replaceable class="parameter">check_expression</replaceable> are replaced
+ independently if specified. When one of those clauses is omitted, the
+ corresponding part of the policy is unchanged.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an existing policy to alter.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the table that the
+ policy is on.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name for the policy.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The role(s) to which the policy applies. Multiple roles can be
+ specified at one time. To apply the policy to all roles,
+ use <literal>PUBLIC</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">using_expression</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>USING</literal> expression for the policy.
+ See <xref linkend="sql-createpolicy"/> for details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">check_expression</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>WITH CHECK</literal> expression for the policy.
+ See <xref linkend="sql-createpolicy"/> for details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER POLICY</command> is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createpolicy"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droppolicy"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_procedure.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_procedure.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..20a6238
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_procedure.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,289 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_procedure.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-alterprocedure">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-alterprocedure">
+ <primary>ALTER PROCEDURE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER PROCEDURE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER PROCEDURE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of a procedure</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER PROCEDURE <replaceable>name</replaceable> [ ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) ]
+ <replaceable class="parameter">action</replaceable> [ ... ] [ RESTRICT ]
+ALTER PROCEDURE <replaceable>name</replaceable> [ ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) ]
+ RENAME TO <replaceable>new_name</replaceable>
+ALTER PROCEDURE <replaceable>name</replaceable> [ ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) ]
+ OWNER TO { <replaceable>new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+ALTER PROCEDURE <replaceable>name</replaceable> [ ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) ]
+ SET SCHEMA <replaceable>new_schema</replaceable>
+ALTER PROCEDURE <replaceable>name</replaceable> [ ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) ]
+ [ NO ] DEPENDS ON EXTENSION <replaceable>extension_name</replaceable>
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">action</replaceable> is one of:</phrase>
+
+ [ EXTERNAL ] SECURITY INVOKER | [ EXTERNAL ] SECURITY DEFINER
+ SET <replaceable class="parameter">configuration_parameter</replaceable> { TO | = } { <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> | DEFAULT }
+ SET <replaceable class="parameter">configuration_parameter</replaceable> FROM CURRENT
+ RESET <replaceable class="parameter">configuration_parameter</replaceable>
+ RESET ALL
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER PROCEDURE</command> changes the definition of a
+ procedure.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must own the procedure to use <command>ALTER PROCEDURE</command>.
+ To change a procedure's schema, you must also have <literal>CREATE</literal>
+ privilege on the new schema.
+ To alter the owner, you must also be a direct or indirect member of the new
+ owning role, and that role must have <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on
+ the procedure's schema. (These restrictions enforce that altering the owner
+ doesn't do anything you couldn't do by dropping and recreating the procedure.
+ However, a superuser can alter ownership of any procedure anyway.)
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing procedure. If no
+ argument list is specified, the name must be unique in its schema.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The mode of an argument: <literal>IN</literal>, <literal>OUT</literal>,
+ <literal>INOUT</literal>, or <literal>VARIADIC</literal>. If omitted,
+ the default is <literal>IN</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an argument.
+ Note that <command>ALTER PROCEDURE</command> does not actually pay
+ any attention to argument names, since only the argument data
+ types are used to determine the procedure's identity.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The data type(s) of the procedure's arguments (optionally
+ schema-qualified), if any.
+ See <xref linkend="sql-dropprocedure"/> for the details of how
+ the procedure is looked up using the argument data type(s).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name of the procedure.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new owner of the procedure. Note that if the procedure is
+ marked <literal>SECURITY DEFINER</literal>, it will subsequently
+ execute as the new owner.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new schema for the procedure.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">extension_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form marks the procedure as dependent on the extension, or no longer
+ dependent on the extension if <literal>NO</literal> is specified.
+ A procedure that's marked as dependent on an extension is dropped when the
+ extension is dropped, even if cascade is not specified.
+ A procedure can depend upon multiple extensions, and will be dropped when
+ any one of those extensions is dropped.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal><optional> EXTERNAL </optional> SECURITY INVOKER</literal></term>
+ <term><literal><optional> EXTERNAL </optional> SECURITY DEFINER</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Change whether the procedure is a security definer or not. The
+ key word <literal>EXTERNAL</literal> is ignored for SQL
+ conformance. See <xref linkend="sql-createprocedure"/> for more information about
+ this capability.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>configuration_parameter</replaceable></term>
+ <term><replaceable>value</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Add or change the assignment to be made to a configuration parameter
+ when the procedure is called. If
+ <replaceable>value</replaceable> is <literal>DEFAULT</literal>
+ or, equivalently, <literal>RESET</literal> is used, the procedure-local
+ setting is removed, so that the procedure executes with the value
+ present in its environment. Use <literal>RESET
+ ALL</literal> to clear all procedure-local settings.
+ <literal>SET FROM CURRENT</literal> saves the value of the parameter that
+ is current when <command>ALTER PROCEDURE</command> is executed as the value
+ to be applied when the procedure is entered.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ See <xref linkend="sql-set"/> and
+ <xref linkend="runtime-config"/>
+ for more information about allowed parameter names and values.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Ignored for conformance with the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To rename the procedure <literal>insert_data</literal> with two arguments
+ of type <type>integer</type> to <literal>insert_record</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER PROCEDURE insert_data(integer, integer) RENAME TO insert_record;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To change the owner of the procedure <literal>insert_data</literal> with
+ two arguments of type <type>integer</type> to <literal>joe</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER PROCEDURE insert_data(integer, integer) OWNER TO joe;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To change the schema of the procedure <literal>insert_data</literal> with
+ two arguments of type <type>integer</type>
+ to <literal>accounting</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER PROCEDURE insert_data(integer, integer) SET SCHEMA accounting;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To mark the procedure <literal>insert_data(integer, integer)</literal> as
+ being dependent on the extension <literal>myext</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER PROCEDURE insert_data(integer, integer) DEPENDS ON EXTENSION myext;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To adjust the search path that is automatically set for a procedure:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER PROCEDURE check_password(text) SET search_path = admin, pg_temp;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To disable automatic setting of <varname>search_path</varname> for a procedure:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER PROCEDURE check_password(text) RESET search_path;
+</programlisting>
+ The procedure will now execute with whatever search path is used by its
+ caller.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This statement is partially compatible with the <command>ALTER
+ PROCEDURE</command> statement in the SQL standard. The standard allows more
+ properties of a procedure to be modified, but does not provide the
+ ability to rename a procedure, make a procedure a security definer,
+ attach configuration parameter values to a procedure,
+ or change the owner, schema, or volatility of a procedure. The standard also
+ requires the <literal>RESTRICT</literal> key word, which is optional in
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createprocedure"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropprocedure"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterfunction"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterroutine"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_publication.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_publication.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..faa114b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_publication.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,166 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_publication.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-alterpublication">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-alterpublication">
+ <primary>ALTER PUBLICATION</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER PUBLICATION</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER PUBLICATION</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of a publication</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER PUBLICATION <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> ADD TABLE [ ONLY ] <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [ * ] [, ...]
+ALTER PUBLICATION <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> SET TABLE [ ONLY ] <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [ * ] [, ...]
+ALTER PUBLICATION <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> DROP TABLE [ ONLY ] <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [ * ] [, ...]
+ALTER PUBLICATION <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> SET ( <replaceable class="parameter">publication_parameter</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>] [, ... ] )
+ALTER PUBLICATION <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> OWNER TO { <replaceable>new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+ALTER PUBLICATION <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> RENAME TO <replaceable>new_name</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The command <command>ALTER PUBLICATION</command> can change the attributes
+ of a publication.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The first three variants change which tables are part of the publication.
+ The <literal>SET TABLE</literal> clause will replace the list of tables in
+ the publication with the specified one. The <literal>ADD TABLE</literal>
+ and <literal>DROP TABLE</literal> clauses will add and remove one or more
+ tables from the publication. Note that adding tables to a publication that
+ is already subscribed to will require a <literal>ALTER SUBSCRIPTION
+ ... REFRESH PUBLICATION</literal> action on the subscribing side in order
+ to become effective.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The fourth variant of this command listed in the synopsis can change
+ all of the publication properties specified in
+ <xref linkend="sql-createpublication"/>. Properties not mentioned in the
+ command retain their previous settings.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The remaining variants change the owner and the name of the publication.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must own the publication to use <command>ALTER PUBLICATION</command>.
+ Adding a table to a publication additionally requires owning that table.
+ To alter the owner, you must also be a direct or indirect member of the new
+ owning role. The new owner must have <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on
+ the database. Also, the new owner of a <literal>FOR ALL TABLES</literal>
+ publication must be a superuser. However, a superuser can change the
+ ownership of a publication regardless of these restrictions.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an existing publication whose definition is to be altered.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Name of an existing table. If <literal>ONLY</literal> is specified before the
+ table name, only that table is affected. If <literal>ONLY</literal> is not
+ specified, the table and all its descendant tables (if any) are
+ affected. Optionally, <literal>*</literal> can be specified after the table
+ name to explicitly indicate that descendant tables are included.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET ( <replaceable class="parameter">publication_parameter</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>] [, ... ] )</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This clause alters publication parameters originally set by
+ <xref linkend="sql-createpublication"/>. See there for more information.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The user name of the new owner of the publication.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name for the publication.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Change the publication to publish only deletes and updates:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER PUBLICATION noinsert SET (publish = 'update, delete');
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Add some tables to the publication:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER PUBLICATION mypublication ADD TABLE users, departments;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER PUBLICATION</command> is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createpublication"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droppublication"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createsubscription"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altersubscription"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_role.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_role.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5aa5648
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_role.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,354 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_role.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-alterrole">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-alterrole">
+ <primary>ALTER ROLE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER ROLE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER ROLE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change a database role</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER ROLE <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [ WITH ] <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> [ ... ]
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> can be:</phrase>
+
+ SUPERUSER | NOSUPERUSER
+ | CREATEDB | NOCREATEDB
+ | CREATEROLE | NOCREATEROLE
+ | INHERIT | NOINHERIT
+ | LOGIN | NOLOGIN
+ | REPLICATION | NOREPLICATION
+ | BYPASSRLS | NOBYPASSRLS
+ | CONNECTION LIMIT <replaceable class="parameter">connlimit</replaceable>
+ | [ ENCRYPTED ] PASSWORD '<replaceable class="parameter">password</replaceable>' | PASSWORD NULL
+ | VALID UNTIL '<replaceable class="parameter">timestamp</replaceable>'
+
+ALTER ROLE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> RENAME TO <replaceable>new_name</replaceable>
+
+ALTER ROLE { <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> | ALL } [ IN DATABASE <replaceable class="parameter">database_name</replaceable> ] SET <replaceable>configuration_parameter</replaceable> { TO | = } { <replaceable>value</replaceable> | DEFAULT }
+ALTER ROLE { <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> | ALL } [ IN DATABASE <replaceable class="parameter">database_name</replaceable> ] SET <replaceable>configuration_parameter</replaceable> FROM CURRENT
+ALTER ROLE { <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> | ALL } [ IN DATABASE <replaceable class="parameter">database_name</replaceable> ] RESET <replaceable>configuration_parameter</replaceable>
+ALTER ROLE { <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> | ALL } [ IN DATABASE <replaceable class="parameter">database_name</replaceable> ] RESET ALL
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> can be:</phrase>
+
+ <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable>
+ | CURRENT_ROLE
+ | CURRENT_USER
+ | SESSION_USER
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER ROLE</command> changes the attributes of a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> role.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The first variant of this command listed in the synopsis can change
+ many of the role attributes that can be specified in
+ <link linkend="sql-createrole"><command>CREATE ROLE</command></link>.
+ (All the possible attributes are covered,
+ except that there are no options for adding or removing memberships; use
+ <link linkend="sql-grant"><command>GRANT</command></link> and
+ <link linkend="sql-revoke"><command>REVOKE</command></link> for that.)
+ Attributes not mentioned in the command retain their previous settings.
+ Database superusers can change any of these settings for any role.
+ Roles having <literal>CREATEROLE</literal> privilege can change any of these
+ settings except <literal>SUPERUSER</literal>, <literal>REPLICATION</literal>,
+ and <literal>BYPASSRLS</literal>; but only for non-superuser and
+ non-replication roles.
+ Ordinary roles can only change their own password.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The second variant changes the name of the role.
+ Database superusers can rename any role.
+ Roles having <literal>CREATEROLE</literal> privilege can rename non-superuser
+ roles.
+ The current session user cannot be renamed.
+ (Connect as a different user if you need to do that.)
+ Because <literal>MD5</literal>-encrypted passwords use the role name as
+ cryptographic salt, renaming a role clears its password if the
+ password is <literal>MD5</literal>-encrypted.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The remaining variants change a role's session default for a configuration
+ variable, either for all databases or, when the <literal>IN
+ DATABASE</literal> clause is specified, only for sessions in the named
+ database. If <literal>ALL</literal> is specified instead of a role name,
+ this changes the setting for all roles. Using <literal>ALL</literal>
+ with <literal>IN DATABASE</literal> is effectively the same as using the
+ command <literal>ALTER DATABASE ... SET ...</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Whenever the role subsequently
+ starts a new session, the specified value becomes the session
+ default, overriding whatever setting is present in
+ <filename>postgresql.conf</filename> or has been received from the <command>postgres</command>
+ command line. This only happens at login time; executing
+ <link linkend="sql-set-role"><command>SET ROLE</command></link> or
+ <link linkend="sql-set-session-authorization"><command>SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION</command></link> does not cause new
+ configuration values to be set.
+ Settings set for all databases are overridden by database-specific settings
+ attached to a role. Settings for specific databases or specific roles override
+ settings for all roles.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Superusers can change anyone's session defaults. Roles having
+ <literal>CREATEROLE</literal> privilege can change defaults for non-superuser
+ roles. Ordinary roles can only set defaults for themselves.
+ Certain configuration variables cannot be set this way, or can only be
+ set if a superuser issues the command. Only superusers can change a setting
+ for all roles in all databases.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the role whose attributes are to be altered.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CURRENT_ROLE</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>CURRENT_USER</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Alter the current user instead of an explicitly identified role.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SESSION_USER</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Alter the current session user instead of an explicitly identified
+ role.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SUPERUSER</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>NOSUPERUSER</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>CREATEDB</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>NOCREATEDB</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>CREATEROLE</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>NOCREATEROLE</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>INHERIT</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>NOINHERIT</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>LOGIN</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>NOLOGIN</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>REPLICATION</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>NOREPLICATION</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>BYPASSRLS</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>NOBYPASSRLS</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>CONNECTION LIMIT</literal> <replaceable class="parameter">connlimit</replaceable></term>
+ <term>[ <literal>ENCRYPTED</literal> ] <literal>PASSWORD</literal> '<replaceable class="parameter">password</replaceable>'</term>
+ <term><literal>PASSWORD NULL</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>VALID UNTIL</literal> '<replaceable class="parameter">timestamp</replaceable>'</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These clauses alter attributes originally set by
+ <link linkend="sql-createrole"><command>CREATE ROLE</command></link>. For more information, see the
+ <command>CREATE ROLE</command> reference page.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name of the role.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>database_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the database the configuration variable should be set in.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>configuration_parameter</replaceable></term>
+ <term><replaceable>value</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Set this role's session default for the specified configuration
+ parameter to the given value. If
+ <replaceable>value</replaceable> is <literal>DEFAULT</literal>
+ or, equivalently, <literal>RESET</literal> is used, the
+ role-specific variable setting is removed, so the role will
+ inherit the system-wide default setting in new sessions. Use
+ <literal>RESET ALL</literal> to clear all role-specific settings.
+ <literal>SET FROM CURRENT</literal> saves the session's current value of
+ the parameter as the role-specific value.
+ If <literal>IN DATABASE</literal> is specified, the configuration
+ parameter is set or removed for the given role and database only.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Role-specific variable settings take effect only at login;
+ <link linkend="sql-set-role"><command>SET ROLE</command></link> and
+ <link linkend="sql-set-session-authorization"><command>SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION</command></link>
+ do not process role-specific variable settings.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ See <xref linkend="sql-set"/> and <xref
+ linkend="runtime-config"/> for more information about allowed
+ parameter names and values.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Use <link linkend="sql-createrole"><command>CREATE ROLE</command></link>
+ to add new roles, and <link linkend="sql-droprole"><command>DROP ROLE</command></link> to remove a role.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER ROLE</command> cannot change a role's memberships.
+ Use <link linkend="sql-grant"><command>GRANT</command></link> and
+ <link linkend="sql-revoke"><command>REVOKE</command></link>
+ to do that.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Caution must be exercised when specifying an unencrypted password
+ with this command. The password will be transmitted to the server
+ in cleartext, and it might also be logged in the client's command
+ history or the server log. <xref linkend="app-psql"/>
+ contains a command
+ <command>\password</command> that can be used to change a
+ role's password without exposing the cleartext password.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ It is also possible to tie a
+ session default to a specific database rather than to a role; see
+ <xref linkend="sql-alterdatabase"/>.
+ If there is a conflict, database-role-specific settings override role-specific
+ ones, which in turn override database-specific ones.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Change a role's password:
+
+<programlisting>
+ALTER ROLE davide WITH PASSWORD 'hu8jmn3';
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Remove a role's password:
+
+<programlisting>
+ALTER ROLE davide WITH PASSWORD NULL;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Change a password expiration date, specifying that the password
+ should expire at midday on 4th May 2015 using
+ the time zone which is one hour ahead of <acronym>UTC</acronym>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER ROLE chris VALID UNTIL 'May 4 12:00:00 2015 +1';
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Make a password valid forever:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER ROLE fred VALID UNTIL 'infinity';
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Give a role the ability to create other roles and new databases:
+
+<programlisting>
+ALTER ROLE miriam CREATEROLE CREATEDB;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Give a role a non-default setting of the
+ <xref linkend="guc-maintenance-work-mem"/> parameter:
+
+<programlisting>
+ALTER ROLE worker_bee SET maintenance_work_mem = 100000;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Give a role a non-default, database-specific setting of the
+ <xref linkend="guc-client-min-messages"/> parameter:
+
+<programlisting>
+ALTER ROLE fred IN DATABASE devel SET client_min_messages = DEBUG;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>ALTER ROLE</command> statement is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createrole"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droprole"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterdatabase"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-set"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_routine.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_routine.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d6c9dea
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_routine.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,103 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_routine.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-alterroutine">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-alterroutine">
+ <primary>ALTER ROUTINE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER ROUTINE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER ROUTINE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of a routine</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER ROUTINE <replaceable>name</replaceable> [ ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) ]
+ <replaceable class="parameter">action</replaceable> [ ... ] [ RESTRICT ]
+ALTER ROUTINE <replaceable>name</replaceable> [ ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) ]
+ RENAME TO <replaceable>new_name</replaceable>
+ALTER ROUTINE <replaceable>name</replaceable> [ ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) ]
+ OWNER TO { <replaceable>new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+ALTER ROUTINE <replaceable>name</replaceable> [ ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) ]
+ SET SCHEMA <replaceable>new_schema</replaceable>
+ALTER ROUTINE <replaceable>name</replaceable> [ ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) ]
+ [ NO ] DEPENDS ON EXTENSION <replaceable>extension_name</replaceable>
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">action</replaceable> is one of:</phrase>
+
+ IMMUTABLE | STABLE | VOLATILE
+ [ NOT ] LEAKPROOF
+ [ EXTERNAL ] SECURITY INVOKER | [ EXTERNAL ] SECURITY DEFINER
+ PARALLEL { UNSAFE | RESTRICTED | SAFE }
+ COST <replaceable class="parameter">execution_cost</replaceable>
+ ROWS <replaceable class="parameter">result_rows</replaceable>
+ SET <replaceable class="parameter">configuration_parameter</replaceable> { TO | = } { <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> | DEFAULT }
+ SET <replaceable class="parameter">configuration_parameter</replaceable> FROM CURRENT
+ RESET <replaceable class="parameter">configuration_parameter</replaceable>
+ RESET ALL
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER ROUTINE</command> changes the definition of a routine, which
+ can be an aggregate function, a normal function, or a procedure. See
+ under <xref linkend="sql-alteraggregate"/>, <xref linkend="sql-alterfunction"/>,
+ and <xref linkend="sql-alterprocedure"/> for the description of the
+ parameters, more examples, and further details.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To rename the routine <literal>foo</literal> for type
+ <type>integer</type> to <literal>foobar</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER ROUTINE foo(integer) RENAME TO foobar;
+</programlisting>
+ This command will work independent of whether <literal>foo</literal> is an
+ aggregate, function, or procedure.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This statement is partially compatible with the <command>ALTER
+ ROUTINE</command> statement in the SQL standard. See
+ under <xref linkend="sql-alterfunction"/>
+ and <xref linkend="sql-alterprocedure"/> for more details. Allowing
+ routine names to refer to aggregate functions is
+ a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alteraggregate"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterfunction"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterprocedure"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droproutine"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+
+ <para>
+ Note that there is no <literal>CREATE ROUTINE</literal> command.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_rule.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_rule.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c20bfb3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_rule.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,105 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_rule.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-alterrule">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-alterrule">
+ <primary>ALTER RULE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER RULE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER RULE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of a rule</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER RULE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> ON <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> RENAME TO <replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER RULE</command> changes properties of an existing
+ rule. Currently, the only available action is to change the rule's name.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To use <command>ALTER RULE</command>, you must own the table or view that
+ the rule applies to.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an existing rule to alter.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the table or view that the
+ rule applies to.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name for the rule.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To rename an existing rule:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER RULE notify_all ON emp RENAME TO notify_me;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER RULE</command> is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> language extension, as is the
+ entire query rewrite system.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createrule"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droprule"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_schema.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_schema.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..04624c5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_schema.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,100 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_schema.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-alterschema">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-alterschema">
+ <primary>ALTER SCHEMA</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER SCHEMA</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER SCHEMA</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of a schema</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER SCHEMA <replaceable>name</replaceable> RENAME TO <replaceable>new_name</replaceable>
+ALTER SCHEMA <replaceable>name</replaceable> OWNER TO { <replaceable>new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER SCHEMA</command> changes the definition of a schema.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must own the schema to use <command>ALTER SCHEMA</command>.
+ To rename a schema you must also have the
+ <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege for the database.
+ To alter the owner, you must also be a direct or
+ indirect member of the new owning role, and you must have the
+ <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege for the database.
+ (Note that superusers have all these privileges automatically.)
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an existing schema.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name of the schema. The new name cannot
+ begin with <literal>pg_</literal>, as such names
+ are reserved for system schemas.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new owner of the schema.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>ALTER SCHEMA</command> statement in the SQL
+ standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createschema"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropschema"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_sequence.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_sequence.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3cd9ece
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_sequence.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,351 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_sequence.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-altersequence">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-altersequence">
+ <primary>ALTER SEQUENCE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER SEQUENCE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER SEQUENCE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>
+ change the definition of a sequence generator
+ </refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER SEQUENCE [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ [ AS <replaceable class="parameter">data_type</replaceable> ]
+ [ INCREMENT [ BY ] <replaceable class="parameter">increment</replaceable> ]
+ [ MINVALUE <replaceable class="parameter">minvalue</replaceable> | NO MINVALUE ] [ MAXVALUE <replaceable class="parameter">maxvalue</replaceable> | NO MAXVALUE ]
+ [ START [ WITH ] <replaceable class="parameter">start</replaceable> ]
+ [ RESTART [ [ WITH ] <replaceable class="parameter">restart</replaceable> ] ]
+ [ CACHE <replaceable class="parameter">cache</replaceable> ] [ [ NO ] CYCLE ]
+ [ OWNED BY { <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable>.<replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> | NONE } ]
+ALTER SEQUENCE [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> OWNER TO { <replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+ALTER SEQUENCE [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> RENAME TO <replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable>
+ALTER SEQUENCE [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> SET SCHEMA <replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER SEQUENCE</command> changes the parameters of an existing
+ sequence generator. Any parameters not specifically set in the
+ <command>ALTER SEQUENCE</command> command retain their prior settings.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must own the sequence to use <command>ALTER SEQUENCE</command>.
+ To change a sequence's schema, you must also have <literal>CREATE</literal>
+ privilege on the new schema.
+ To alter the owner, you must also be a direct or indirect member of the new
+ owning role, and that role must have <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on
+ the sequence's schema. (These restrictions enforce that altering the owner
+ doesn't do anything you couldn't do by dropping and recreating the sequence.
+ However, a superuser can alter ownership of any sequence anyway.)
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of a sequence to be altered.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the sequence does not exist. A notice is issued
+ in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">data_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The optional
+ clause <literal>AS <replaceable class="parameter">data_type</replaceable></literal>
+ changes the data type of the sequence. Valid types are
+ <literal>smallint</literal>, <literal>integer</literal>,
+ and <literal>bigint</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Changing the data type automatically changes the minimum and maximum
+ values of the sequence if and only if the previous minimum and maximum
+ values were the minimum or maximum value of the old data type (in
+ other words, if the sequence had been created using <literal>NO
+ MINVALUE</literal> or <literal>NO MAXVALUE</literal>, implicitly or
+ explicitly). Otherwise, the minimum and maximum values are preserved,
+ unless new values are given as part of the same command. If the
+ minimum and maximum values do not fit into the new data type, an error
+ will be generated.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">increment</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The clause <literal>INCREMENT BY <replaceable
+ class="parameter">increment</replaceable></literal> is
+ optional. A positive value will make an ascending sequence, a
+ negative one a descending sequence. If unspecified, the old
+ increment value will be maintained.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">minvalue</replaceable></term>
+ <term><literal>NO MINVALUE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The optional clause <literal>MINVALUE <replaceable
+ class="parameter">minvalue</replaceable></literal> determines
+ the minimum value a sequence can generate. If <literal>NO
+ MINVALUE</literal> is specified, the defaults of 1 and
+ the minimum value of the data type for ascending and descending sequences,
+ respectively, will be used. If neither option is specified,
+ the current minimum value will be maintained.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">maxvalue</replaceable></term>
+ <term><literal>NO MAXVALUE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The optional clause <literal>MAXVALUE <replaceable
+ class="parameter">maxvalue</replaceable></literal> determines
+ the maximum value for the sequence. If <literal>NO
+ MAXVALUE</literal> is specified, the defaults of
+ the maximum value of the data type and -1 for ascending and descending
+ sequences, respectively, will be used. If neither option is
+ specified, the current maximum value will be maintained.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">start</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The optional clause <literal>START WITH <replaceable
+ class="parameter">start</replaceable></literal> changes the
+ recorded start value of the sequence. This has no effect on the
+ <emphasis>current</emphasis> sequence value; it simply sets the value
+ that future <command>ALTER SEQUENCE RESTART</command> commands will use.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">restart</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The optional clause <literal>RESTART [ WITH <replaceable
+ class="parameter">restart</replaceable> ]</literal> changes the
+ current value of the sequence. This is similar to calling the
+ <function>setval</function> function with <literal>is_called</literal> =
+ <literal>false</literal>: the specified value will be returned by the
+ <emphasis>next</emphasis> call of <function>nextval</function>.
+ Writing <literal>RESTART</literal> with no <replaceable
+ class="parameter">restart</replaceable> value is equivalent to supplying
+ the start value that was recorded by <command>CREATE SEQUENCE</command>
+ or last set by <command>ALTER SEQUENCE START WITH</command>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In contrast to a <function>setval</function> call,
+ a <literal>RESTART</literal> operation on a sequence is transactional
+ and blocks concurrent transactions from obtaining numbers from the
+ same sequence. If that's not the desired mode of
+ operation, <function>setval</function> should be used.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">cache</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The clause <literal>CACHE <replaceable
+ class="parameter">cache</replaceable></literal> enables
+ sequence numbers to be preallocated and stored in memory for
+ faster access. The minimum value is 1 (only one value can be
+ generated at a time, i.e., no cache). If unspecified, the old
+ cache value will be maintained.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CYCLE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The optional <literal>CYCLE</literal> key word can be used to enable
+ the sequence to wrap around when the
+ <replaceable class="parameter">maxvalue</replaceable> or
+ <replaceable class="parameter">minvalue</replaceable> has been
+ reached by
+ an ascending or descending sequence respectively. If the limit is
+ reached, the next number generated will be the
+ <replaceable class="parameter">minvalue</replaceable> or
+ <replaceable class="parameter">maxvalue</replaceable>,
+ respectively.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>NO CYCLE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If the optional <literal>NO CYCLE</literal> key word is
+ specified, any calls to <function>nextval</function> after the
+ sequence has reached its maximum value will return an error.
+ If neither <literal>CYCLE</literal> or <literal>NO
+ CYCLE</literal> are specified, the old cycle behavior will be
+ maintained.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>OWNED BY</literal> <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable>.<replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable></term>
+ <term><literal>OWNED BY NONE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>OWNED BY</literal> option causes the sequence to be
+ associated with a specific table column, such that if that column
+ (or its whole table) is dropped, the sequence will be automatically
+ dropped as well. If specified, this association replaces any
+ previously specified association for the sequence. The specified
+ table must have the same owner and be in the same schema as the
+ sequence.
+ Specifying <literal>OWNED BY NONE</literal> removes any existing
+ association, making the sequence <quote>free-standing</quote>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The user name of the new owner of the sequence.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name for the sequence.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new schema for the sequence.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER SEQUENCE</command> will not immediately affect
+ <function>nextval</function> results in backends,
+ other than the current one, that have preallocated (cached) sequence
+ values. They will use up all cached values prior to noticing the changed
+ sequence generation parameters. The current backend will be affected
+ immediately.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER SEQUENCE</command> does not affect the <function>currval</function>
+ status for the sequence. (Before <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ 8.3, it sometimes did.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER SEQUENCE</command> blocks
+ concurrent <function>nextval</function>, <function>currval</function>,
+ <function>lastval</function>, and <command>setval</command> calls.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For historical reasons, <command>ALTER TABLE</command> can be used with
+ sequences too; but the only variants of <command>ALTER TABLE</command>
+ that are allowed with sequences are equivalent to the forms shown above.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Restart a sequence called <literal>serial</literal>, at 105:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER SEQUENCE serial RESTART WITH 105;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER SEQUENCE</command> conforms to the <acronym>SQL</acronym>
+ standard, except for the <literal>AS</literal>, <literal>START WITH</literal>,
+ <literal>OWNED BY</literal>, <literal>OWNER TO</literal>, <literal>RENAME TO</literal>, and
+ <literal>SET SCHEMA</literal> clauses, which are
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extensions.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createsequence"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropsequence"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_server.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_server.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..186f38b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_server.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,144 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_server.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-alterserver">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-alterserver">
+ <primary>ALTER SERVER</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER SERVER</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER SERVER</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of a foreign server</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER SERVER <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ VERSION '<replaceable class="parameter">new_version</replaceable>' ]
+ [ OPTIONS ( [ ADD | SET | DROP ] <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> ['<replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>'] [, ... ] ) ]
+ALTER SERVER <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> OWNER TO { <replaceable>new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+ALTER SERVER <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> RENAME TO <replaceable>new_name</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER SERVER</command> changes the definition of a foreign
+ server. The first form changes the server version string or the
+ generic options of the server (at least one clause is required).
+ The second form changes the owner of the server.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To alter the server you must be the owner of the server.
+ Additionally to alter the owner, you must own the server and also
+ be a direct or indirect member of the new owning role, and you must
+ have <literal>USAGE</literal> privilege on the server's foreign-data
+ wrapper. (Note that superusers satisfy all these criteria
+ automatically.)
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an existing server.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_version</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ New server version.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>OPTIONS ( [ ADD | SET | DROP ] <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> ['<replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>'] [, ... ] )</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Change options for the
+ server. <literal>ADD</literal>, <literal>SET</literal>, and <literal>DROP</literal>
+ specify the action to be performed. <literal>ADD</literal> is assumed
+ if no operation is explicitly specified. Option names must be
+ unique; names and values are also validated using the server's
+ foreign-data wrapper library.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The user name of the new owner of the foreign server.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name for the foreign server.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Alter server <literal>foo</literal>, add connection options:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER SERVER foo OPTIONS (host 'foo', dbname 'foodb');
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Alter server <literal>foo</literal>, change version,
+ change <literal>host</literal> option:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER SERVER foo VERSION '8.4' OPTIONS (SET host 'baz');
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER SERVER</command> conforms to ISO/IEC 9075-9 (SQL/MED).
+ The <literal>OWNER TO</literal> and <literal>RENAME</literal> forms are
+ PostgreSQL extensions.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createserver"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropserver"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_statistics.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_statistics.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ce6cdf2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_statistics.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,135 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_statistics.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-alterstatistics">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-alterstatistics">
+ <primary>ALTER STATISTICS</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER STATISTICS</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER STATISTICS</refname>
+ <refpurpose>
+ change the definition of an extended statistics object
+ </refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER STATISTICS <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> OWNER TO { <replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+ALTER STATISTICS <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> RENAME TO <replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable>
+ALTER STATISTICS <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> SET SCHEMA <replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable>
+ALTER STATISTICS <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> SET STATISTICS <replaceable class="parameter">new_target</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER STATISTICS</command> changes the parameters of an existing
+ extended statistics object. Any parameters not specifically set in the
+ <command>ALTER STATISTICS</command> command retain their prior settings.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must own the statistics object to use <command>ALTER STATISTICS</command>.
+ To change a statistics object's schema, you must also
+ have <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on the new schema.
+ To alter the owner, you must also be a direct or indirect member of the new
+ owning role, and that role must have <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on
+ the statistics object's schema. (These restrictions enforce that altering
+ the owner doesn't do anything you couldn't do by dropping and recreating
+ the statistics object. However, a superuser can alter ownership of any
+ statistics object anyway.)
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the statistics object to be
+ altered.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The user name of the new owner of the statistics object.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name for the statistics object.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new schema for the statistics object.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_target</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The statistic-gathering target for this statistics object for subsequent
+ <link linkend="sql-analyze"><command>ANALYZE</command></link> operations.
+ The target can be set in the range 0 to 10000; alternatively, set it
+ to -1 to revert to using the maximum of the statistics target of the
+ referenced columns, if set, or the system default statistics
+ target (<xref linkend="guc-default-statistics-target"/>).
+ For more information on the use of statistics by the
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> query planner, refer to
+ <xref linkend="planner-stats"/>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>ALTER STATISTICS</command> command in the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createstatistics"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropstatistics"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_subscription.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_subscription.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6d256b6
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_subscription.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,259 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_subscription.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-altersubscription">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-altersubscription">
+ <primary>ALTER SUBSCRIPTION</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER SUBSCRIPTION</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER SUBSCRIPTION</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of a subscription</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER SUBSCRIPTION <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> CONNECTION '<replaceable>conninfo</replaceable>'
+ALTER SUBSCRIPTION <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> SET PUBLICATION <replaceable class="parameter">publication_name</replaceable> [, ...] [ WITH ( <replaceable class="parameter">publication_option</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>] [, ... ] ) ]
+ALTER SUBSCRIPTION <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> ADD PUBLICATION <replaceable class="parameter">publication_name</replaceable> [, ...] [ WITH ( <replaceable class="parameter">publication_option</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>] [, ... ] ) ]
+ALTER SUBSCRIPTION <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> DROP PUBLICATION <replaceable class="parameter">publication_name</replaceable> [, ...] [ WITH ( <replaceable class="parameter">publication_option</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>] [, ... ] ) ]
+ALTER SUBSCRIPTION <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> REFRESH PUBLICATION [ WITH ( <replaceable class="parameter">refresh_option</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>] [, ... ] ) ]
+ALTER SUBSCRIPTION <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> ENABLE
+ALTER SUBSCRIPTION <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> DISABLE
+ALTER SUBSCRIPTION <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> SET ( <replaceable class="parameter">subscription_parameter</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>] [, ... ] )
+ALTER SUBSCRIPTION <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> OWNER TO { <replaceable>new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+ALTER SUBSCRIPTION <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> RENAME TO <replaceable>new_name</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER SUBSCRIPTION</command> can change most of the subscription
+ properties that can be specified
+ in <xref linkend="sql-createsubscription"/>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must own the subscription to use <command>ALTER SUBSCRIPTION</command>.
+ To alter the owner, you must also be a direct or indirect member of the
+ new owning role. The new owner has to be a superuser.
+ (Currently, all subscription owners must be superusers, so the owner checks
+ will be bypassed in practice. But this might change in the future.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When refreshing a publication we remove the relations that are no longer
+ part of the publication and we also remove the table synchronization slots
+ if there are any. It is necessary to remove these slots so that the resources
+ allocated for the subscription on the remote host are released. If due to
+ network breakdown or some other error, <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ is unable to remove the slots, an ERROR will be reported. To proceed in this
+ situation, the user either needs to retry the operation or disassociate the
+ slot from the subscription and drop the subscription as explained in
+ <xref linkend="sql-dropsubscription"/>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Commands <command>ALTER SUBSCRIPTION ... REFRESH PUBLICATION</command> and
+ <command>ALTER SUBSCRIPTION ... {SET|ADD|DROP} PUBLICATION ...</command>
+ with <literal>refresh</literal> option as <literal>true</literal> cannot be
+ executed inside a transaction block.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a subscription whose properties are to be altered.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CONNECTION '<replaceable class="parameter">conninfo</replaceable>'</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This clause alters the connection property originally set by
+ <xref linkend="sql-createsubscription"/>. See there for more
+ information.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET PUBLICATION <replaceable class="parameter">publication_name</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <term><literal>ADD PUBLICATION <replaceable class="parameter">publication_name</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <term><literal>DROP PUBLICATION <replaceable class="parameter">publication_name</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Changes the list of subscribed publications. <literal>SET</literal>
+ replaces the entire list of publications with a new list,
+ <literal>ADD</literal> adds additional publications to the list of
+ publications, and <literal>DROP</literal> removes the publications from
+ the list of publications. See <xref linkend="sql-createsubscription"/>
+ for more information. By default, this command will also act like
+ <literal>REFRESH PUBLICATION</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <replaceable>publication_option</replaceable> specifies additional
+ options for this operation. The supported options are:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>refresh</literal> (<type>boolean</type>)</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ When false, the command will not try to refresh table information.
+ <literal>REFRESH PUBLICATION</literal> should then be executed separately.
+ The default is <literal>true</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ Additionally, the options described under
+ <literal>REFRESH PUBLICATION</literal> may be specified, to control the
+ implicit refresh operation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>REFRESH PUBLICATION</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Fetch missing table information from publisher. This will start
+ replication of tables that were added to the subscribed-to publications
+ since the last invocation of <command>REFRESH PUBLICATION</command> or
+ since <command>CREATE SUBSCRIPTION</command>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <replaceable>refresh_option</replaceable> specifies additional options for the
+ refresh operation. The supported options are:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>copy_data</literal> (<type>boolean</type>)</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether the existing data in the publications that are
+ being subscribed to should be copied once the replication starts.
+ The default is <literal>true</literal>. (Previously subscribed
+ tables are not copied.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist></para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ENABLE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Enables the previously disabled subscription, starting the logical
+ replication worker at the end of transaction.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DISABLE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Disables the running subscription, stopping the logical replication
+ worker at the end of transaction.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET ( <replaceable class="parameter">subscription_parameter</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>] [, ... ] )</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This clause alters parameters originally set by
+ <xref linkend="sql-createsubscription"/>. See there for more
+ information. The parameters that can be altered
+ are <literal>slot_name</literal>,
+ <literal>synchronous_commit</literal>,
+ <literal>binary</literal>, and
+ <literal>streaming</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The user name of the new owner of the subscription.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name for the subscription.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Change the publication subscribed by a subscription to
+ <literal>insert_only</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER SUBSCRIPTION mysub SET PUBLICATION insert_only;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Disable (stop) the subscription:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER SUBSCRIPTION mysub DISABLE;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER SUBSCRIPTION</command> is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createsubscription"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropsubscription"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createpublication"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterpublication"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_system.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_system.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5e41f7f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_system.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,143 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_system.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-altersystem">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-altersystem">
+ <primary>ALTER SYSTEM</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER SYSTEM</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER SYSTEM</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change a server configuration parameter</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER SYSTEM SET <replaceable class="parameter">configuration_parameter</replaceable> { TO | = } { <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> | '<replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>' | DEFAULT }
+
+ALTER SYSTEM RESET <replaceable class="parameter">configuration_parameter</replaceable>
+ALTER SYSTEM RESET ALL
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER SYSTEM</command> is used for changing server configuration
+ parameters across the entire database cluster. It can be more convenient
+ than the traditional method of manually editing
+ the <filename>postgresql.conf</filename> file.
+ <command>ALTER SYSTEM</command> writes the given parameter setting to
+ the <filename>postgresql.auto.conf</filename> file, which is read in
+ addition to <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.
+ Setting a parameter to <literal>DEFAULT</literal>, or using the
+ <command>RESET</command> variant, removes that configuration entry from the
+ <filename>postgresql.auto.conf</filename> file. Use <literal>RESET
+ ALL</literal> to remove all such configuration entries.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Values set with <command>ALTER SYSTEM</command> will be effective after
+ the next server configuration reload, or after the next server restart
+ in the case of parameters that can only be changed at server start.
+ A server configuration reload can be commanded by calling the SQL
+ function <function>pg_reload_conf()</function>, running <literal>pg_ctl reload</literal>,
+ or sending a <systemitem>SIGHUP</systemitem> signal to the main server process.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Only superusers can use <command>ALTER SYSTEM</command>. Also, since
+ this command acts directly on the file system and cannot be rolled back,
+ it is not allowed inside a transaction block or function.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">configuration_parameter</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Name of a settable configuration parameter. Available parameters are
+ documented in <xref linkend="runtime-config"/>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ New value of the parameter. Values can be specified as string
+ constants, identifiers, numbers, or comma-separated lists of
+ these, as appropriate for the particular parameter.
+ <literal>DEFAULT</literal> can be written to specify removing the
+ parameter and its value from <filename>postgresql.auto.conf</filename>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This command can't be used to set <xref linkend="guc-data-directory"/>,
+ nor parameters that are not allowed in <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>
+ (e.g., <link linkend="runtime-config-preset">preset options</link>).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ See <xref linkend="config-setting"/> for other ways to set the parameters.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Set the <literal>wal_level</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER SYSTEM SET wal_level = replica;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Undo that, restoring whatever setting was effective
+ in <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER SYSTEM RESET wal_level;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>ALTER SYSTEM</command> statement is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-set"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-show"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_table.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_table.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8933bb0
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_table.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,1735 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_table.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-altertable">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-altertable">
+ <primary>ALTER TABLE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER TABLE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER TABLE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of a table</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER TABLE [ IF EXISTS ] [ ONLY ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ * ]
+ <replaceable class="parameter">action</replaceable> [, ... ]
+ALTER TABLE [ IF EXISTS ] [ ONLY ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ * ]
+ RENAME [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> TO <replaceable class="parameter">new_column_name</replaceable>
+ALTER TABLE [ IF EXISTS ] [ ONLY ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ * ]
+ RENAME CONSTRAINT <replaceable class="parameter">constraint_name</replaceable> TO <replaceable class="parameter">new_constraint_name</replaceable>
+ALTER TABLE [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ RENAME TO <replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable>
+ALTER TABLE [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ SET SCHEMA <replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable>
+ALTER TABLE ALL IN TABLESPACE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ OWNED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> [, ... ] ]
+ SET TABLESPACE <replaceable class="parameter">new_tablespace</replaceable> [ NOWAIT ]
+ALTER TABLE [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ ATTACH PARTITION <replaceable class="parameter">partition_name</replaceable> { FOR VALUES <replaceable class="parameter">partition_bound_spec</replaceable> | DEFAULT }
+ALTER TABLE [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ DETACH PARTITION <replaceable class="parameter">partition_name</replaceable> [ CONCURRENTLY | FINALIZE ]
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">action</replaceable> is one of:</phrase>
+
+ ADD [ COLUMN ] [ IF NOT EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> <replaceable class="parameter">data_type</replaceable> [ COLLATE <replaceable class="parameter">collation</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">column_constraint</replaceable> [ ... ] ]
+ DROP [ COLUMN ] [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [ RESTRICT | CASCADE ]
+ ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [ SET DATA ] TYPE <replaceable class="parameter">data_type</replaceable> [ COLLATE <replaceable class="parameter">collation</replaceable> ] [ USING <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> ]
+ ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> SET DEFAULT <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable>
+ ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> DROP DEFAULT
+ ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> { SET | DROP } NOT NULL
+ ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> DROP EXPRESSION [ IF EXISTS ]
+ ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> ADD GENERATED { ALWAYS | BY DEFAULT } AS IDENTITY [ ( <replaceable>sequence_options</replaceable> ) ]
+ ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> { SET GENERATED { ALWAYS | BY DEFAULT } | SET <replaceable>sequence_option</replaceable> | RESTART [ [ WITH ] <replaceable class="parameter">restart</replaceable> ] } [...]
+ ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> DROP IDENTITY [ IF EXISTS ]
+ ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> SET STATISTICS <replaceable class="parameter">integer</replaceable>
+ ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> SET ( <replaceable class="parameter">attribute_option</replaceable> = <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> [, ... ] )
+ ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> RESET ( <replaceable class="parameter">attribute_option</replaceable> [, ... ] )
+ ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> SET STORAGE { PLAIN | EXTERNAL | EXTENDED | MAIN }
+ ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> SET COMPRESSION <replaceable class="parameter">compression_method</replaceable>
+ ADD <replaceable class="parameter">table_constraint</replaceable> [ NOT VALID ]
+ ADD <replaceable class="parameter">table_constraint_using_index</replaceable>
+ ALTER CONSTRAINT <replaceable class="parameter">constraint_name</replaceable> [ DEFERRABLE | NOT DEFERRABLE ] [ INITIALLY DEFERRED | INITIALLY IMMEDIATE ]
+ VALIDATE CONSTRAINT <replaceable class="parameter">constraint_name</replaceable>
+ DROP CONSTRAINT [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">constraint_name</replaceable> [ RESTRICT | CASCADE ]
+ DISABLE TRIGGER [ <replaceable class="parameter">trigger_name</replaceable> | ALL | USER ]
+ ENABLE TRIGGER [ <replaceable class="parameter">trigger_name</replaceable> | ALL | USER ]
+ ENABLE REPLICA TRIGGER <replaceable class="parameter">trigger_name</replaceable>
+ ENABLE ALWAYS TRIGGER <replaceable class="parameter">trigger_name</replaceable>
+ DISABLE RULE <replaceable class="parameter">rewrite_rule_name</replaceable>
+ ENABLE RULE <replaceable class="parameter">rewrite_rule_name</replaceable>
+ ENABLE REPLICA RULE <replaceable class="parameter">rewrite_rule_name</replaceable>
+ ENABLE ALWAYS RULE <replaceable class="parameter">rewrite_rule_name</replaceable>
+ DISABLE ROW LEVEL SECURITY
+ ENABLE ROW LEVEL SECURITY
+ FORCE ROW LEVEL SECURITY
+ NO FORCE ROW LEVEL SECURITY
+ CLUSTER ON <replaceable class="parameter">index_name</replaceable>
+ SET WITHOUT CLUSTER
+ SET WITHOUT OIDS
+ SET TABLESPACE <replaceable class="parameter">new_tablespace</replaceable>
+ SET { LOGGED | UNLOGGED }
+ SET ( <replaceable class="parameter">storage_parameter</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>] [, ... ] )
+ RESET ( <replaceable class="parameter">storage_parameter</replaceable> [, ... ] )
+ INHERIT <replaceable class="parameter">parent_table</replaceable>
+ NO INHERIT <replaceable class="parameter">parent_table</replaceable>
+ OF <replaceable class="parameter">type_name</replaceable>
+ NOT OF
+ OWNER TO { <replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+ REPLICA IDENTITY { DEFAULT | USING INDEX <replaceable class="parameter">index_name</replaceable> | FULL | NOTHING }
+
+<phrase>and <replaceable class="parameter">partition_bound_spec</replaceable> is:</phrase>
+
+IN ( <replaceable class="parameter">partition_bound_expr</replaceable> [, ...] ) |
+FROM ( { <replaceable class="parameter">partition_bound_expr</replaceable> | MINVALUE | MAXVALUE } [, ...] )
+ TO ( { <replaceable class="parameter">partition_bound_expr</replaceable> | MINVALUE | MAXVALUE } [, ...] ) |
+WITH ( MODULUS <replaceable class="parameter">numeric_literal</replaceable>, REMAINDER <replaceable class="parameter">numeric_literal</replaceable> )
+
+<phrase>and <replaceable class="parameter">column_constraint</replaceable> is:</phrase>
+
+[ CONSTRAINT <replaceable class="parameter">constraint_name</replaceable> ]
+{ NOT NULL |
+ NULL |
+ CHECK ( <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> ) [ NO INHERIT ] |
+ DEFAULT <replaceable>default_expr</replaceable> |
+ GENERATED ALWAYS AS ( <replaceable>generation_expr</replaceable> ) STORED |
+ GENERATED { ALWAYS | BY DEFAULT } AS IDENTITY [ ( <replaceable>sequence_options</replaceable> ) ] |
+ UNIQUE <replaceable class="parameter">index_parameters</replaceable> |
+ PRIMARY KEY <replaceable class="parameter">index_parameters</replaceable> |
+ REFERENCES <replaceable class="parameter">reftable</replaceable> [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">refcolumn</replaceable> ) ] [ MATCH FULL | MATCH PARTIAL | MATCH SIMPLE ]
+ [ ON DELETE <replaceable class="parameter">referential_action</replaceable> ] [ ON UPDATE <replaceable class="parameter">referential_action</replaceable> ] }
+[ DEFERRABLE | NOT DEFERRABLE ] [ INITIALLY DEFERRED | INITIALLY IMMEDIATE ]
+
+<phrase>and <replaceable class="parameter">table_constraint</replaceable> is:</phrase>
+
+[ CONSTRAINT <replaceable class="parameter">constraint_name</replaceable> ]
+{ CHECK ( <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> ) [ NO INHERIT ] |
+ UNIQUE ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ... ] ) <replaceable class="parameter">index_parameters</replaceable> |
+ PRIMARY KEY ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ... ] ) <replaceable class="parameter">index_parameters</replaceable> |
+ EXCLUDE [ USING <replaceable class="parameter">index_method</replaceable> ] ( <replaceable class="parameter">exclude_element</replaceable> WITH <replaceable class="parameter">operator</replaceable> [, ... ] ) <replaceable class="parameter">index_parameters</replaceable> [ WHERE ( <replaceable class="parameter">predicate</replaceable> ) ] |
+ FOREIGN KEY ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ... ] ) REFERENCES <replaceable class="parameter">reftable</replaceable> [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">refcolumn</replaceable> [, ... ] ) ]
+ [ MATCH FULL | MATCH PARTIAL | MATCH SIMPLE ] [ ON DELETE <replaceable class="parameter">referential_action</replaceable> ] [ ON UPDATE <replaceable class="parameter">referential_action</replaceable> ] }
+[ DEFERRABLE | NOT DEFERRABLE ] [ INITIALLY DEFERRED | INITIALLY IMMEDIATE ]
+
+<phrase>and <replaceable class="parameter">table_constraint_using_index</replaceable> is:</phrase>
+
+ [ CONSTRAINT <replaceable class="parameter">constraint_name</replaceable> ]
+ { UNIQUE | PRIMARY KEY } USING INDEX <replaceable class="parameter">index_name</replaceable>
+ [ DEFERRABLE | NOT DEFERRABLE ] [ INITIALLY DEFERRED | INITIALLY IMMEDIATE ]
+
+<phrase><replaceable class="parameter">index_parameters</replaceable> in <literal>UNIQUE</literal>, <literal>PRIMARY KEY</literal>, and <literal>EXCLUDE</literal> constraints are:</phrase>
+
+[ INCLUDE ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ... ] ) ]
+[ WITH ( <replaceable class="parameter">storage_parameter</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>] [, ... ] ) ]
+[ USING INDEX TABLESPACE <replaceable class="parameter">tablespace_name</replaceable> ]
+
+<phrase><replaceable class="parameter">exclude_element</replaceable> in an <literal>EXCLUDE</literal> constraint is:</phrase>
+
+{ <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> | ( <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> ) } [ <replaceable class="parameter">opclass</replaceable> ] [ ASC | DESC ] [ NULLS { FIRST | LAST } ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER TABLE</command> changes the definition of an existing table.
+ There are several subforms described below. Note that the lock level required
+ may differ for each subform. An <literal>ACCESS EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock is
+ acquired unless explicitly noted. When multiple subcommands are given, the
+ lock acquired will be the strictest one required by any subcommand.
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ADD COLUMN [ IF NOT EXISTS ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form adds a new column to the table, using the same syntax as
+ <link linkend="sql-createtable"><command>CREATE TABLE</command></link>. If <literal>IF NOT EXISTS</literal>
+ is specified and a column already exists with this name,
+ no error is thrown.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DROP COLUMN [ IF EXISTS ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form drops a column from a table. Indexes and
+ table constraints involving the column will be automatically
+ dropped as well.
+ Multivariate statistics referencing the dropped column will also be
+ removed if the removal of the column would cause the statistics to
+ contain data for only a single column.
+ You will need to say <literal>CASCADE</literal> if anything outside the table
+ depends on the column, for example, foreign key references or views.
+ If <literal>IF EXISTS</literal> is specified and the column
+ does not exist, no error is thrown. In this case a notice
+ is issued instead.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET DATA TYPE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form changes the type of a column of a table. Indexes and
+ simple table constraints involving the column will be automatically
+ converted to use the new column type by reparsing the originally
+ supplied expression.
+ The optional <literal>COLLATE</literal> clause specifies a collation
+ for the new column; if omitted, the collation is the default for the
+ new column type.
+ The optional <literal>USING</literal>
+ clause specifies how to compute the new column value from the old;
+ if omitted, the default conversion is the same as an assignment
+ cast from old data type to new. A <literal>USING</literal>
+ clause must be provided if there is no implicit or assignment
+ cast from old to new type.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET</literal>/<literal>DROP DEFAULT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These forms set or remove the default value for a column (where
+ removal is equivalent to setting the default value to NULL). The new
+ default value will only apply in subsequent <command>INSERT</command>
+ or <command>UPDATE</command> commands; it does not cause rows already
+ in the table to change.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET</literal>/<literal>DROP NOT NULL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These forms change whether a column is marked to allow null
+ values or to reject null values.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <literal>SET NOT NULL</literal> may only be applied to a column
+ provided none of the records in the table contain a
+ <literal>NULL</literal> value for the column. Ordinarily this is
+ checked during the <literal>ALTER TABLE</literal> by scanning the
+ entire table; however, if a valid <literal>CHECK</literal> constraint is
+ found which proves no <literal>NULL</literal> can exist, then the
+ table scan is skipped.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If this table is a partition, one cannot perform <literal>DROP NOT NULL</literal>
+ on a column if it is marked <literal>NOT NULL</literal> in the parent
+ table. To drop the <literal>NOT NULL</literal> constraint from all the
+ partitions, perform <literal>DROP NOT NULL</literal> on the parent
+ table. Even if there is no <literal>NOT NULL</literal> constraint on the
+ parent, such a constraint can still be added to individual partitions,
+ if desired; that is, the children can disallow nulls even if the parent
+ allows them, but not the other way around.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DROP EXPRESSION [ IF EXISTS ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form turns a stored generated column into a normal base column.
+ Existing data in the columns is retained, but future changes will no
+ longer apply the generation expression.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If <literal>DROP EXPRESSION IF EXISTS</literal> is specified and the
+ column is not a stored generated column, no error is thrown. In this
+ case a notice is issued instead.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ADD GENERATED { ALWAYS | BY DEFAULT } AS IDENTITY</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>SET GENERATED { ALWAYS | BY DEFAULT }</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>DROP IDENTITY [ IF EXISTS ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These forms change whether a column is an identity column or change the
+ generation attribute of an existing identity column.
+ See <link linkend="sql-createtable"><command>CREATE TABLE</command></link> for details.
+ Like <literal>SET DEFAULT</literal>, these forms only affect the
+ behavior of subsequent <command>INSERT</command>
+ and <command>UPDATE</command> commands; they do not cause rows
+ already in the table to change.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If <literal>DROP IDENTITY IF EXISTS</literal> is specified and the
+ column is not an identity column, no error is thrown. In this case a
+ notice is issued instead.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET <replaceable>sequence_option</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <term><literal>RESTART</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These forms alter the sequence that underlies an existing identity
+ column. <replaceable>sequence_option</replaceable> is an option
+ supported by <link linkend="sql-altersequence"><command>ALTER SEQUENCE</command></link> such
+ as <literal>INCREMENT BY</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET STATISTICS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form
+ sets the per-column statistics-gathering target for subsequent
+ <link linkend="sql-analyze"><command>ANALYZE</command></link> operations.
+ The target can be set in the range 0 to 10000; alternatively, set it
+ to -1 to revert to using the system default statistics
+ target (<xref linkend="guc-default-statistics-target"/>).
+ For more information on the use of statistics by the
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> query planner, refer to
+ <xref linkend="planner-stats"/>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>SET STATISTICS</literal> acquires a
+ <literal>SHARE UPDATE EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET ( <replaceable class="parameter">attribute_option</replaceable> = <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> [, ... ] )</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>RESET ( <replaceable class="parameter">attribute_option</replaceable> [, ... ] )</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form sets or resets per-attribute options. Currently, the only
+ defined per-attribute options are <literal>n_distinct</literal> and
+ <literal>n_distinct_inherited</literal>, which override the
+ number-of-distinct-values estimates made by subsequent
+ <link linkend="sql-analyze"><command>ANALYZE</command></link>
+ operations. <literal>n_distinct</literal> affects the statistics for the table
+ itself, while <literal>n_distinct_inherited</literal> affects the statistics
+ gathered for the table plus its inheritance children. When set to a
+ positive value, <command>ANALYZE</command> will assume that the column contains
+ exactly the specified number of distinct nonnull values. When set to a
+ negative value, which must be greater
+ than or equal to -1, <command>ANALYZE</command> will assume that the number of
+ distinct nonnull values in the column is linear in the size of the
+ table; the exact count is to be computed by multiplying the estimated
+ table size by the absolute value of the given number. For example,
+ a value of -1 implies that all values in the column are distinct, while
+ a value of -0.5 implies that each value appears twice on the average.
+ This can be useful when the size of the table changes over time, since
+ the multiplication by the number of rows in the table is not performed
+ until query planning time. Specify a value of 0 to revert to estimating
+ the number of distinct values normally. For more information on the use
+ of statistics by the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> query
+ planner, refer to <xref linkend="planner-stats"/>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Changing per-attribute options acquires a
+ <literal>SHARE UPDATE EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term>
+ <literal>SET STORAGE</literal>
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary>TOAST</primary>
+ <secondary>per-column storage settings</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form sets the storage mode for a column. This controls whether this
+ column is held inline or in a secondary <acronym>TOAST</acronym> table, and
+ whether the data
+ should be compressed or not. <literal>PLAIN</literal> must be used
+ for fixed-length values such as <type>integer</type> and is
+ inline, uncompressed. <literal>MAIN</literal> is for inline,
+ compressible data. <literal>EXTERNAL</literal> is for external,
+ uncompressed data, and <literal>EXTENDED</literal> is for external,
+ compressed data. <literal>EXTENDED</literal> is the default for most
+ data types that support non-<literal>PLAIN</literal> storage.
+ Use of <literal>EXTERNAL</literal> will make substring operations on
+ very large <type>text</type> and <type>bytea</type> values run faster,
+ at the penalty of increased storage space. Note that
+ <literal>SET STORAGE</literal> doesn't itself change anything in the table,
+ it just sets the strategy to be pursued during future table updates.
+ See <xref linkend="storage-toast"/> for more information.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term>
+ <literal>SET COMPRESSION <replaceable class="parameter">compression_method</replaceable></literal>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form sets the compression method for a column, determining how
+ values inserted in future will be compressed (if the storage mode
+ permits compression at all).
+ This does not cause the table to be rewritten, so existing data may still
+ be compressed with other compression methods. If the table is restored
+ with <application>pg_restore</application>, then all values are rewritten
+ with the configured compression method.
+ However, when data is inserted from another relation (for example,
+ by <command>INSERT ... SELECT</command>), values from the source table are
+ not necessarily detoasted, so any previously compressed data may retain
+ its existing compression method, rather than being recompressed with the
+ compression method of the target column.
+ The supported compression
+ methods are <literal>pglz</literal> and <literal>lz4</literal>.
+ (<literal>lz4</literal> is available only if <option>--with-lz4</option>
+ was used when building <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>.) In
+ addition, <replaceable class="parameter">compression_method</replaceable>
+ can be <literal>default</literal>, which selects the default behavior of
+ consulting the <xref linkend="guc-default-toast-compression"/> setting
+ at the time of data insertion to determine the method to use.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ADD <replaceable class="parameter">table_constraint</replaceable> [ NOT VALID ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form adds a new constraint to a table using the same constraint
+ syntax as <link linkend="sql-createtable"><command>CREATE TABLE</command></link>, plus the option <literal>NOT
+ VALID</literal>, which is currently only allowed for foreign key
+ and CHECK constraints.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Normally, this form will cause a scan of the table to verify that all
+ existing rows in the table satisfy the new constraint. But if
+ the <literal>NOT VALID</literal> option is used, this
+ potentially-lengthy scan is skipped. The constraint will still be
+ enforced against subsequent inserts or updates (that is, they'll fail
+ unless there is a matching row in the referenced table, in the case
+ of foreign keys, or they'll fail unless the new row matches the
+ specified check condition). But the
+ database will not assume that the constraint holds for all rows in
+ the table, until it is validated by using the <literal>VALIDATE
+ CONSTRAINT</literal> option.
+ See <xref linkend="sql-altertable-notes"/> below for more information
+ about using the <literal>NOT VALID</literal> option.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Although most forms of <literal>ADD
+ <replaceable class="parameter">table_constraint</replaceable></literal>
+ require an <literal>ACCESS EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock, <literal>ADD
+ FOREIGN KEY</literal> requires only a <literal>SHARE ROW
+ EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock. Note that <literal>ADD FOREIGN KEY</literal>
+ also acquires a <literal>SHARE ROW EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock on the
+ referenced table, in addition to the lock on the table on which the
+ constraint is declared.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Additional restrictions apply when unique or primary key constraints
+ are added to partitioned tables; see <link linkend="sql-createtable"><command>CREATE TABLE</command></link>.
+ Also, foreign key constraints on partitioned
+ tables may not be declared <literal>NOT VALID</literal> at present.
+ </para>
+
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ADD <replaceable class="parameter">table_constraint_using_index</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form adds a new <literal>PRIMARY KEY</literal> or <literal>UNIQUE</literal>
+ constraint to a table based on an existing unique index. All the
+ columns of the index will be included in the constraint.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The index cannot have expression columns nor be a partial index.
+ Also, it must be a b-tree index with default sort ordering. These
+ restrictions ensure that the index is equivalent to one that would be
+ built by a regular <literal>ADD PRIMARY KEY</literal> or <literal>ADD UNIQUE</literal>
+ command.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If <literal>PRIMARY KEY</literal> is specified, and the index's columns are not
+ already marked <literal>NOT NULL</literal>, then this command will attempt to
+ do <literal>ALTER COLUMN SET NOT NULL</literal> against each such column.
+ That requires a full table scan to verify the column(s) contain no
+ nulls. In all other cases, this is a fast operation.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a constraint name is provided then the index will be renamed to match
+ the constraint name. Otherwise the constraint will be named the same as
+ the index.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ After this command is executed, the index is <quote>owned</quote> by the
+ constraint, in the same way as if the index had been built by
+ a regular <literal>ADD PRIMARY KEY</literal> or <literal>ADD UNIQUE</literal>
+ command. In particular, dropping the constraint will make the index
+ disappear too.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This form is not currently supported on partitioned tables.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ Adding a constraint using an existing index can be helpful in
+ situations where a new constraint needs to be added without blocking
+ table updates for a long time. To do that, create the index using
+ <command>CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY</command>, and then install it as an
+ official constraint using this syntax. See the example below.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ALTER CONSTRAINT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form alters the attributes of a constraint that was previously
+ created. Currently only foreign key constraints may be altered.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>VALIDATE CONSTRAINT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form validates a foreign key or check constraint that was
+ previously created as <literal>NOT VALID</literal>, by scanning the
+ table to ensure there are no rows for which the constraint is not
+ satisfied. Nothing happens if the constraint is already marked valid.
+ (See <xref linkend="sql-altertable-notes"/> below for an explanation
+ of the usefulness of this command.)
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ This command acquires a <literal>SHARE UPDATE EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DROP CONSTRAINT [ IF EXISTS ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form drops the specified constraint on a table, along with
+ any index underlying the constraint.
+ If <literal>IF EXISTS</literal> is specified and the constraint
+ does not exist, no error is thrown. In this case a notice is issued instead.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DISABLE</literal>/<literal>ENABLE [ REPLICA | ALWAYS ] TRIGGER</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These forms configure the firing of trigger(s) belonging to the table.
+ A disabled trigger is still known to the system, but is not executed
+ when its triggering event occurs. For a deferred trigger, the enable
+ status is checked when the event occurs, not when the trigger function
+ is actually executed. One can disable or enable a single
+ trigger specified by name, or all triggers on the table, or only
+ user triggers (this option excludes internally generated constraint
+ triggers such as those that are used to implement foreign key
+ constraints or deferrable uniqueness and exclusion constraints).
+ Disabling or enabling internally generated constraint triggers
+ requires superuser privileges; it should be done with caution since
+ of course the integrity of the constraint cannot be guaranteed if the
+ triggers are not executed.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The trigger firing mechanism is also affected by the configuration
+ variable <xref linkend="guc-session-replication-role"/>. Simply enabled
+ triggers (the default) will fire when the replication role is <quote>origin</quote>
+ (the default) or <quote>local</quote>. Triggers configured as <literal>ENABLE
+ REPLICA</literal> will only fire if the session is in <quote>replica</quote>
+ mode, and triggers configured as <literal>ENABLE ALWAYS</literal> will
+ fire regardless of the current replication role.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The effect of this mechanism is that in the default configuration,
+ triggers do not fire on replicas. This is useful because if a trigger
+ is used on the origin to propagate data between tables, then the
+ replication system will also replicate the propagated data, and the
+ trigger should not fire a second time on the replica, because that would
+ lead to duplication. However, if a trigger is used for another purpose
+ such as creating external alerts, then it might be appropriate to set it
+ to <literal>ENABLE ALWAYS</literal> so that it is also fired on
+ replicas.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This command acquires a <literal>SHARE ROW EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DISABLE</literal>/<literal>ENABLE [ REPLICA | ALWAYS ] RULE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These forms configure the firing of rewrite rules belonging to the table.
+ A disabled rule is still known to the system, but is not applied
+ during query rewriting. The semantics are as for disabled/enabled
+ triggers. This configuration is ignored for <literal>ON SELECT</literal> rules, which
+ are always applied in order to keep views working even if the current
+ session is in a non-default replication role.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The rule firing mechanism is also affected by the configuration variable
+ <xref linkend="guc-session-replication-role"/>, analogous to triggers as
+ described above.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DISABLE</literal>/<literal>ENABLE ROW LEVEL SECURITY</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These forms control the application of row security policies belonging
+ to the table. If enabled and no policies exist for the table, then a
+ default-deny policy is applied. Note that policies can exist for a table
+ even if row-level security is disabled. In this case, the policies will
+ <emphasis>not</emphasis> be applied and the policies will be ignored.
+ See also
+ <link linkend="sql-createpolicy"><command>CREATE POLICY</command></link>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>NO FORCE</literal>/<literal>FORCE ROW LEVEL SECURITY</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These forms control the application of row security policies belonging
+ to the table when the user is the table owner. If enabled, row-level
+ security policies will be applied when the user is the table owner. If
+ disabled (the default) then row-level security will not be applied when
+ the user is the table owner.
+ See also
+ <link linkend="sql-createpolicy"><command>CREATE POLICY</command></link>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CLUSTER ON</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form selects the default index for future
+ <link linkend="sql-cluster"><command>CLUSTER</command></link>
+ operations. It does not actually re-cluster the table.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Changing cluster options acquires a <literal>SHARE UPDATE EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET WITHOUT CLUSTER</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form removes the most recently used
+ <link linkend="sql-cluster"><command>CLUSTER</command></link>
+ index specification from the table. This affects
+ future cluster operations that don't specify an index.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Changing cluster options acquires a <literal>SHARE UPDATE EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET WITHOUT OIDS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Backward-compatible syntax for removing the <literal>oid</literal>
+ system column. As <literal>oid</literal> system columns cannot be
+ added anymore, this never has an effect.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET TABLESPACE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form changes the table's tablespace to the specified tablespace and
+ moves the data file(s) associated with the table to the new tablespace.
+ Indexes on the table, if any, are not moved; but they can be moved
+ separately with additional <literal>SET TABLESPACE</literal> commands.
+ When applied to a partitioned table, nothing is moved, but any
+ partitions created afterwards with
+ <command>CREATE TABLE PARTITION OF</command> will use that tablespace,
+ unless overridden by a <literal>TABLESPACE</literal> clause.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ All tables in the current database in a tablespace can be moved by using
+ the <literal>ALL IN TABLESPACE</literal> form, which will lock all tables
+ to be moved first and then move each one. This form also supports
+ <literal>OWNED BY</literal>, which will only move tables owned by the
+ roles specified. If the <literal>NOWAIT</literal> option is specified
+ then the command will fail if it is unable to acquire all of the locks
+ required immediately. Note that system catalogs are not moved by this
+ command; use <command>ALTER DATABASE</command> or explicit
+ <command>ALTER TABLE</command> invocations instead if desired. The
+ <literal>information_schema</literal> relations are not considered part
+ of the system catalogs and will be moved.
+ See also
+ <link linkend="sql-createtablespace"><command>CREATE TABLESPACE</command></link>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET { LOGGED | UNLOGGED }</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form changes the table from unlogged to logged or vice-versa
+ (see <xref linkend="sql-createtable-unlogged"/>). It cannot be applied
+ to a temporary table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET ( <replaceable class="parameter">storage_parameter</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>] [, ... ] )</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form changes one or more storage parameters for the table. See
+ <xref linkend="sql-createtable-storage-parameters"/> in the
+ <link linkend="sql-createtable"><command>CREATE TABLE</command></link> documentation
+ for details on the available parameters. Note that the table contents
+ will not be modified immediately by this command; depending on the
+ parameter you might need to rewrite the table to get the desired effects.
+ That can be done with <link linkend="sql-vacuum"><command>VACUUM
+ FULL</command></link>, <link linkend="sql-cluster"><command>CLUSTER</command></link> or one of the forms
+ of <command>ALTER TABLE</command> that forces a table rewrite.
+ For planner related parameters, changes will take effect from the next
+ time the table is locked so currently executing queries will not be
+ affected.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <literal>SHARE UPDATE EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock will be taken for
+ fillfactor, toast and autovacuum storage parameters, as well as the
+ planner parameter <varname>parallel_workers</varname>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESET ( <replaceable class="parameter">storage_parameter</replaceable> [, ... ] )</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form resets one or more storage parameters to their
+ defaults. As with <literal>SET</literal>, a table rewrite might be
+ needed to update the table entirely.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>INHERIT <replaceable class="parameter">parent_table</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form adds the target table as a new child of the specified parent
+ table. Subsequently, queries against the parent will include records
+ of the target table. To be added as a child, the target table must
+ already contain all the same columns as the parent (it could have
+ additional columns, too). The columns must have matching data types,
+ and if they have <literal>NOT NULL</literal> constraints in the parent
+ then they must also have <literal>NOT NULL</literal> constraints in the
+ child.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ There must also be matching child-table constraints for all
+ <literal>CHECK</literal> constraints of the parent, except those
+ marked non-inheritable (that is, created with <literal>ALTER TABLE ... ADD CONSTRAINT ... NO INHERIT</literal>)
+ in the parent, which are ignored; all child-table constraints matched
+ must not be marked non-inheritable.
+ Currently
+ <literal>UNIQUE</literal>, <literal>PRIMARY KEY</literal>, and
+ <literal>FOREIGN KEY</literal> constraints are not considered, but
+ this might change in the future.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>NO INHERIT <replaceable class="parameter">parent_table</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form removes the target table from the list of children of the
+ specified parent table.
+ Queries against the parent table will no longer include records drawn
+ from the target table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>OF <replaceable class="parameter">type_name</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form links the table to a composite type as though <command>CREATE
+ TABLE OF</command> had formed it. The table's list of column names and types
+ must precisely match that of the composite type. The table must
+ not inherit from any other table. These restrictions ensure
+ that <command>CREATE TABLE OF</command> would permit an equivalent table
+ definition.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>NOT OF</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form dissociates a typed table from its type.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>OWNER TO</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form changes the owner of the table, sequence, view, materialized view,
+ or foreign table to the specified user.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="sql-altertable-replica-identity">
+ <term><literal>REPLICA IDENTITY</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form changes the information which is written to the write-ahead log
+ to identify rows which are updated or deleted.
+ In most cases, the old value of each column is only logged if it differs
+ from the new value; however, if the old value is stored externally, it is
+ always logged regardless of whether it changed.
+ This option has no effect except when logical replication is in use.
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DEFAULT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Records the old values of the columns of the primary key, if any.
+ This is the default for non-system tables.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>USING INDEX <replaceable class="parameter">index_name</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Records the old values of the columns covered by the named index,
+ that must be unique, not partial, not deferrable, and include only
+ columns marked <literal>NOT NULL</literal>. If this index is
+ dropped, the behavior is the same as <literal>NOTHING</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>FULL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Records the old values of all columns in the row.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>NOTHING</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Records no information about the old row. This is the default for
+ system tables.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RENAME</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>RENAME</literal> forms change the name of a table
+ (or an index, sequence, view, materialized view, or foreign table), the
+ name of an individual column in a table, or the name of a constraint of
+ the table. When renaming a constraint that has an underlying index,
+ the index is renamed as well.
+ There is no effect on the stored data.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET SCHEMA</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form moves the table into another schema. Associated indexes,
+ constraints, and sequences owned by table columns are moved as well.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="sql-altertable-attach-partition">
+ <term><literal>ATTACH PARTITION <replaceable class="parameter">partition_name</replaceable> { FOR VALUES <replaceable class="parameter">partition_bound_spec</replaceable> | DEFAULT }</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form attaches an existing table (which might itself be partitioned)
+ as a partition of the target table. The table can be attached
+ as a partition for specific values using <literal>FOR VALUES</literal>
+ or as a default partition by using <literal>DEFAULT</literal>.
+ For each index in the target table, a corresponding
+ one will be created in the attached table; or, if an equivalent
+ index already exists, it will be attached to the target table's index,
+ as if <command>ALTER INDEX ATTACH PARTITION</command> had been executed.
+ Note that if the existing table is a foreign table, it is currently not
+ allowed to attach the table as a partition of the target table if there
+ are <literal>UNIQUE</literal> indexes on the target table. (See also
+ <xref linkend="sql-createforeigntable"/>.) For each user-defined
+ row-level trigger that exists in the target table, a corresponding one
+ is created in the attached table.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A partition using <literal>FOR VALUES</literal> uses same syntax for
+ <replaceable class="parameter">partition_bound_spec</replaceable> as
+ <link linkend="sql-createtable"><command>CREATE TABLE</command></link>. The partition bound specification
+ must correspond to the partitioning strategy and partition key of the
+ target table. The table to be attached must have all the same columns
+ as the target table and no more; moreover, the column types must also
+ match. Also, it must have all the <literal>NOT NULL</literal> and
+ <literal>CHECK</literal> constraints of the target table. Currently
+ <literal>FOREIGN KEY</literal> constraints are not considered.
+ <literal>UNIQUE</literal> and <literal>PRIMARY KEY</literal> constraints
+ from the parent table will be created in the partition, if they don't
+ already exist.
+ If any of the <literal>CHECK</literal> constraints of the table being
+ attached are marked <literal>NO INHERIT</literal>, the command will fail;
+ such constraints must be recreated without the
+ <literal>NO INHERIT</literal> clause.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the new partition is a regular table, a full table scan is performed
+ to check that existing rows in the table do not violate the partition
+ constraint. It is possible to avoid this scan by adding a valid
+ <literal>CHECK</literal> constraint to the table that allows only
+ rows satisfying the desired partition constraint before running this
+ command. The <literal>CHECK</literal> constraint will be used to
+ determine that the table need not be scanned to validate the partition
+ constraint. This does not work, however, if any of the partition keys
+ is an expression and the partition does not accept
+ <literal>NULL</literal> values. If attaching a list partition that will
+ not accept <literal>NULL</literal> values, also add
+ <literal>NOT NULL</literal> constraint to the partition key column,
+ unless it's an expression.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the new partition is a foreign table, nothing is done to verify
+ that all the rows in the foreign table obey the partition constraint.
+ (See the discussion in <xref linkend="sql-createforeigntable"/> about
+ constraints on the foreign table.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When a table has a default partition, defining a new partition changes
+ the partition constraint for the default partition. The default
+ partition can't contain any rows that would need to be moved to the new
+ partition, and will be scanned to verify that none are present. This
+ scan, like the scan of the new partition, can be avoided if an
+ appropriate <literal>CHECK</literal> constraint is present. Also like
+ the scan of the new partition, it is always skipped when the default
+ partition is a foreign table.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Attaching a partition acquires a
+ <literal>SHARE UPDATE EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock on the parent table,
+ in addition to the <literal>ACCESS EXCLUSIVE</literal> locks on the table
+ being attached and on the default partition (if any).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Further locks must also be held on all sub-partitions if the table being
+ attached is itself a partitioned table. Likewise if the default
+ partition is itself a partitioned table. The locking of the
+ sub-partitions can be avoided by adding a <literal>CHECK</literal>
+ constraint as described in
+ <xref linkend="ddl-partitioning-declarative-maintenance"/>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="sql-altertable-detach-partition">
+ <term><literal>DETACH PARTITION <replaceable class="parameter">partition_name</replaceable> [ CONCURRENTLY | FINALIZE ]</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form detaches the specified partition of the target table. The detached
+ partition continues to exist as a standalone table, but no longer has any
+ ties to the table from which it was detached. Any indexes that were
+ attached to the target table's indexes are detached. Any triggers that
+ were created as clones of those in the target table are removed.
+ <literal>SHARE</literal> lock is obtained on any tables that reference
+ this partitioned table in foreign key constraints.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ If <literal>CONCURRENTLY</literal> is specified, it runs using a reduced
+ lock level to avoid blocking other sessions that might be accessing the
+ partitioned table. In this mode, two transactions are used internally.
+ During the first transaction, a <literal>SHARE UPDATE EXCLUSIVE</literal>
+ lock is taken on both parent table and partition, and the partition is
+ marked as undergoing detach; at that point, the transaction is committed
+ and all other transactions using the partitioned table are waited for.
+ Once all those transactions have completed, the second transaction
+ acquires <literal>SHARE UPDATE EXCLUSIVE</literal> on the partitioned
+ table and <literal>ACCESS EXCLUSIVE</literal> on the partition,
+ and the detach process completes. A <literal>CHECK</literal> constraint
+ that duplicates the partition constraint is added to the partition.
+ <literal>CONCURRENTLY</literal> cannot be run in a transaction block and
+ is not allowed if the partitioned table contains a default partition.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ If <literal>FINALIZE</literal> is specified, a previous
+ <literal>DETACH CONCURRENTLY</literal> invocation that was canceled or
+ interrupted is completed.
+ At most one partition in a partitioned table can be pending detach at
+ a time.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ All the forms of ALTER TABLE that act on a single table, except
+ <literal>RENAME</literal>, <literal>SET SCHEMA</literal>,
+ <literal>ATTACH PARTITION</literal>, and
+ <literal>DETACH PARTITION</literal> can be combined into
+ a list of multiple alterations to be applied together. For example, it
+ is possible to add several columns and/or alter the type of several
+ columns in a single command. This is particularly useful with large
+ tables, since only one pass over the table need be made.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must own the table to use <command>ALTER TABLE</command>.
+ To change the schema or tablespace of a table, you must also have
+ <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on the new schema or tablespace.
+ To add the table as a new child of a parent table, you must own the parent
+ table as well. Also, to attach a table as a new partition of the table,
+ you must own the table being attached.
+ To alter the owner, you must also be a direct or indirect member of the new
+ owning role, and that role must have <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on
+ the table's schema. (These restrictions enforce that altering the owner
+ doesn't do anything you couldn't do by dropping and recreating the table.
+ However, a superuser can alter ownership of any table anyway.)
+ To add a column or alter a column type or use the <literal>OF</literal>
+ clause, you must also have <literal>USAGE</literal> privilege on the data
+ type.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the table does not exist. A notice is issued
+ in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing table to
+ alter. If <literal>ONLY</literal> is specified before the table name, only
+ that table is altered. If <literal>ONLY</literal> is not specified, the table
+ and all its descendant tables (if any) are altered. Optionally,
+ <literal>*</literal> can be specified after the table name to explicitly
+ indicate that descendant tables are included.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Name of a new or existing column.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_column_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ New name for an existing column.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ New name for the table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">data_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Data type of the new column, or new data type for an existing
+ column.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">table_constraint</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ New table constraint for the table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">constraint_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Name of a new or existing constraint.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the dropped column
+ or constraint (for example, views referencing the column),
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the column or constraint if there are any dependent
+ objects. This is the default behavior.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">trigger_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Name of a single trigger to disable or enable.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ALL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Disable or enable all triggers belonging to the table.
+ (This requires superuser privilege if any of the triggers are
+ internally generated constraint triggers such as those that are used
+ to implement foreign key constraints or deferrable uniqueness and
+ exclusion constraints.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>USER</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Disable or enable all triggers belonging to the table except for
+ internally generated constraint triggers such as those that are used
+ to implement foreign key constraints or deferrable uniqueness and
+ exclusion constraints.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">index_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an existing index.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">storage_parameter</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a table storage parameter.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new value for a table storage parameter.
+ This might be a number or a word depending on the parameter.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">parent_table</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A parent table to associate or de-associate with this table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The user name of the new owner of the table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_tablespace</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the tablespace to which the table will be moved.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the schema to which the table will be moved.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">partition_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the table to attach as a new partition or to detach from this table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">partition_bound_spec</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The partition bound specification for a new partition. Refer to
+ <xref linkend="sql-createtable"/> for more details on the syntax of the same.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-altertable-notes" xreflabel="Notes">
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The key word <literal>COLUMN</literal> is noise and can be omitted.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When a column is added with <literal>ADD COLUMN</literal> and a
+ non-volatile <literal>DEFAULT</literal> is specified, the default is
+ evaluated at the time of the statement and the result stored in the
+ table's metadata. That value will be used for the column for all existing
+ rows. If no <literal>DEFAULT</literal> is specified, NULL is used. In
+ neither case is a rewrite of the table required.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Adding a column with a volatile <literal>DEFAULT</literal> or
+ changing the type of an existing column will require the entire table and
+ its indexes to be rewritten. As an exception, when changing the type of an
+ existing column, if the <literal>USING</literal> clause does not change
+ the column contents and the old type is either binary coercible to the new
+ type or an unconstrained domain over the new type, a table rewrite is not
+ needed; but any indexes on the affected columns must still be rebuilt.
+ Table and/or index rebuilds may take a
+ significant amount of time for a large table; and will temporarily require
+ as much as double the disk space.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Adding a <literal>CHECK</literal> or <literal>NOT NULL</literal> constraint requires
+ scanning the table to verify that existing rows meet the constraint,
+ but does not require a table rewrite.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Similarly, when attaching a new partition it may be scanned to verify that
+ existing rows meet the partition constraint.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The main reason for providing the option to specify multiple changes
+ in a single <command>ALTER TABLE</command> is that multiple table scans or
+ rewrites can thereby be combined into a single pass over the table.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Scanning a large table to verify a new foreign key or check constraint
+ can take a long time, and other updates to the table are locked out
+ until the <command>ALTER TABLE ADD CONSTRAINT</command> command is
+ committed. The main purpose of the <literal>NOT VALID</literal>
+ constraint option is to reduce the impact of adding a constraint on
+ concurrent updates. With <literal>NOT VALID</literal>,
+ the <command>ADD CONSTRAINT</command> command does not scan the table
+ and can be committed immediately. After that, a <literal>VALIDATE
+ CONSTRAINT</literal> command can be issued to verify that existing rows
+ satisfy the constraint. The validation step does not need to lock out
+ concurrent updates, since it knows that other transactions will be
+ enforcing the constraint for rows that they insert or update; only
+ pre-existing rows need to be checked. Hence, validation acquires only
+ a <literal>SHARE UPDATE EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock on the table being
+ altered. (If the constraint is a foreign key then a <literal>ROW
+ SHARE</literal> lock is also required on the table referenced by the
+ constraint.) In addition to improving concurrency, it can be useful to
+ use <literal>NOT VALID</literal> and <literal>VALIDATE
+ CONSTRAINT</literal> in cases where the table is known to contain
+ pre-existing violations. Once the constraint is in place, no new
+ violations can be inserted, and the existing problems can be corrected
+ at leisure until <literal>VALIDATE CONSTRAINT</literal> finally
+ succeeds.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>DROP COLUMN</literal> form does not physically remove
+ the column, but simply makes it invisible to SQL operations. Subsequent
+ insert and update operations in the table will store a null value for the
+ column. Thus, dropping a column is quick but it will not immediately
+ reduce the on-disk size of your table, as the space occupied
+ by the dropped column is not reclaimed. The space will be
+ reclaimed over time as existing rows are updated.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To force immediate reclamation of space occupied by a dropped column,
+ you can execute one of the forms of <command>ALTER TABLE</command> that
+ performs a rewrite of the whole table. This results in reconstructing
+ each row with the dropped column replaced by a null value.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The rewriting forms of <command>ALTER TABLE</command> are not MVCC-safe.
+ After a table rewrite, the table will appear empty to concurrent
+ transactions, if they are using a snapshot taken before the rewrite
+ occurred. See <xref linkend="mvcc-caveats"/> for more details.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>USING</literal> option of <literal>SET DATA TYPE</literal> can actually
+ specify any expression involving the old values of the row; that is, it
+ can refer to other columns as well as the one being converted. This allows
+ very general conversions to be done with the <literal>SET DATA TYPE</literal>
+ syntax. Because of this flexibility, the <literal>USING</literal>
+ expression is not applied to the column's default value (if any); the
+ result might not be a constant expression as required for a default.
+ This means that when there is no implicit or assignment cast from old to
+ new type, <literal>SET DATA TYPE</literal> might fail to convert the default even
+ though a <literal>USING</literal> clause is supplied. In such cases,
+ drop the default with <literal>DROP DEFAULT</literal>, perform the <literal>ALTER
+ TYPE</literal>, and then use <literal>SET DEFAULT</literal> to add a suitable new
+ default. Similar considerations apply to indexes and constraints involving
+ the column.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a table has any descendant tables, it is not permitted to add,
+ rename, or change the type of a column in the parent table without doing
+ the same to the descendants. This ensures that the descendants always
+ have columns matching the parent. Similarly, a <literal>CHECK</literal>
+ constraint cannot be renamed in the parent without also renaming it in
+ all descendants, so that <literal>CHECK</literal> constraints also match
+ between the parent and its descendants. (That restriction does not apply
+ to index-based constraints, however.)
+ Also, because selecting from the parent also selects from its descendants,
+ a constraint on the parent cannot be marked valid unless it is also marked
+ valid for those descendants. In all of these cases, <command>ALTER TABLE
+ ONLY</command> will be rejected.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A recursive <literal>DROP COLUMN</literal> operation will remove a
+ descendant table's column only if the descendant does not inherit
+ that column from any other parents and never had an independent
+ definition of the column. A nonrecursive <literal>DROP
+ COLUMN</literal> (i.e., <command>ALTER TABLE ONLY ... DROP
+ COLUMN</command>) never removes any descendant columns, but
+ instead marks them as independently defined rather than inherited.
+ A nonrecursive <literal>DROP COLUMN</literal> command will fail for a
+ partitioned table, because all partitions of a table must have the same
+ columns as the partitioning root.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The actions for identity columns (<literal>ADD
+ GENERATED</literal>, <literal>SET</literal> etc., <literal>DROP
+ IDENTITY</literal>), as well as the actions
+ <literal>TRIGGER</literal>, <literal>CLUSTER</literal>, <literal>OWNER</literal>,
+ and <literal>TABLESPACE</literal> never recurse to descendant tables;
+ that is, they always act as though <literal>ONLY</literal> were specified.
+ Adding a constraint recurses only for <literal>CHECK</literal> constraints
+ that are not marked <literal>NO INHERIT</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Changing any part of a system catalog table is not permitted.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Refer to <xref linkend="sql-createtable"/> for a further description of valid
+ parameters. <xref linkend="ddl"/> has further information on
+ inheritance.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To add a column of type <type>varchar</type> to a table:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TABLE distributors ADD COLUMN address varchar(30);
+</programlisting>
+ That will cause all existing rows in the table to be filled with null
+ values for the new column.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To add a column with a non-null default:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TABLE measurements
+ ADD COLUMN mtime timestamp with time zone DEFAULT now();
+</programlisting>
+ Existing rows will be filled with the current time as the value of the
+ new column, and then new rows will receive the time of their insertion.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To add a column and fill it with a value different from the default to
+ be used later:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TABLE transactions
+ ADD COLUMN status varchar(30) DEFAULT 'old',
+ ALTER COLUMN status SET default 'current';
+</programlisting>
+ Existing rows will be filled with <literal>old</literal>, but then
+ the default for subsequent commands will be <literal>current</literal>.
+ The effects are the same as if the two sub-commands had been issued
+ in separate <command>ALTER TABLE</command> commands.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To drop a column from a table:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TABLE distributors DROP COLUMN address RESTRICT;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To change the types of two existing columns in one operation:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TABLE distributors
+ ALTER COLUMN address TYPE varchar(80),
+ ALTER COLUMN name TYPE varchar(100);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To change an integer column containing Unix timestamps to <type>timestamp
+ with time zone</type> via a <literal>USING</literal> clause:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TABLE foo
+ ALTER COLUMN foo_timestamp SET DATA TYPE timestamp with time zone
+ USING
+ timestamp with time zone 'epoch' + foo_timestamp * interval '1 second';
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The same, when the column has a default expression that won't automatically
+ cast to the new data type:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TABLE foo
+ ALTER COLUMN foo_timestamp DROP DEFAULT,
+ ALTER COLUMN foo_timestamp TYPE timestamp with time zone
+ USING
+ timestamp with time zone 'epoch' + foo_timestamp * interval '1 second',
+ ALTER COLUMN foo_timestamp SET DEFAULT now();
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To rename an existing column:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TABLE distributors RENAME COLUMN address TO city;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To rename an existing table:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TABLE distributors RENAME TO suppliers;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To rename an existing constraint:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TABLE distributors RENAME CONSTRAINT zipchk TO zip_check;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To add a not-null constraint to a column:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TABLE distributors ALTER COLUMN street SET NOT NULL;
+</programlisting>
+ To remove a not-null constraint from a column:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TABLE distributors ALTER COLUMN street DROP NOT NULL;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To add a check constraint to a table and all its children:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TABLE distributors ADD CONSTRAINT zipchk CHECK (char_length(zipcode) = 5);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To add a check constraint only to a table and not to its children:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TABLE distributors ADD CONSTRAINT zipchk CHECK (char_length(zipcode) = 5) NO INHERIT;
+</programlisting>
+ (The check constraint will not be inherited by future children, either.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To remove a check constraint from a table and all its children:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TABLE distributors DROP CONSTRAINT zipchk;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To remove a check constraint from one table only:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TABLE ONLY distributors DROP CONSTRAINT zipchk;
+</programlisting>
+ (The check constraint remains in place for any child tables.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To add a foreign key constraint to a table:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TABLE distributors ADD CONSTRAINT distfk FOREIGN KEY (address) REFERENCES addresses (address);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To add a foreign key constraint to a table with the least impact on other work:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TABLE distributors ADD CONSTRAINT distfk FOREIGN KEY (address) REFERENCES addresses (address) NOT VALID;
+ALTER TABLE distributors VALIDATE CONSTRAINT distfk;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To add a (multicolumn) unique constraint to a table:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TABLE distributors ADD CONSTRAINT dist_id_zipcode_key UNIQUE (dist_id, zipcode);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To add an automatically named primary key constraint to a table, noting
+ that a table can only ever have one primary key:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TABLE distributors ADD PRIMARY KEY (dist_id);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To move a table to a different tablespace:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TABLE distributors SET TABLESPACE fasttablespace;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To move a table to a different schema:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TABLE myschema.distributors SET SCHEMA yourschema;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To recreate a primary key constraint, without blocking updates while the
+ index is rebuilt:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE UNIQUE INDEX CONCURRENTLY dist_id_temp_idx ON distributors (dist_id);
+ALTER TABLE distributors DROP CONSTRAINT distributors_pkey,
+ ADD CONSTRAINT distributors_pkey PRIMARY KEY USING INDEX dist_id_temp_idx;
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ <para>
+ To attach a partition to a range-partitioned table:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TABLE measurement
+ ATTACH PARTITION measurement_y2016m07 FOR VALUES FROM ('2016-07-01') TO ('2016-08-01');
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ <para>
+ To attach a partition to a list-partitioned table:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TABLE cities
+ ATTACH PARTITION cities_ab FOR VALUES IN ('a', 'b');
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ <para>
+ To attach a partition to a hash-partitioned table:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TABLE orders
+ ATTACH PARTITION orders_p4 FOR VALUES WITH (MODULUS 4, REMAINDER 3);
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ <para>
+ To attach a default partition to a partitioned table:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TABLE cities
+ ATTACH PARTITION cities_partdef DEFAULT;
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ <para>
+ To detach a partition from a partitioned table:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TABLE measurement
+ DETACH PARTITION measurement_y2015m12;
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The forms <literal>ADD</literal> (without <literal>USING INDEX</literal>),
+ <literal>DROP [COLUMN]</literal>, <literal>DROP IDENTITY</literal>, <literal>RESTART</literal>,
+ <literal>SET DEFAULT</literal>, <literal>SET DATA TYPE</literal> (without <literal>USING</literal>),
+ <literal>SET GENERATED</literal>, and <literal>SET <replaceable>sequence_option</replaceable></literal>
+ conform with the SQL standard. The other forms are
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extensions of the SQL standard.
+ Also, the ability to specify more than one manipulation in a single
+ <command>ALTER TABLE</command> command is an extension.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER TABLE DROP COLUMN</command> can be used to drop the only
+ column of a table, leaving a zero-column table. This is an
+ extension of SQL, which disallows zero-column tables.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createtable"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_tablespace.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_tablespace.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6de8074
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_tablespace.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,140 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_tablespace.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-altertablespace">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-altertablespace">
+ <primary>ALTER TABLESPACE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER TABLESPACE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER TABLESPACE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of a tablespace</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER TABLESPACE <replaceable>name</replaceable> RENAME TO <replaceable>new_name</replaceable>
+ALTER TABLESPACE <replaceable>name</replaceable> OWNER TO { <replaceable>new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+ALTER TABLESPACE <replaceable>name</replaceable> SET ( <replaceable class="parameter">tablespace_option</replaceable> = <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> [, ... ] )
+ALTER TABLESPACE <replaceable>name</replaceable> RESET ( <replaceable class="parameter">tablespace_option</replaceable> [, ... ] )
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER TABLESPACE</command> can be used to change the definition of
+ a tablespace.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must own the tablespace to change the definition of a tablespace.
+ To alter the owner, you must also be a direct or indirect member of the new
+ owning role.
+ (Note that superusers have these privileges automatically.)
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an existing tablespace.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name of the tablespace. The new name cannot
+ begin with <literal>pg_</literal>, as such names
+ are reserved for system tablespaces.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new owner of the tablespace.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">tablespace_option</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A tablespace parameter to be set or reset. Currently, the only
+ available parameters are <varname>seq_page_cost</varname>,
+ <varname>random_page_cost</varname>, <varname>effective_io_concurrency</varname>
+ and <varname>maintenance_io_concurrency</varname>.
+ Setting these values for a particular tablespace will override the
+ planner's usual estimate of the cost of reading pages from tables in
+ that tablespace, and the executor's prefetching behavior, as established
+ by the configuration parameters of the
+ same name (see <xref linkend="guc-seq-page-cost"/>,
+ <xref linkend="guc-random-page-cost"/>,
+ <xref linkend="guc-effective-io-concurrency"/>,
+ <xref linkend="guc-maintenance-io-concurrency"/>). This may be useful if
+ one tablespace is located on a disk which is faster or slower than the
+ remainder of the I/O subsystem.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Rename tablespace <literal>index_space</literal> to <literal>fast_raid</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TABLESPACE index_space RENAME TO fast_raid;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Change the owner of tablespace <literal>index_space</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TABLESPACE index_space OWNER TO mary;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>ALTER TABLESPACE</command> statement in
+ the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createtablespace"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droptablespace"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_trigger.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_trigger.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..43a7da4
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_trigger.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,135 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_trigger.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-altertrigger">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-altertrigger">
+ <primary>ALTER TRIGGER</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER TRIGGER</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER TRIGGER</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of a trigger</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER TRIGGER <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> ON <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> RENAME TO <replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable>
+ALTER TRIGGER <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> ON <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [ NO ] DEPENDS ON EXTENSION <replaceable class="parameter">extension_name</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER TRIGGER</command> changes properties of an existing
+ trigger. The <literal>RENAME</literal> clause changes the name of
+ the given trigger without otherwise changing the trigger
+ definition. The <literal>DEPENDS ON EXTENSION</literal> clause marks
+ the trigger as dependent on an extension, such that if the extension is
+ dropped, the trigger will automatically be dropped as well.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must own the table on which the trigger acts to be allowed to change its properties.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an existing trigger to alter.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the table on which this trigger acts.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name for the trigger.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">extension_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the extension that the trigger is to depend on (or no longer
+ dependent on, if <literal>NO</literal> is specified). A trigger
+ that's marked as dependent on an extension is automatically dropped when
+ the extension is dropped.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The ability to temporarily enable or disable a trigger is provided by
+ <link linkend="sql-altertable"><command>ALTER TABLE</command></link>, not by
+ <command>ALTER TRIGGER</command>, because <command>ALTER TRIGGER</command> has no
+ convenient way to express the option of enabling or disabling all of
+ a table's triggers at once.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To rename an existing trigger:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TRIGGER emp_stamp ON emp RENAME TO emp_track_chgs;
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ <para>
+ To mark a trigger as being dependent on an extension:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TRIGGER emp_stamp ON emp DEPENDS ON EXTENSION emplib;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER TRIGGER</command> is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension of the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altertable"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_tsconfig.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_tsconfig.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8fafcd3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_tsconfig.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,189 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_tsconfig.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-altertsconfig">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-altertsconfig">
+ <primary>ALTER TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of a text search configuration</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION <replaceable>name</replaceable>
+ ADD MAPPING FOR <replaceable class="parameter">token_type</replaceable> [, ... ] WITH <replaceable class="parameter">dictionary_name</replaceable> [, ... ]
+ALTER TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION <replaceable>name</replaceable>
+ ALTER MAPPING FOR <replaceable class="parameter">token_type</replaceable> [, ... ] WITH <replaceable class="parameter">dictionary_name</replaceable> [, ... ]
+ALTER TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION <replaceable>name</replaceable>
+ ALTER MAPPING REPLACE <replaceable class="parameter">old_dictionary</replaceable> WITH <replaceable class="parameter">new_dictionary</replaceable>
+ALTER TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION <replaceable>name</replaceable>
+ ALTER MAPPING FOR <replaceable class="parameter">token_type</replaceable> [, ... ] REPLACE <replaceable class="parameter">old_dictionary</replaceable> WITH <replaceable class="parameter">new_dictionary</replaceable>
+ALTER TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION <replaceable>name</replaceable>
+ DROP MAPPING [ IF EXISTS ] FOR <replaceable class="parameter">token_type</replaceable> [, ... ]
+ALTER TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION <replaceable>name</replaceable> RENAME TO <replaceable>new_name</replaceable>
+ALTER TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION <replaceable>name</replaceable> OWNER TO { <replaceable>new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+ALTER TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION <replaceable>name</replaceable> SET SCHEMA <replaceable>new_schema</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION</command> changes the definition of
+ a text search configuration. You can modify
+ its mappings from token types to dictionaries,
+ or change the configuration's name or owner.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must be the owner of the configuration to use
+ <command>ALTER TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION</command>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing text search
+ configuration.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">token_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a token type that is emitted by the configuration's
+ parser.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">dictionary_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a text search dictionary to be consulted for the
+ specified token type(s). If multiple dictionaries are listed,
+ they are consulted in the specified order.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">old_dictionary</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a text search dictionary to be replaced in the mapping.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_dictionary</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a text search dictionary to be substituted for
+ <replaceable class="parameter">old_dictionary</replaceable>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name of the text search configuration.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new owner of the text search configuration.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new schema for the text search configuration.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>ADD MAPPING FOR</literal> form installs a list of dictionaries to be
+ consulted for the specified token type(s); it is an error if there is
+ already a mapping for any of the token types.
+ The <literal>ALTER MAPPING FOR</literal> form does the same, but first removing
+ any existing mapping for those token types.
+ The <literal>ALTER MAPPING REPLACE</literal> forms substitute <replaceable
+ class="parameter">new_dictionary</replaceable> for <replaceable
+ class="parameter">old_dictionary</replaceable> anywhere the latter appears.
+ This is done for only the specified token types when <literal>FOR</literal>
+ appears, or for all mappings of the configuration when it doesn't.
+ The <literal>DROP MAPPING</literal> form removes all dictionaries for the
+ specified token type(s), causing tokens of those types to be ignored
+ by the text search configuration. It is an error if there is no mapping
+ for the token types, unless <literal>IF EXISTS</literal> appears.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The following example replaces the <literal>english</literal> dictionary
+ with the <literal>swedish</literal> dictionary anywhere that <literal>english</literal>
+ is used within <literal>my_config</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION my_config
+ ALTER MAPPING REPLACE english WITH swedish;
+</programlisting>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>ALTER TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION</command> statement in
+ the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createtsconfig"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droptsconfig"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_tsdictionary.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_tsdictionary.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d1923ef
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_tsdictionary.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,170 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_tsdictionary.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-altertsdictionary">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-altertsdictionary">
+ <primary>ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of a text search dictionary</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY <replaceable>name</replaceable> (
+ <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> [ = <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> ] [, ... ]
+)
+ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY <replaceable>name</replaceable> RENAME TO <replaceable>new_name</replaceable>
+ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY <replaceable>name</replaceable> OWNER TO { <replaceable>new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY <replaceable>name</replaceable> SET SCHEMA <replaceable>new_schema</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY</command> changes the definition of
+ a text search dictionary. You can change the dictionary's
+ template-specific options, or change the dictionary's name or owner.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must be the owner of the dictionary to use
+ <command>ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY</command>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing text search
+ dictionary.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a template-specific option to be set for this dictionary.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new value to use for a template-specific option.
+ If the equal sign and value are omitted, then any previous
+ setting for the option is removed from the dictionary,
+ allowing the default to be used.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name of the text search dictionary.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new owner of the text search dictionary.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new schema for the text search dictionary.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ Template-specific options can appear in any order.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The following example command changes the stopword list
+ for a Snowball-based dictionary. Other parameters remain unchanged.
+ </para>
+
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY my_dict ( StopWords = newrussian );
+</programlisting>
+
+ <para>
+ The following example command changes the language option to <literal>dutch</literal>,
+ and removes the stopword option entirely.
+ </para>
+
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY my_dict ( language = dutch, StopWords );
+</programlisting>
+
+ <para>
+ The following example command <quote>updates</quote> the dictionary's
+ definition without actually changing anything.
+
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY my_dict ( dummy );
+</programlisting>
+
+ (The reason this works is that the option removal code doesn't complain
+ if there is no such option.) This trick is useful when changing
+ configuration files for the dictionary: the <command>ALTER</command> will
+ force existing database sessions to re-read the configuration files,
+ which otherwise they would never do if they had read them earlier.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY</command> statement in
+ the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createtsdictionary"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droptsdictionary"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_tsparser.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_tsparser.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9edff4b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_tsparser.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,93 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_tsparser.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-altertsparser">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-altertsparser">
+ <primary>ALTER TEXT SEARCH PARSER</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER TEXT SEARCH PARSER</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER TEXT SEARCH PARSER</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of a text search parser</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER TEXT SEARCH PARSER <replaceable>name</replaceable> RENAME TO <replaceable>new_name</replaceable>
+ALTER TEXT SEARCH PARSER <replaceable>name</replaceable> SET SCHEMA <replaceable>new_schema</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER TEXT SEARCH PARSER</command> changes the definition of
+ a text search parser. Currently, the only supported functionality
+ is to change the parser's name.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must be a superuser to use <command>ALTER TEXT SEARCH PARSER</command>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing text search parser.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name of the text search parser.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new schema for the text search parser.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>ALTER TEXT SEARCH PARSER</command> statement in
+ the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createtsparser"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droptsparser"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_tstemplate.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_tstemplate.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5d3c826
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_tstemplate.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,93 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_tstemplate.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-altertstemplate">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-altertstemplate">
+ <primary>ALTER TEXT SEARCH TEMPLATE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER TEXT SEARCH TEMPLATE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER TEXT SEARCH TEMPLATE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of a text search template</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER TEXT SEARCH TEMPLATE <replaceable>name</replaceable> RENAME TO <replaceable>new_name</replaceable>
+ALTER TEXT SEARCH TEMPLATE <replaceable>name</replaceable> SET SCHEMA <replaceable>new_schema</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER TEXT SEARCH TEMPLATE</command> changes the definition of
+ a text search template. Currently, the only supported functionality
+ is to change the template's name.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must be a superuser to use <command>ALTER TEXT SEARCH TEMPLATE</command>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing text search template.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name of the text search template.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new schema for the text search template.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>ALTER TEXT SEARCH TEMPLATE</command> statement in
+ the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createtstemplate"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droptstemplate"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_type.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_type.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1460651
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_type.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,494 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_type.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-altertype">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-altertype">
+ <primary>ALTER TYPE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER TYPE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER TYPE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>
+ change the definition of a type
+ </refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER TYPE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> OWNER TO { <replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+ALTER TYPE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> RENAME TO <replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable>
+ALTER TYPE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> SET SCHEMA <replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable>
+ALTER TYPE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> RENAME ATTRIBUTE <replaceable class="parameter">attribute_name</replaceable> TO <replaceable class="parameter">new_attribute_name</replaceable> [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+ALTER TYPE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> <replaceable class="parameter">action</replaceable> [, ... ]
+ALTER TYPE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> ADD VALUE [ IF NOT EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">new_enum_value</replaceable> [ { BEFORE | AFTER } <replaceable class="parameter">neighbor_enum_value</replaceable> ]
+ALTER TYPE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> RENAME VALUE <replaceable class="parameter">existing_enum_value</replaceable> TO <replaceable class="parameter">new_enum_value</replaceable>
+ALTER TYPE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> SET ( <replaceable class="parameter">property</replaceable> = <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> [, ... ] )
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">action</replaceable> is one of:</phrase>
+
+ ADD ATTRIBUTE <replaceable class="parameter">attribute_name</replaceable> <replaceable class="parameter">data_type</replaceable> [ COLLATE <replaceable class="parameter">collation</replaceable> ] [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+ DROP ATTRIBUTE [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">attribute_name</replaceable> [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+ ALTER ATTRIBUTE <replaceable class="parameter">attribute_name</replaceable> [ SET DATA ] TYPE <replaceable class="parameter">data_type</replaceable> [ COLLATE <replaceable class="parameter">collation</replaceable> ] [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER TYPE</command> changes the definition of an existing type.
+ There are several subforms:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>OWNER</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form changes the owner of the type.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RENAME</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form changes the name of the type.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET SCHEMA</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form moves the type into another schema.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RENAME ATTRIBUTE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form is only usable with composite types.
+ It changes the name of an individual attribute of the type.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ADD ATTRIBUTE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form adds a new attribute to a composite type, using the same syntax as
+ <link linkend="sql-createtype"><command>CREATE TYPE</command></link>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DROP ATTRIBUTE [ IF EXISTS ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form drops an attribute from a composite type.
+ If <literal>IF EXISTS</literal> is specified and the attribute
+ does not exist, no error is thrown. In this case a notice
+ is issued instead.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ALTER ATTRIBUTE ... SET DATA TYPE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form changes the type of an attribute of a composite type.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ADD VALUE [ IF NOT EXISTS ] [ BEFORE | AFTER ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form adds a new value to an enum type. The new value's place in
+ the enum's ordering can be specified as being <literal>BEFORE</literal>
+ or <literal>AFTER</literal> one of the existing values. Otherwise,
+ the new item is added at the end of the list of values.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ If <literal>IF NOT EXISTS</literal> is specified, it is not an error if
+ the type already contains the new value: a notice is issued but no other
+ action is taken. Otherwise, an error will occur if the new value is
+ already present.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RENAME VALUE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form renames a value of an enum type.
+ The value's place in the enum's ordering is not affected.
+ An error will occur if the specified value is not present or the new
+ name is already present.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term>
+ <literal>SET ( <replaceable class="parameter">property</replaceable> = <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> [, ... ] )</literal>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form is only applicable to base types. It allows adjustment of a
+ subset of the base-type properties that can be set in <command>CREATE
+ TYPE</command>. Specifically, these properties can be changed:
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ <literal>RECEIVE</literal> can be set to the name of a binary input
+ function, or <literal>NONE</literal> to remove the type's binary
+ input function. Using this option requires superuser privilege.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ <literal>SEND</literal> can be set to the name of a binary output
+ function, or <literal>NONE</literal> to remove the type's binary
+ output function. Using this option requires superuser privilege.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ <literal>TYPMOD_IN</literal> can be set to the name of a type
+ modifier input function, or <literal>NONE</literal> to remove the
+ type's type modifier input function. Using this option requires
+ superuser privilege.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ <literal>TYPMOD_OUT</literal> can be set to the name of a type
+ modifier output function, or <literal>NONE</literal> to remove the
+ type's type modifier output function. Using this option requires
+ superuser privilege.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ <literal>ANALYZE</literal> can be set to the name of a type-specific
+ statistics collection function, or <literal>NONE</literal> to remove
+ the type's statistics collection function. Using this option
+ requires superuser privilege.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ <literal>SUBSCRIPT</literal> can be set to the name of a type-specific
+ subscripting handler function, or <literal>NONE</literal> to remove
+ the type's subscripting handler function. Using this option
+ requires superuser privilege.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ <literal>STORAGE</literal><indexterm>
+ <primary>TOAST</primary>
+ <secondary>per-type storage settings</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+ can be set to <literal>plain</literal>,
+ <literal>extended</literal>, <literal>external</literal>,
+ or <literal>main</literal> (see <xref linkend="storage-toast"/> for
+ more information about what these mean). However, changing
+ from <literal>plain</literal> to another setting requires superuser
+ privilege (because it requires that the type's C functions all be
+ TOAST-ready), and changing to <literal>plain</literal> from another
+ setting is not allowed at all (since the type may already have
+ TOASTed values present in the database). Note that changing this
+ option doesn't by itself change any stored data, it just sets the
+ default TOAST strategy to be used for table columns created in the
+ future. See <xref linkend="sql-altertable"/> to change the TOAST
+ strategy for existing table columns.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+ See <xref linkend="sql-createtype"/> for more details about these
+ type properties. Note that where appropriate, a change in these
+ properties for a base type will be propagated automatically to domains
+ based on that type.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>ADD ATTRIBUTE</literal>, <literal>DROP
+ ATTRIBUTE</literal>, and <literal>ALTER ATTRIBUTE</literal> actions
+ can be combined into a list of multiple alterations to apply in
+ parallel. For example, it is possible to add several attributes
+ and/or alter the type of several attributes in a single command.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must own the type to use <command>ALTER TYPE</command>.
+ To change the schema of a type, you must also have
+ <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on the new schema.
+ To alter the owner, you must also be a direct or indirect member of the new
+ owning role, and that role must have <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on
+ the type's schema. (These restrictions enforce that altering the owner
+ doesn't do anything you couldn't do by dropping and recreating the type.
+ However, a superuser can alter ownership of any type anyway.)
+ To add an attribute or alter an attribute type, you must also
+ have <literal>USAGE</literal> privilege on the attribute's data type.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (possibly schema-qualified) of an existing type to
+ alter.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name for the type.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The user name of the new owner of the type.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new schema for the type.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">attribute_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the attribute to add, alter, or drop.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_attribute_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name of the attribute to be renamed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">data_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The data type of the attribute to add, or the new type of the
+ attribute to alter.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_enum_value</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new value to be added to an enum type's list of values,
+ or the new name to be given to an existing value.
+ Like all enum literals, it needs to be quoted.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">neighbor_enum_value</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The existing enum value that the new value should be added immediately
+ before or after in the enum type's sort ordering.
+ Like all enum literals, it needs to be quoted.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">existing_enum_value</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The existing enum value that should be renamed.
+ Like all enum literals, it needs to be quoted.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">property</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a base-type property to be modified; see above for
+ possible values.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically propagate the operation to typed tables of the
+ type being altered, and their descendants.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse the operation if the type being altered is the type of a
+ typed table. This is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ If <command>ALTER TYPE ... ADD VALUE</command> (the form that adds a new
+ value to an enum type) is executed inside a transaction block, the new
+ value cannot be used until after the transaction has been committed.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Comparisons involving an added enum value will sometimes be slower than
+ comparisons involving only original members of the enum type. This will
+ usually only occur if <literal>BEFORE</literal> or <literal>AFTER</literal>
+ is used to set the new value's sort position somewhere other than at the
+ end of the list. However, sometimes it will happen even though the new
+ value is added at the end (this occurs if the OID counter <quote>wrapped
+ around</quote> since the original creation of the enum type). The slowdown is
+ usually insignificant; but if it matters, optimal performance can be
+ regained by dropping and recreating the enum type, or by dumping and
+ restoring the database.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To rename a data type:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TYPE electronic_mail RENAME TO email;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To change the owner of the type <literal>email</literal>
+ to <literal>joe</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TYPE email OWNER TO joe;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To change the schema of the type <literal>email</literal>
+ to <literal>customers</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TYPE email SET SCHEMA customers;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To add a new attribute to a composite type:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TYPE compfoo ADD ATTRIBUTE f3 int;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To add a new value to an enum type in a particular sort position:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TYPE colors ADD VALUE 'orange' AFTER 'red';
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To rename an enum value:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER TYPE colors RENAME VALUE 'purple' TO 'mauve';
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To create binary I/O functions for an existing base type:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE FUNCTION mytypesend(mytype) RETURNS bytea ...;
+CREATE FUNCTION mytyperecv(internal, oid, integer) RETURNS mytype ...;
+ALTER TYPE mytype SET (
+ SEND = mytypesend,
+ RECEIVE = mytyperecv
+);
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The variants to add and drop attributes are part of the SQL
+ standard; the other variants are PostgreSQL extensions.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-altertype-see-also">
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createtype"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droptype"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_user.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_user.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0ee89f5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_user.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,81 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_user.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-alteruser">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-alteruser">
+ <primary>ALTER USER</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER USER</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER USER</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change a database role</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER USER <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [ WITH ] <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> [ ... ]
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> can be:</phrase>
+
+ SUPERUSER | NOSUPERUSER
+ | CREATEDB | NOCREATEDB
+ | CREATEROLE | NOCREATEROLE
+ | INHERIT | NOINHERIT
+ | LOGIN | NOLOGIN
+ | REPLICATION | NOREPLICATION
+ | BYPASSRLS | NOBYPASSRLS
+ | CONNECTION LIMIT <replaceable class="parameter">connlimit</replaceable>
+ | [ ENCRYPTED ] PASSWORD '<replaceable class="parameter">password</replaceable>' | PASSWORD NULL
+ | VALID UNTIL '<replaceable class="parameter">timestamp</replaceable>'
+
+ALTER USER <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> RENAME TO <replaceable>new_name</replaceable>
+
+ALTER USER { <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> | ALL } [ IN DATABASE <replaceable class="parameter">database_name</replaceable> ] SET <replaceable>configuration_parameter</replaceable> { TO | = } { <replaceable>value</replaceable> | DEFAULT }
+ALTER USER { <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> | ALL } [ IN DATABASE <replaceable class="parameter">database_name</replaceable> ] SET <replaceable>configuration_parameter</replaceable> FROM CURRENT
+ALTER USER { <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> | ALL } [ IN DATABASE <replaceable class="parameter">database_name</replaceable> ] RESET <replaceable>configuration_parameter</replaceable>
+ALTER USER { <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> | ALL } [ IN DATABASE <replaceable class="parameter">database_name</replaceable> ] RESET ALL
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> can be:</phrase>
+
+ <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable>
+ | CURRENT_ROLE
+ | CURRENT_USER
+ | SESSION_USER
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER USER</command> is now an alias for
+ <link linkend="sql-alterrole"><command>ALTER ROLE</command></link>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>ALTER USER</command> statement is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension. The SQL standard
+ leaves the definition of users to the implementation.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterrole"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_user_mapping.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_user_mapping.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ee5aee9
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_user_mapping.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,124 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_user_mapping.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-alterusermapping">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-alterusermapping">
+ <primary>ALTER USER MAPPING</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER USER MAPPING</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER USER MAPPING</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of a user mapping</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER USER MAPPING FOR { <replaceable class="parameter">user_name</replaceable> | USER | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER | PUBLIC }
+ SERVER <replaceable class="parameter">server_name</replaceable>
+ OPTIONS ( [ ADD | SET | DROP ] <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> ['<replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>'] [, ... ] )
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER USER MAPPING</command> changes the definition of a
+ user mapping.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The owner of a foreign server can alter user mappings for that
+ server for any user. Also, a user can alter a user mapping for
+ their own user name if <literal>USAGE</literal> privilege on the server has
+ been granted to the user.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">user_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ User name of the mapping. <literal>CURRENT_ROLE</literal>, <literal>CURRENT_USER</literal>,
+ and <literal>USER</literal> match the name of the current
+ user. <literal>PUBLIC</literal> is used to match all present and future
+ user names in the system.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">server_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Server name of the user mapping.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>OPTIONS ( [ ADD | SET | DROP ] <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> ['<replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>'] [, ... ] )</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Change options for the user mapping. The new options override
+ any previously specified
+ options. <literal>ADD</literal>, <literal>SET</literal>, and <literal>DROP</literal>
+ specify the action to be performed. <literal>ADD</literal> is assumed
+ if no operation is explicitly specified. Option names must be
+ unique; options are also validated by the server's foreign-data
+ wrapper.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Change the password for user mapping <literal>bob</literal>, server <literal>foo</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER USER MAPPING FOR bob SERVER foo OPTIONS (SET password 'public');
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER USER MAPPING</command> conforms to ISO/IEC 9075-9
+ (SQL/MED). There is a subtle syntax issue: The standard omits
+ the <literal>FOR</literal> key word. Since both <literal>CREATE
+ USER MAPPING</literal> and <literal>DROP USER MAPPING</literal> use
+ <literal>FOR</literal> in analogous positions, and IBM DB2 (being
+ the other major SQL/MED implementation) also requires it
+ for <literal>ALTER USER MAPPING</literal>, PostgreSQL diverges from
+ the standard here in the interest of consistency and
+ interoperability.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createusermapping"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropusermapping"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_view.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_view.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..98c312c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_view.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,219 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/alter_view.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-alterview">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-alterview">
+ <primary>ALTER VIEW</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ALTER VIEW</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ALTER VIEW</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the definition of a view</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ALTER VIEW [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> SET DEFAULT <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable>
+ALTER VIEW [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> ALTER [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> DROP DEFAULT
+ALTER VIEW [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> OWNER TO { <replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+ALTER VIEW [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> RENAME [ COLUMN ] <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> TO <replaceable class="parameter">new_column_name</replaceable>
+ALTER VIEW [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> RENAME TO <replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable>
+ALTER VIEW [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> SET SCHEMA <replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable>
+ALTER VIEW [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> SET ( <replaceable class="parameter">view_option_name</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">view_option_value</replaceable>] [, ... ] )
+ALTER VIEW [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> RESET ( <replaceable class="parameter">view_option_name</replaceable> [, ... ] )
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER VIEW</command> changes various auxiliary properties
+ of a view. (If you want to modify the view's defining query,
+ use <command>CREATE OR REPLACE VIEW</command>.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must own the view to use <command>ALTER VIEW</command>.
+ To change a view's schema, you must also have <literal>CREATE</literal>
+ privilege on the new schema.
+ To alter the owner, you must also be a direct or indirect member of the new
+ owning role, and that role must have <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on
+ the view's schema. (These restrictions enforce that altering the owner
+ doesn't do anything you couldn't do by dropping and recreating the view.
+ However, a superuser can alter ownership of any view anyway.)
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing view.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Name of an existing column.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_column_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ New name for an existing column.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the view does not exist. A notice is issued
+ in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET</literal>/<literal>DROP DEFAULT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These forms set or remove the default value for a column.
+ A view column's default value is substituted into any
+ <command>INSERT</command> or <command>UPDATE</command> command whose target is the
+ view, before applying any rules or triggers for the view. The view's
+ default will therefore take precedence over any default values from
+ underlying relations.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_owner</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The user name of the new owner of the view.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new name for the view.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_schema</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new schema for the view.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET ( <replaceable class="parameter">view_option_name</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">view_option_value</replaceable>] [, ... ] )</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>RESET ( <replaceable class="parameter">view_option_name</replaceable> [, ... ] )</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets or resets a view option. Currently supported options are:
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>check_option</literal> (<type>enum</type>)</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Changes the check option of the view. The value must
+ be <literal>local</literal> or <literal>cascaded</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>security_barrier</literal> (<type>boolean</type>)</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Changes the security-barrier property of the view. The value must
+ be Boolean value, such as <literal>true</literal>
+ or <literal>false</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist></para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ For historical reasons, <command>ALTER TABLE</command> can be used with
+ views too; but the only variants of <command>ALTER TABLE</command>
+ that are allowed with views are equivalent to the ones shown above.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To rename the view <literal>foo</literal> to
+ <literal>bar</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+ALTER VIEW foo RENAME TO bar;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To attach a default column value to an updatable view:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE base_table (id int, ts timestamptz);
+CREATE VIEW a_view AS SELECT * FROM base_table;
+ALTER VIEW a_view ALTER COLUMN ts SET DEFAULT now();
+INSERT INTO base_table(id) VALUES(1); -- ts will receive a NULL
+INSERT INTO a_view(id) VALUES(2); -- ts will receive the current time
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ALTER VIEW</command> is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension of the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createview"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropview"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/analyze.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/analyze.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b968f74
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/analyze.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,329 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/analyze.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-analyze">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-analyze">
+ <primary>ANALYZE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ANALYZE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ANALYZE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>collect statistics about a database</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ANALYZE [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> [, ...] ) ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">table_and_columns</replaceable> [, ...] ]
+ANALYZE [ VERBOSE ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">table_and_columns</replaceable> [, ...] ]
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> can be one of:</phrase>
+
+ VERBOSE [ <replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable> ]
+ SKIP_LOCKED [ <replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable> ]
+
+<phrase>and <replaceable class="parameter">table_and_columns</replaceable> is:</phrase>
+
+ <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ...] ) ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ANALYZE</command> collects statistics about the contents
+ of tables in the database, and stores the results in the <link
+ linkend="catalog-pg-statistic"><structname>pg_statistic</structname></link>
+ system catalog. Subsequently, the query planner uses these
+ statistics to help determine the most efficient execution plans for
+ queries.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Without a <replaceable class="parameter">table_and_columns</replaceable>
+ list, <command>ANALYZE</command> processes every table and materialized view
+ in the current database that the current user has permission to analyze.
+ With a list, <command>ANALYZE</command> processes only those table(s).
+ It is further possible to give a list of column names for a table,
+ in which case only the statistics for those columns are collected.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When the option list is surrounded by parentheses, the options can be
+ written in any order. The parenthesized syntax was added in
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 11; the unparenthesized syntax
+ is deprecated.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>VERBOSE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Enables display of progress messages.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SKIP_LOCKED</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies that <command>ANALYZE</command> should not wait for any
+ conflicting locks to be released when beginning work on a relation:
+ if a relation cannot be locked immediately without waiting, the relation
+ is skipped. Note that even with this option, <command>ANALYZE</command>
+ may still block when opening the relation's indexes or when acquiring
+ sample rows from partitions, table inheritance children, and some
+ types of foreign tables. Also, while <command>ANALYZE</command>
+ ordinarily processes all partitions of specified partitioned tables,
+ this option will cause <command>ANALYZE</command> to skip all
+ partitions if there is a conflicting lock on the partitioned table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether the selected option should be turned on or off.
+ You can write <literal>TRUE</literal>, <literal>ON</literal>, or
+ <literal>1</literal> to enable the option, and <literal>FALSE</literal>,
+ <literal>OFF</literal>, or <literal>0</literal> to disable it. The
+ <replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable> value can also
+ be omitted, in which case <literal>TRUE</literal> is assumed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (possibly schema-qualified) of a specific table to
+ analyze. If omitted, all regular tables, partitioned tables, and
+ materialized views in the current database are analyzed (but not
+ foreign tables). If the specified table is a partitioned table, both the
+ inheritance statistics of the partitioned table as a whole and
+ statistics of the individual partitions are updated.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a specific column to analyze. Defaults to all columns.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Outputs</title>
+
+ <para>
+ When <literal>VERBOSE</literal> is specified, <command>ANALYZE</command> emits
+ progress messages to indicate which table is currently being
+ processed. Various statistics about the tables are printed as well.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To analyze a table, one must ordinarily be the table's owner or a
+ superuser. However, database owners are allowed to
+ analyze all tables in their databases, except shared catalogs.
+ (The restriction for shared catalogs means that a true database-wide
+ <command>ANALYZE</command> can only be performed by a superuser.)
+ <command>ANALYZE</command> will skip over any tables that the calling user
+ does not have permission to analyze.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Foreign tables are analyzed only when explicitly selected. Not all
+ foreign data wrappers support <command>ANALYZE</command>. If the table's
+ wrapper does not support <command>ANALYZE</command>, the command prints a
+ warning and does nothing.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In the default <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> configuration,
+ the autovacuum daemon (see <xref linkend="autovacuum"/>)
+ takes care of automatic analyzing of tables when they are first loaded
+ with data, and as they change throughout regular operation.
+ When autovacuum is disabled,
+ it is a good idea to run <command>ANALYZE</command> periodically, or
+ just after making major changes in the contents of a table. Accurate
+ statistics will help the planner to choose the most appropriate query
+ plan, and thereby improve the speed of query processing. A common
+ strategy for read-mostly databases is to run <link linkend="sql-vacuum"><command>VACUUM</command></link>
+ and <command>ANALYZE</command> once a day during a low-usage time of day.
+ (This will not be sufficient if there is heavy update activity.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ANALYZE</command>
+ requires only a read lock on the target table, so it can run in
+ parallel with other activity on the table.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The statistics collected by <command>ANALYZE</command> usually
+ include a list of some of the most common values in each column and
+ a histogram showing the approximate data distribution in each
+ column. One or both of these can be omitted if
+ <command>ANALYZE</command> deems them uninteresting (for example,
+ in a unique-key column, there are no common values) or if the
+ column data type does not support the appropriate operators. There
+ is more information about the statistics in <xref
+ linkend="maintenance"/>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For large tables, <command>ANALYZE</command> takes a random sample
+ of the table contents, rather than examining every row. This
+ allows even very large tables to be analyzed in a small amount of
+ time. Note, however, that the statistics are only approximate, and
+ will change slightly each time <command>ANALYZE</command> is run,
+ even if the actual table contents did not change. This might result
+ in small changes in the planner's estimated costs shown by
+ <link linkend="sql-explain"><command>EXPLAIN</command></link>.
+ In rare situations, this non-determinism will cause the planner's
+ choices of query plans to change after <command>ANALYZE</command> is run.
+ To avoid this, raise the amount of statistics collected by
+ <command>ANALYZE</command>, as described below.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The extent of analysis can be controlled by adjusting the
+ <xref linkend="guc-default-statistics-target"/> configuration variable, or
+ on a column-by-column basis by setting the per-column statistics
+ target with <link linkend="sql-altertable"><command>ALTER TABLE ... ALTER COLUMN ... SET
+ STATISTICS</command></link>.
+ The target value sets the
+ maximum number of entries in the most-common-value list and the
+ maximum number of bins in the histogram. The default target value
+ is 100, but this can be adjusted up or down to trade off accuracy of
+ planner estimates against the time taken for
+ <command>ANALYZE</command> and the amount of space occupied in
+ <literal>pg_statistic</literal>. In particular, setting the
+ statistics target to zero disables collection of statistics for
+ that column. It might be useful to do that for columns that are
+ never used as part of the <literal>WHERE</literal>, <literal>GROUP BY</literal>,
+ or <literal>ORDER BY</literal> clauses of queries, since the planner will
+ have no use for statistics on such columns.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The largest statistics target among the columns being analyzed determines
+ the number of table rows sampled to prepare the statistics. Increasing
+ the target causes a proportional increase in the time and space needed
+ to do <command>ANALYZE</command>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ One of the values estimated by <command>ANALYZE</command> is the number of
+ distinct values that appear in each column. Because only a subset of the
+ rows are examined, this estimate can sometimes be quite inaccurate, even
+ with the largest possible statistics target. If this inaccuracy leads to
+ bad query plans, a more accurate value can be determined manually and then
+ installed with
+ <link linkend="sql-altertable"><command>ALTER TABLE ... ALTER COLUMN ... SET (n_distinct = ...)</command></link>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the table being analyzed has one or more children,
+ <command>ANALYZE</command> will gather statistics twice: once on the
+ rows of the parent table only, and a second time on the rows of the
+ parent table with all of its children. This second set of statistics
+ is needed when planning queries that traverse the entire inheritance
+ tree. The autovacuum daemon, however, will only consider inserts or
+ updates on the parent table itself when deciding whether to trigger an
+ automatic analyze for that table. If that table is rarely inserted into
+ or updated, the inheritance statistics will not be up to date unless you
+ run <command>ANALYZE</command> manually.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For partitioned tables, <command>ANALYZE</command> gathers statistics by
+ sampling rows from all partitions; in addition, it will recurse into each
+ partition and update its statistics. Each leaf partition is analyzed only
+ once, even with multi-level partitioning. No statistics are collected for
+ only the parent table (without data from its partitions), because with
+ partitioning it's guaranteed to be empty.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ By contrast, if the table being analyzed has inheritance children,
+ <command>ANALYZE</command> gathers two sets of statistics: one on the rows
+ of the parent table only, and a second including rows of both the parent
+ table and all of its children. This second set of statistics is needed when
+ planning queries that process the inheritance tree as a whole. The child
+ tables themselves are not individually analyzed in this case.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The autovacuum daemon does not process partitioned tables, nor does it
+ process inheritance parents if only the children are ever modified.
+ It is usually necessary to periodically run a manual
+ <command>ANALYZE</command> to keep the statistics of the table hierarchy
+ up to date.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If any child tables or partitions are foreign tables whose foreign
+ data wrappers do not support <command>ANALYZE</command>, those tables are
+ ignored while gathering inheritance statistics.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the table being analyzed is completely empty, <command>ANALYZE</command>
+ will not record new statistics for that table. Any existing statistics
+ will be retained.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Each backend running <command>ANALYZE</command> will report its progress
+ in the <structname>pg_stat_progress_analyze</structname> view. See
+ <xref linkend="analyze-progress-reporting"/> for details.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>ANALYZE</command> statement in the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-vacuum"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="app-vacuumdb"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="runtime-config-resource-vacuum-cost"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="autovacuum"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="analyze-progress-reporting"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/begin.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/begin.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..016b021
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/begin.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,161 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/begin.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-begin">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-begin">
+ <primary>BEGIN</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>BEGIN</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>BEGIN</refname>
+ <refpurpose>start a transaction block</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+BEGIN [ WORK | TRANSACTION ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">transaction_mode</replaceable> [, ...] ]
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">transaction_mode</replaceable> is one of:</phrase>
+
+ ISOLATION LEVEL { SERIALIZABLE | REPEATABLE READ | READ COMMITTED | READ UNCOMMITTED }
+ READ WRITE | READ ONLY
+ [ NOT ] DEFERRABLE
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>BEGIN</command> initiates a transaction block, that is,
+ all statements after a <command>BEGIN</command> command will be
+ executed in a single transaction until an explicit <link
+ linkend="sql-commit"><command>COMMIT</command></link> or <link
+ linkend="sql-rollback"><command>ROLLBACK</command></link> is given.
+ By default (without <command>BEGIN</command>),
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> executes
+ transactions in <quote>autocommit</quote> mode, that is, each
+ statement is executed in its own transaction and a commit is
+ implicitly performed at the end of the statement (if execution was
+ successful, otherwise a rollback is done).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Statements are executed more quickly in a transaction block, because
+ transaction start/commit requires significant CPU and disk
+ activity. Execution of multiple statements inside a transaction is
+ also useful to ensure consistency when making several related changes:
+ other sessions will be unable to see the intermediate states
+ wherein not all the related updates have been done.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the isolation level, read/write mode, or deferrable mode is specified, the new
+ transaction has those characteristics, as if
+ <link linkend="sql-set-transaction"><command>SET TRANSACTION</command></link>
+ was executed.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>WORK</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>TRANSACTION</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Optional key words. They have no effect.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ Refer to <xref linkend="sql-set-transaction"/> for information on the meaning
+ of the other parameters to this statement.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <link linkend="sql-start-transaction"><command>START TRANSACTION</command></link> has the same functionality
+ as <command>BEGIN</command>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Use <link linkend="sql-commit"><command>COMMIT</command></link> or
+ <link linkend="sql-rollback"><command>ROLLBACK</command></link>
+ to terminate a transaction block.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Issuing <command>BEGIN</command> when already inside a transaction block will
+ provoke a warning message. The state of the transaction is not affected.
+ To nest transactions within a transaction block, use savepoints
+ (see <xref linkend="sql-savepoint"/>).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For reasons of backwards compatibility, the commas between successive
+ <replaceable class="parameter">transaction_modes</replaceable> can be
+ omitted.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To begin a transaction block:
+
+<programlisting>
+BEGIN;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>BEGIN</command> is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ language extension. It is equivalent to the SQL-standard command
+ <link linkend="sql-start-transaction"><command>START TRANSACTION</command></link>, whose reference page
+ contains additional compatibility information.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>DEFERRABLE</literal>
+ <replaceable class="parameter">transaction_mode</replaceable>
+ is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> language extension.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Incidentally, the <literal>BEGIN</literal> key word is used for a
+ different purpose in embedded SQL. You are advised to be careful
+ about the transaction semantics when porting database applications.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-commit"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-rollback"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-start-transaction"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-savepoint"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/call.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/call.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9e83a77
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/call.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,133 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/call.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-call">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-call">
+ <primary>CALL</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CALL</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CALL</refname>
+ <refpurpose>invoke a procedure</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CALL <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> ( [ <replaceable class="parameter">argument</replaceable> ] [, ...] )
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CALL</command> executes a procedure.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the procedure has any output parameters, then a result row will be
+ returned, containing the values of those parameters.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the procedure.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argument</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An argument expression for the procedure call.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Arguments can include parameter names, using the syntax
+ <literal><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> =&gt; <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable></literal>.
+ This works the same as in ordinary function calls; see
+ <xref linkend="sql-syntax-calling-funcs"/> for details.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Arguments must be supplied for all procedure parameters that lack
+ defaults, including <literal>OUT</literal> parameters. However,
+ arguments matching <literal>OUT</literal> parameters are not evaluated,
+ so it's customary to just write <literal>NULL</literal> for them.
+ (Writing something else for an <literal>OUT</literal> parameter
+ might cause compatibility problems with
+ future <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> versions.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The user must have <literal>EXECUTE</literal> privilege on the procedure in
+ order to be allowed to invoke it.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To call a function (not a procedure), use <command>SELECT</command> instead.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If <command>CALL</command> is executed in a transaction block, then the
+ called procedure cannot execute transaction control statements.
+ Transaction control statements are only allowed if <command>CALL</command>
+ is executed in its own transaction.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>PL/pgSQL</application> handles output parameters
+ in <command>CALL</command> commands differently;
+ see <xref linkend="plpgsql-statements-calling-procedure"/>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+<programlisting>
+CALL do_db_maintenance();
+</programlisting>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CALL</command> conforms to the SQL standard,
+ except for the handling of output parameters. The standard
+ says that users should write variables to receive the values
+ of output parameters.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createprocedure"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/checkpoint.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/checkpoint.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2afee6d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/checkpoint.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,67 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/checkpoint.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-checkpoint">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-checkpoint">
+ <primary>CHECKPOINT</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CHECKPOINT</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CHECKPOINT</refname>
+ <refpurpose>force a write-ahead log checkpoint</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CHECKPOINT
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ A checkpoint is a point in the write-ahead log sequence at which
+ all data files have been updated to reflect the information in the
+ log. All data files will be flushed to disk. Refer to
+ <xref linkend="wal-configuration"/> for more details about what happens
+ during a checkpoint.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>CHECKPOINT</command> command forces an immediate
+ checkpoint when the command is issued, without waiting for a
+ regular checkpoint scheduled by the system (controlled by the settings in
+ <xref linkend="runtime-config-wal-checkpoints"/>).
+ <command>CHECKPOINT</command> is not intended for use during normal
+ operation.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If executed during recovery, the <command>CHECKPOINT</command> command
+ will force a restartpoint (see <xref linkend="wal-configuration"/>)
+ rather than writing a new checkpoint.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Only superusers can call <command>CHECKPOINT</command>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>CHECKPOINT</command> command is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> language extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/close.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/close.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..32d20ed
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/close.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,132 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/close.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-close">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-close">
+ <primary>CLOSE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <indexterm zone="sql-close">
+ <primary>cursor</primary>
+ <secondary>CLOSE</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CLOSE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CLOSE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>close a cursor</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CLOSE { <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> | ALL }
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CLOSE</command> frees the resources associated with an open cursor.
+ After the cursor is closed, no subsequent operations
+ are allowed on it. A cursor should be closed when it is
+ no longer needed.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Every non-holdable open cursor is implicitly closed when a
+ transaction is terminated by <command>COMMIT</command> or
+ <command>ROLLBACK</command>. A holdable cursor is implicitly
+ closed if the transaction that created it aborts via
+ <command>ROLLBACK</command>. If the creating transaction
+ successfully commits, the holdable cursor remains open until an
+ explicit <command>CLOSE</command> is executed, or the client
+ disconnects.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an open cursor to close.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ALL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Close all open cursors.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> does not have an explicit
+ <command>OPEN</command> cursor statement; a cursor is considered
+ open when it is declared. Use the
+ <link linkend="sql-declare"><command>DECLARE</command></link>
+ statement to declare a cursor.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You can see all available cursors by querying the <link
+ linkend="view-pg-cursors"><structname>pg_cursors</structname></link> system view.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a cursor is closed after a savepoint which is later rolled back,
+ the <command>CLOSE</command> is not rolled back; that is, the cursor
+ remains closed.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Close the cursor <literal>liahona</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+CLOSE liahona;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CLOSE</command> is fully conforming with the SQL
+ standard. <command>CLOSE ALL</command> is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-declare"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-fetch"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-move"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/cluster.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/cluster.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..86f5fdc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/cluster.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,252 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/cluster.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-cluster">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-cluster">
+ <primary>CLUSTER</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CLUSTER</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CLUSTER</refname>
+ <refpurpose>cluster a table according to an index</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CLUSTER [VERBOSE] <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [ USING <replaceable class="parameter">index_name</replaceable> ]
+CLUSTER ( <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> [, ...] ) <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [ USING <replaceable class="parameter">index_name</replaceable> ]
+CLUSTER [VERBOSE]
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> can be one of:</phrase>
+
+ VERBOSE [ <replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable> ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CLUSTER</command> instructs <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ to cluster the table specified
+ by <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable>
+ based on the index specified by
+ <replaceable class="parameter">index_name</replaceable>. The index must
+ already have been defined on
+ <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When a table is clustered, it is physically reordered
+ based on the index information. Clustering is a one-time operation:
+ when the table is subsequently updated, the changes are
+ not clustered. That is, no attempt is made to store new or
+ updated rows according to their index order. (If one wishes, one can
+ periodically recluster by issuing the command again. Also, setting
+ the table's <literal>fillfactor</literal> storage parameter to less than
+ 100% can aid in preserving cluster ordering during updates, since updated
+ rows are kept on the same page if enough space is available there.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When a table is clustered, <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ remembers which index it was clustered by. The form
+ <command>CLUSTER <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable></command>
+ reclusters the table using the same index as before. You can also
+ use the <literal>CLUSTER</literal> or <literal>SET WITHOUT CLUSTER</literal>
+ forms of <link linkend="sql-altertable"><command>ALTER TABLE</command></link> to set the index to be used for
+ future cluster operations, or to clear any previous setting.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CLUSTER</command> without any parameter reclusters all the
+ previously-clustered tables in the current database that the calling user
+ owns, or all such tables if called by a superuser. This
+ form of <command>CLUSTER</command> cannot be executed inside a transaction
+ block.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When a table is being clustered, an <literal>ACCESS
+ EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock is acquired on it. This prevents any other
+ database operations (both reads and writes) from operating on the
+ table until the <command>CLUSTER</command> is finished.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (possibly schema-qualified) of a table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">index_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an index.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>VERBOSE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Prints a progress report as each table is clustered.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether the selected option should be turned on or off.
+ You can write <literal>TRUE</literal>, <literal>ON</literal>, or
+ <literal>1</literal> to enable the option, and <literal>FALSE</literal>,
+ <literal>OFF</literal>, or <literal>0</literal> to disable it. The
+ <replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable> value can also
+ be omitted, in which case <literal>TRUE</literal> is assumed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ In cases where you are accessing single rows randomly
+ within a table, the actual order of the data in the
+ table is unimportant. However, if you tend to access some
+ data more than others, and there is an index that groups
+ them together, you will benefit from using <command>CLUSTER</command>.
+ If you are requesting a range of indexed values from a table, or a
+ single indexed value that has multiple rows that match,
+ <command>CLUSTER</command> will help because once the index identifies the
+ table page for the first row that matches, all other rows
+ that match are probably already on the same table page,
+ and so you save disk accesses and speed up the query.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CLUSTER</command> can re-sort the table using either an index scan
+ on the specified index, or (if the index is a b-tree) a sequential
+ scan followed by sorting. It will attempt to choose the method that
+ will be faster, based on planner cost parameters and available statistical
+ information.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When an index scan is used, a temporary copy of the table is created that
+ contains the table data in the index order. Temporary copies of each
+ index on the table are created as well. Therefore, you need free space on
+ disk at least equal to the sum of the table size and the index sizes.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When a sequential scan and sort is used, a temporary sort file is
+ also created, so that the peak temporary space requirement is as much
+ as double the table size, plus the index sizes. This method is often
+ faster than the index scan method, but if the disk space requirement is
+ intolerable, you can disable this choice by temporarily setting <xref
+ linkend="guc-enable-sort"/> to <literal>off</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ It is advisable to set <xref linkend="guc-maintenance-work-mem"/> to
+ a reasonably large value (but not more than the amount of RAM you can
+ dedicate to the <command>CLUSTER</command> operation) before clustering.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Because the planner records statistics about the ordering of
+ tables, it is advisable to run <link linkend="sql-analyze"><command>ANALYZE</command></link>
+ on the newly clustered table.
+ Otherwise, the planner might make poor choices of query plans.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Because <command>CLUSTER</command> remembers which indexes are clustered,
+ one can cluster the tables one wants clustered manually the first time,
+ then set up a periodic maintenance script that executes
+ <command>CLUSTER</command> without any parameters, so that the desired tables
+ are periodically reclustered.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Each backend running <command>CLUSTER</command> will report its progress
+ in the <structname>pg_stat_progress_cluster</structname> view. See
+ <xref linkend="cluster-progress-reporting"/> for details.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Cluster the table <literal>employees</literal> on the basis of
+ its index <literal>employees_ind</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+CLUSTER employees USING employees_ind;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Cluster the <literal>employees</literal> table using the same
+ index that was used before:
+<programlisting>
+CLUSTER employees;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Cluster all tables in the database that have previously been clustered:
+<programlisting>
+CLUSTER;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>CLUSTER</command> statement in the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The syntax
+<synopsis>
+CLUSTER <replaceable class="parameter">index_name</replaceable> ON <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ is also supported for compatibility with pre-8.3 <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ versions.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="app-clusterdb"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="cluster-progress-reporting"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/clusterdb.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/clusterdb.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c838b22
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/clusterdb.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,352 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/clusterdb.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="app-clusterdb">
+ <indexterm zone="app-clusterdb">
+ <primary>clusterdb</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>clusterdb</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>clusterdb</refname>
+ <refpurpose>cluster a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>clusterdb</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>connection-option</replaceable></arg>
+ <group choice="opt"><arg choice="plain"><option>--verbose</option></arg><arg choice="plain"><option>-v</option></arg></group>
+
+ <arg choice="plain" rep="repeat">
+ <arg choice="opt">
+ <group choice="plain">
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>--table</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>-t</option></arg>
+ </group>
+ <replaceable>table</replaceable>
+ </arg>
+ </arg>
+
+ <arg choice="opt"><replaceable>dbname</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>clusterdb</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>connection-option</replaceable></arg>
+ <group choice="opt"><arg choice="plain"><option>--verbose</option></arg><arg choice="plain"><option>-v</option></arg></group>
+ <group choice="plain"><arg choice="plain"><option>--all</option></arg><arg choice="plain"><option>-a</option></arg></group>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>clusterdb</application> is a utility for reclustering tables
+ in a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database. It finds tables
+ that have previously been clustered, and clusters them again on the same
+ index that was last used. Tables that have never been clustered are not
+ affected.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>clusterdb</application> is a wrapper around the SQL
+ command <xref linkend="sql-cluster"/>.
+ There is no effective difference between clustering databases via
+ this utility and via other methods for accessing the server.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>clusterdb</application> accepts the following command-line arguments:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-a</option></term>
+ <term><option>--all</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Cluster all databases.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option><optional>-d</optional> <replaceable class="parameter">dbname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option><optional>--dbname=</optional><replaceable class="parameter">dbname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the name of the database to be clustered,
+ when <option>-a</option>/<option>--all</option> is not used.
+ If this is not specified, the database name is read
+ from the environment variable <envar>PGDATABASE</envar>. If
+ that is not set, the user name specified for the connection is
+ used. The <replaceable>dbname</replaceable> can be a <link
+ linkend="libpq-connstring">connection string</link>. If so,
+ connection string parameters will override any conflicting command
+ line options.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-e</option></term>
+ <term><option>--echo</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Echo the commands that <application>clusterdb</application> generates
+ and sends to the server.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-q</option></term>
+ <term><option>--quiet</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not display progress messages.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-t <replaceable class="parameter">table</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--table=<replaceable class="parameter">table</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Cluster <replaceable class="parameter">table</replaceable> only.
+ Multiple tables can be clustered by writing multiple
+ <option>-t</option> switches.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-v</option></term>
+ <term><option>--verbose</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print detailed information during processing.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-V</option></term>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the <application>clusterdb</application> version and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show help about <application>clusterdb</application> command line
+ arguments, and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>clusterdb</application> also accepts
+ the following command-line arguments for connection parameters:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-h <replaceable class="parameter">host</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--host=<replaceable class="parameter">host</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the host name of the machine on which the server is
+ running. If the value begins with a slash, it is used as the
+ directory for the Unix domain socket.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-p <replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--port=<replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the TCP port or local Unix domain socket file
+ extension on which the server
+ is listening for connections.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-U <replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--username=<replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ User name to connect as.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-w</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Never issue a password prompt. If the server requires
+ password authentication and a password is not available by
+ other means such as a <filename>.pgpass</filename> file, the
+ connection attempt will fail. This option can be useful in
+ batch jobs and scripts where no user is present to enter a
+ password.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-W</option></term>
+ <term><option>--password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Force <application>clusterdb</application> to prompt for a
+ password before connecting to a database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This option is never essential, since
+ <application>clusterdb</application> will automatically prompt
+ for a password if the server demands password authentication.
+ However, <application>clusterdb</application> will waste a
+ connection attempt finding out that the server wants a password.
+ In some cases it is worth typing <option>-W</option> to avoid the extra
+ connection attempt.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--maintenance-db=<replaceable class="parameter">dbname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the name of the database to connect to to discover which
+ databases should be clustered,
+ when <option>-a</option>/<option>--all</option> is used.
+ If not specified, the <literal>postgres</literal> database will be used,
+ or if that does not exist, <literal>template1</literal> will be used.
+ This can be a <link linkend="libpq-connstring">connection
+ string</link>. If so, connection string parameters will override any
+ conflicting command line options. Also, connection string parameters
+ other than the database name itself will be re-used when connecting
+ to other databases.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Environment</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PGDATABASE</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGHOST</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGPORT</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGUSER</envar></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Default connection parameters
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PG_COLOR</envar></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether to use color in diagnostic messages. Possible values
+ are <literal>always</literal>, <literal>auto</literal> and
+ <literal>never</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ This utility, like most other <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> utilities,
+ also uses the environment variables supported by <application>libpq</application>
+ (see <xref linkend="libpq-envars"/>).
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Diagnostics</title>
+
+ <para>
+ In case of difficulty, see <xref linkend="sql-cluster"/>
+ and <xref linkend="app-psql"/> for
+ discussions of potential problems and error messages.
+ The database server must be running at the
+ targeted host. Also, any default connection settings and environment
+ variables used by the <application>libpq</application> front-end
+ library will apply.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To cluster the database <literal>test</literal>:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$ </prompt><userinput>clusterdb test</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To cluster a single table
+ <literal>foo</literal> in a database named
+ <literal>xyzzy</literal>:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$ </prompt><userinput>clusterdb --table=foo xyzzy</userinput>
+</screen></para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-cluster"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/comment.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/comment.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b127960
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/comment.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,366 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/comment.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-comment">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-comment">
+ <primary>COMMENT</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>COMMENT</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>COMMENT</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define or change the comment of an object</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+COMMENT ON
+{
+ ACCESS METHOD <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ AGGREGATE <replaceable class="parameter">aggregate_name</replaceable> ( <replaceable>aggregate_signature</replaceable> ) |
+ CAST (<replaceable>source_type</replaceable> AS <replaceable>target_type</replaceable>) |
+ COLLATION <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ COLUMN <replaceable class="parameter">relation_name</replaceable>.<replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> |
+ CONSTRAINT <replaceable class="parameter">constraint_name</replaceable> ON <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> |
+ CONSTRAINT <replaceable class="parameter">constraint_name</replaceable> ON DOMAIN <replaceable class="parameter">domain_name</replaceable> |
+ CONVERSION <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ DATABASE <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ DOMAIN <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ EXTENSION <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ EVENT TRIGGER <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ FOREIGN TABLE <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ FUNCTION <replaceable class="parameter">function_name</replaceable> [ ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) ] |
+ INDEX <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ LARGE OBJECT <replaceable class="parameter">large_object_oid</replaceable> |
+ MATERIALIZED VIEW <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ OPERATOR <replaceable class="parameter">operator_name</replaceable> (<replaceable class="parameter">left_type</replaceable>, <replaceable class="parameter">right_type</replaceable>) |
+ OPERATOR CLASS <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> USING <replaceable class="parameter">index_method</replaceable> |
+ OPERATOR FAMILY <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> USING <replaceable class="parameter">index_method</replaceable> |
+ POLICY <replaceable class="parameter">policy_name</replaceable> ON <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> |
+ [ PROCEDURAL ] LANGUAGE <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ PROCEDURE <replaceable class="parameter">procedure_name</replaceable> [ ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) ] |
+ PUBLICATION <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ ROLE <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ ROUTINE <replaceable class="parameter">routine_name</replaceable> [ ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) ] |
+ RULE <replaceable class="parameter">rule_name</replaceable> ON <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> |
+ SCHEMA <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ SEQUENCE <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ SERVER <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ STATISTICS <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ SUBSCRIPTION <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ TABLE <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ TABLESPACE <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ TEXT SEARCH PARSER <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ TEXT SEARCH TEMPLATE <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ TRANSFORM FOR <replaceable>type_name</replaceable> LANGUAGE <replaceable>lang_name</replaceable> |
+ TRIGGER <replaceable class="parameter">trigger_name</replaceable> ON <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> |
+ TYPE <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ VIEW <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable>
+} IS '<replaceable class="parameter">text</replaceable>'
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable>aggregate_signature</replaceable> is:</phrase>
+
+* |
+[ <replaceable>argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable>argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable>argtype</replaceable> [ , ... ] |
+[ [ <replaceable>argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable>argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable>argtype</replaceable> [ , ... ] ] ORDER BY [ <replaceable>argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable>argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable>argtype</replaceable> [ , ... ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>COMMENT</command> stores a comment about a database object.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Only one comment string is stored for each object, so to modify a comment,
+ issue a new <command>COMMENT</command> command for the same object. To remove a
+ comment, write <literal>NULL</literal> in place of the text string.
+ Comments are automatically dropped when their object is dropped.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A <literal>SHARE UPDATE EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock is acquired on the
+ object to be commented.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For most kinds of object, only the object's owner can set the comment.
+ Roles don't have owners, so the rule for <literal>COMMENT ON ROLE</literal> is
+ that you must be superuser to comment on a superuser role, or have the
+ <literal>CREATEROLE</literal> privilege to comment on non-superuser roles.
+ Likewise, access methods don't have owners either; you must be superuser
+ to comment on an access method.
+ Of course, a superuser can comment on anything.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Comments can be viewed using <application>psql</application>'s
+ <command>\d</command> family of commands.
+ Other user interfaces to retrieve comments can be built atop
+ the same built-in functions that <application>psql</application> uses, namely
+ <function>obj_description</function>, <function>col_description</function>,
+ and <function>shobj_description</function>
+ (see <xref linkend="functions-info-comment-table"/>).
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable></term>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">relation_name</replaceable>.<replaceable>column_name</replaceable></term>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">aggregate_name</replaceable></term>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">constraint_name</replaceable></term>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">function_name</replaceable></term>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">operator_name</replaceable></term>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">policy_name</replaceable></term>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">procedure_name</replaceable></term>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">routine_name</replaceable></term>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">rule_name</replaceable></term>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">trigger_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the object to be commented. Names of objects that reside in
+ schemas (tables, functions, etc.) can be
+ schema-qualified. When commenting on a column,
+ <replaceable class="parameter">relation_name</replaceable> must refer
+ to a table, view, composite type, or foreign table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable></term>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">domain_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ When creating a comment on a constraint, a trigger, a rule or
+ a policy these parameters specify the name of the table or domain on
+ which that object is defined.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>source_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the source data type of the cast.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>target_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the target data type of the cast.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The mode of a function, procedure, or aggregate
+ argument: <literal>IN</literal>, <literal>OUT</literal>,
+ <literal>INOUT</literal>, or <literal>VARIADIC</literal>.
+ If omitted, the default is <literal>IN</literal>.
+ Note that <command>COMMENT</command> does not actually pay
+ any attention to <literal>OUT</literal> arguments, since only the input
+ arguments are needed to determine the function's identity.
+ So it is sufficient to list the <literal>IN</literal>, <literal>INOUT</literal>,
+ and <literal>VARIADIC</literal> arguments.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a function, procedure, or aggregate argument.
+ Note that <command>COMMENT</command> does not actually pay
+ any attention to argument names, since only the argument data
+ types are needed to determine the function's identity.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The data type of a function, procedure, or aggregate argument.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">large_object_oid</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The OID of the large object.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">left_type</replaceable></term>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">right_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The data type(s) of the operator's arguments (optionally
+ schema-qualified). Write <literal>NONE</literal> for the missing argument
+ of a prefix operator.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>PROCEDURAL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This is a noise word.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>type_name</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the data type of the transform.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>lang_name</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the language of the transform.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">text</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new comment, written as a string literal; or <literal>NULL</literal>
+ to drop the comment.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is presently no security mechanism for viewing comments: any user
+ connected to a database can see all the comments for objects in
+ that database. For shared objects such as
+ databases, roles, and tablespaces, comments are stored globally so any
+ user connected to any database in the cluster can see all the comments
+ for shared objects. Therefore, don't put security-critical
+ information in comments.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Attach a comment to the table <literal>mytable</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+COMMENT ON TABLE mytable IS 'This is my table.';
+</programlisting>
+
+ Remove it again:
+
+<programlisting>
+COMMENT ON TABLE mytable IS NULL;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Some more examples:
+
+<programlisting>
+COMMENT ON ACCESS METHOD gin IS 'GIN index access method';
+COMMENT ON AGGREGATE my_aggregate (double precision) IS 'Computes sample variance';
+COMMENT ON CAST (text AS int4) IS 'Allow casts from text to int4';
+COMMENT ON COLLATION "fr_CA" IS 'Canadian French';
+COMMENT ON COLUMN my_table.my_column IS 'Employee ID number';
+COMMENT ON CONVERSION my_conv IS 'Conversion to UTF8';
+COMMENT ON CONSTRAINT bar_col_cons ON bar IS 'Constrains column col';
+COMMENT ON CONSTRAINT dom_col_constr ON DOMAIN dom IS 'Constrains col of domain';
+COMMENT ON DATABASE my_database IS 'Development Database';
+COMMENT ON DOMAIN my_domain IS 'Email Address Domain';
+COMMENT ON EVENT TRIGGER abort_ddl IS 'Aborts all DDL commands';
+COMMENT ON EXTENSION hstore IS 'implements the hstore data type';
+COMMENT ON FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER mywrapper IS 'my foreign data wrapper';
+COMMENT ON FOREIGN TABLE my_foreign_table IS 'Employee Information in other database';
+COMMENT ON FUNCTION my_function (timestamp) IS 'Returns Roman Numeral';
+COMMENT ON INDEX my_index IS 'Enforces uniqueness on employee ID';
+COMMENT ON LANGUAGE plpython IS 'Python support for stored procedures';
+COMMENT ON LARGE OBJECT 346344 IS 'Planning document';
+COMMENT ON MATERIALIZED VIEW my_matview IS 'Summary of order history';
+COMMENT ON OPERATOR ^ (text, text) IS 'Performs intersection of two texts';
+COMMENT ON OPERATOR - (NONE, integer) IS 'Unary minus';
+COMMENT ON OPERATOR CLASS int4ops USING btree IS '4 byte integer operators for btrees';
+COMMENT ON OPERATOR FAMILY integer_ops USING btree IS 'all integer operators for btrees';
+COMMENT ON POLICY my_policy ON mytable IS 'Filter rows by users';
+COMMENT ON PROCEDURE my_proc (integer, integer) IS 'Runs a report';
+COMMENT ON PUBLICATION alltables IS 'Publishes all operations on all tables';
+COMMENT ON ROLE my_role IS 'Administration group for finance tables';
+COMMENT ON ROUTINE my_routine (integer, integer) IS 'Runs a routine (which is a function or procedure)';
+COMMENT ON RULE my_rule ON my_table IS 'Logs updates of employee records';
+COMMENT ON SCHEMA my_schema IS 'Departmental data';
+COMMENT ON SEQUENCE my_sequence IS 'Used to generate primary keys';
+COMMENT ON SERVER myserver IS 'my foreign server';
+COMMENT ON STATISTICS my_statistics IS 'Improves planner row estimations';
+COMMENT ON SUBSCRIPTION alltables IS 'Subscription for all operations on all tables';
+COMMENT ON TABLE my_schema.my_table IS 'Employee Information';
+COMMENT ON TABLESPACE my_tablespace IS 'Tablespace for indexes';
+COMMENT ON TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION my_config IS 'Special word filtering';
+COMMENT ON TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY swedish IS 'Snowball stemmer for Swedish language';
+COMMENT ON TEXT SEARCH PARSER my_parser IS 'Splits text into words';
+COMMENT ON TEXT SEARCH TEMPLATE snowball IS 'Snowball stemmer';
+COMMENT ON TRANSFORM FOR hstore LANGUAGE plpythonu IS 'Transform between hstore and Python dict';
+COMMENT ON TRIGGER my_trigger ON my_table IS 'Used for RI';
+COMMENT ON TYPE complex IS 'Complex number data type';
+COMMENT ON VIEW my_view IS 'View of departmental costs';
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>COMMENT</command> command in the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/commit.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/commit.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5f244cd
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/commit.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,112 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/commit.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-commit">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-commit">
+ <primary>COMMIT</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>COMMIT</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>COMMIT</refname>
+ <refpurpose>commit the current transaction</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+COMMIT [ WORK | TRANSACTION ] [ AND [ NO ] CHAIN ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>COMMIT</command> commits the current transaction. All
+ changes made by the transaction become visible to others
+ and are guaranteed to be durable if a crash occurs.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <indexterm zone="sql-commit-chain">
+ <primary>chained transactions</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>WORK</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>TRANSACTION</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Optional key words. They have no effect.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="sql-commit-chain">
+ <term><literal>AND CHAIN</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If <literal>AND CHAIN</literal> is specified, a new transaction is
+ immediately started with the same transaction characteristics (see <xref
+ linkend="sql-set-transaction"/>) as the just finished one. Otherwise,
+ no new transaction is started.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Use <xref linkend="sql-rollback"/> to
+ abort a transaction.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Issuing <command>COMMIT</command> when not inside a transaction does
+ no harm, but it will provoke a warning message. <command>COMMIT AND
+ CHAIN</command> when not inside a transaction is an error.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To commit the current transaction and make all changes permanent:
+<programlisting>
+COMMIT;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The command <command>COMMIT</command> conforms to the SQL standard. The
+ form <literal>COMMIT TRANSACTION</literal> is a PostgreSQL extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-begin"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-rollback"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/commit_prepared.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/commit_prepared.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7299f73
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/commit_prepared.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,107 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/commit_prepared.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-commit-prepared">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-commit-prepared">
+ <primary>COMMIT PREPARED</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>COMMIT PREPARED</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>COMMIT PREPARED</refname>
+ <refpurpose>commit a transaction that was earlier prepared for two-phase commit</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+COMMIT PREPARED <replaceable class="parameter">transaction_id</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>COMMIT PREPARED</command> commits a transaction that is in
+ prepared state.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">transaction_id</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The transaction identifier of the transaction that is to be
+ committed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To commit a prepared transaction, you must be either the same user that
+ executed the transaction originally, or a superuser. But you do not
+ have to be in the same session that executed the transaction.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This command cannot be executed inside a transaction block. The prepared
+ transaction is committed immediately.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ All currently available prepared transactions are listed in the
+ <link linkend="view-pg-prepared-xacts"><structname>pg_prepared_xacts</structname></link>
+ system view.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-commit-prepared-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+ <para>
+ Commit the transaction identified by the transaction
+ identifier <literal>foobar</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+COMMIT PREPARED 'foobar';
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>COMMIT PREPARED</command> is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension. It is intended for use by
+ external transaction management systems, some of which are covered by
+ standards (such as X/Open XA), but the SQL side of those systems is not
+ standardized.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-prepare-transaction"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-rollback-prepared"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/copy.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/copy.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4624c8f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/copy.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,1075 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/copy.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-copy">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-copy">
+ <primary>COPY</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>COPY</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>COPY</refname>
+ <refpurpose>copy data between a file and a table</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+COPY <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ...] ) ]
+ FROM { '<replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable>' | PROGRAM '<replaceable class="parameter">command</replaceable>' | STDIN }
+ [ [ WITH ] ( <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> [, ...] ) ]
+ [ WHERE <replaceable class="parameter">condition</replaceable> ]
+
+COPY { <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ...] ) ] | ( <replaceable class="parameter">query</replaceable> ) }
+ TO { '<replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable>' | PROGRAM '<replaceable class="parameter">command</replaceable>' | STDOUT }
+ [ [ WITH ] ( <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> [, ...] ) ]
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> can be one of:</phrase>
+
+ FORMAT <replaceable class="parameter">format_name</replaceable>
+ FREEZE [ <replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable> ]
+ DELIMITER '<replaceable class="parameter">delimiter_character</replaceable>'
+ NULL '<replaceable class="parameter">null_string</replaceable>'
+ HEADER [ <replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable> ]
+ QUOTE '<replaceable class="parameter">quote_character</replaceable>'
+ ESCAPE '<replaceable class="parameter">escape_character</replaceable>'
+ FORCE_QUOTE { ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ...] ) | * }
+ FORCE_NOT_NULL ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ...] )
+ FORCE_NULL ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ...] )
+ ENCODING '<replaceable class="parameter">encoding_name</replaceable>'
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>COPY</command> moves data between
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> tables and standard file-system
+ files. <command>COPY TO</command> copies the contents of a table
+ <emphasis>to</emphasis> a file, while <command>COPY FROM</command> copies
+ data <emphasis>from</emphasis> a file to a table (appending the data to
+ whatever is in the table already). <command>COPY TO</command>
+ can also copy the results of a <command>SELECT</command> query.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a column list is specified, <command>COPY TO</command> copies only
+ the data in the specified columns to the file. For <command>COPY
+ FROM</command>, each field in the file is inserted, in order, into the
+ specified column. Table columns not specified in the <command>COPY
+ FROM</command> column list will receive their default values.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>COPY</command> with a file name instructs the
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> server to directly read from
+ or write to a file. The file must be accessible by the
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> user (the user ID the server
+ runs as) and the name must be specified from the viewpoint of the
+ server. When <literal>PROGRAM</literal> is specified, the server
+ executes the given command and reads from the standard output of the
+ program, or writes to the standard input of the program. The command
+ must be specified from the viewpoint of the server, and be executable
+ by the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> user. When
+ <literal>STDIN</literal> or <literal>STDOUT</literal> is
+ specified, data is transmitted via the connection between the
+ client and the server.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Each backend running <command>COPY</command> will report its progress
+ in the <structname>pg_stat_progress_copy</structname> view. See
+ <xref linkend="copy-progress-reporting"/> for details.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An optional list of columns to be copied. If no column list is
+ specified, all columns of the table except generated columns will be
+ copied.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">query</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A <link linkend="sql-select"><command>SELECT</command></link>,
+ <link linkend="sql-values"><command>VALUES</command></link>,
+ <link linkend="sql-insert"><command>INSERT</command></link>,
+ <link linkend="sql-update"><command>UPDATE</command></link>, or
+ <link linkend="sql-delete"><command>DELETE</command></link> command whose results are to be
+ copied. Note that parentheses are required around the query.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ For <command>INSERT</command>, <command>UPDATE</command> and
+ <command>DELETE</command> queries a RETURNING clause must be provided,
+ and the target relation must not have a conditional rule, nor
+ an <literal>ALSO</literal> rule, nor an <literal>INSTEAD</literal> rule
+ that expands to multiple statements.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The path name of the input or output file. An input file name can be
+ an absolute or relative path, but an output file name must be an absolute
+ path. Windows users might need to use an <literal>E''</literal> string and
+ double any backslashes used in the path name.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>PROGRAM</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A command to execute. In <command>COPY FROM</command>, the input is
+ read from standard output of the command, and in <command>COPY TO</command>,
+ the output is written to the standard input of the command.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Note that the command is invoked by the shell, so if you need to pass
+ any arguments to shell command that come from an untrusted source, you
+ must be careful to strip or escape any special characters that might
+ have a special meaning for the shell. For security reasons, it is best
+ to use a fixed command string, or at least avoid passing any user input
+ in it.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>STDIN</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies that input comes from the client application.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>STDOUT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies that output goes to the client application.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether the selected option should be turned on or off.
+ You can write <literal>TRUE</literal>, <literal>ON</literal>, or
+ <literal>1</literal> to enable the option, and <literal>FALSE</literal>,
+ <literal>OFF</literal>, or <literal>0</literal> to disable it. The
+ <replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable> value can also
+ be omitted, in which case <literal>TRUE</literal> is assumed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>FORMAT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Selects the data format to be read or written:
+ <literal>text</literal>,
+ <literal>csv</literal> (Comma Separated Values),
+ or <literal>binary</literal>.
+ The default is <literal>text</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>FREEZE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Requests copying the data with rows already frozen, just as they
+ would be after running the <command>VACUUM FREEZE</command> command.
+ This is intended as a performance option for initial data loading.
+ Rows will be frozen only if the table being loaded has been created
+ or truncated in the current subtransaction, there are no cursors
+ open and there are no older snapshots held by this transaction. It is
+ currently not possible to perform a <command>COPY FREEZE</command> on
+ a partitioned table.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Note that all other sessions will immediately be able to see the data
+ once it has been successfully loaded. This violates the normal rules
+ of MVCC visibility and users specifying should be aware of the
+ potential problems this might cause.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DELIMITER</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the character that separates columns within each row
+ (line) of the file. The default is a tab character in text format,
+ a comma in <literal>CSV</literal> format.
+ This must be a single one-byte character.
+ This option is not allowed when using <literal>binary</literal> format.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>NULL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the string that represents a null value. The default is
+ <literal>\N</literal> (backslash-N) in text format, and an unquoted empty
+ string in <literal>CSV</literal> format. You might prefer an
+ empty string even in text format for cases where you don't want to
+ distinguish nulls from empty strings.
+ This option is not allowed when using <literal>binary</literal> format.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ When using <command>COPY FROM</command>, any data item that matches
+ this string will be stored as a null value, so you should make
+ sure that you use the same string as you used with
+ <command>COPY TO</command>.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>HEADER</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies that the file contains a header line with the names of each
+ column in the file. On output, the first line contains the column
+ names from the table, and on input, the first line is ignored.
+ This option is allowed only when using <literal>CSV</literal> format.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>QUOTE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the quoting character to be used when a data value is quoted.
+ The default is double-quote.
+ This must be a single one-byte character.
+ This option is allowed only when using <literal>CSV</literal> format.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ESCAPE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the character that should appear before a
+ data character that matches the <literal>QUOTE</literal> value.
+ The default is the same as the <literal>QUOTE</literal> value (so that
+ the quoting character is doubled if it appears in the data).
+ This must be a single one-byte character.
+ This option is allowed only when using <literal>CSV</literal> format.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>FORCE_QUOTE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Forces quoting to be
+ used for all non-<literal>NULL</literal> values in each specified column.
+ <literal>NULL</literal> output is never quoted. If <literal>*</literal> is specified,
+ non-<literal>NULL</literal> values will be quoted in all columns.
+ This option is allowed only in <command>COPY TO</command>, and only when
+ using <literal>CSV</literal> format.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>FORCE_NOT_NULL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not match the specified columns' values against the null string.
+ In the default case where the null string is empty, this means that
+ empty values will be read as zero-length strings rather than nulls,
+ even when they are not quoted.
+ This option is allowed only in <command>COPY FROM</command>, and only when
+ using <literal>CSV</literal> format.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>FORCE_NULL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Match the specified columns' values against the null string, even
+ if it has been quoted, and if a match is found set the value to
+ <literal>NULL</literal>. In the default case where the null string is empty,
+ this converts a quoted empty string into NULL.
+ This option is allowed only in <command>COPY FROM</command>, and only when
+ using <literal>CSV</literal> format.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ENCODING</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies that the file is encoded in the <replaceable
+ class="parameter">encoding_name</replaceable>. If this option is
+ omitted, the current client encoding is used. See the Notes below
+ for more details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>WHERE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The optional <literal>WHERE</literal> clause has the general form
+<synopsis>
+WHERE <replaceable class="parameter">condition</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ where <replaceable class="parameter">condition</replaceable> is
+ any expression that evaluates to a result of type
+ <type>boolean</type>. Any row that does not satisfy this
+ condition will not be inserted to the table. A row satisfies the
+ condition if it returns true when the actual row values are
+ substituted for any variable references.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Currently, subqueries are not allowed in <literal>WHERE</literal>
+ expressions, and the evaluation does not see any changes made by the
+ <command>COPY</command> itself (this matters when the expression
+ contains calls to <literal>VOLATILE</literal> functions).
+ </para>
+
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Outputs</title>
+
+ <para>
+ On successful completion, a <command>COPY</command> command returns a command
+ tag of the form
+<screen>
+COPY <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable>
+</screen>
+ The <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable> is the number
+ of rows copied.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ <application>psql</application> will print this command tag only if the command
+ was not <literal>COPY ... TO STDOUT</literal>, or the
+ equivalent <application>psql</application> meta-command
+ <literal>\copy ... to stdout</literal>. This is to prevent confusing the
+ command tag with the data that was just printed.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>COPY TO</command> can be used only with plain
+ tables, not views, and does not copy rows from child tables
+ or child partitions. For example, <literal>COPY <replaceable
+ class="parameter">table</replaceable> TO</literal> copies
+ the same rows as <literal>SELECT * FROM ONLY <replaceable
+ class="parameter">table</replaceable></literal>.
+ The syntax <literal>COPY (SELECT * FROM <replaceable
+ class="parameter">table</replaceable>) TO ...</literal> can be used to
+ dump all of the rows in an inheritance hierarchy, partitioned table,
+ or view.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>COPY FROM</command> can be used with plain, foreign, or
+ partitioned tables or with views that have
+ <literal>INSTEAD OF INSERT</literal> triggers.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must have select privilege on the table
+ whose values are read by <command>COPY TO</command>, and
+ insert privilege on the table into which values
+ are inserted by <command>COPY FROM</command>. It is sufficient
+ to have column privileges on the column(s) listed in the command.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If row-level security is enabled for the table, the relevant
+ <command>SELECT</command> policies will apply to <literal>COPY
+ <replaceable class="parameter">table</replaceable> TO</literal> statements.
+ Currently, <command>COPY FROM</command> is not supported for tables
+ with row-level security. Use equivalent <command>INSERT</command>
+ statements instead.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Files named in a <command>COPY</command> command are read or written
+ directly by the server, not by the client application. Therefore,
+ they must reside on or be accessible to the database server machine,
+ not the client. They must be accessible to and readable or writable
+ by the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> user (the user ID the
+ server runs as), not the client. Similarly,
+ the command specified with <literal>PROGRAM</literal> is executed directly
+ by the server, not by the client application, must be executable by the
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> user.
+ <command>COPY</command> naming a file or command is only allowed to
+ database superusers or users who are granted one of the roles
+ <literal>pg_read_server_files</literal>,
+ <literal>pg_write_server_files</literal>,
+ or <literal>pg_execute_server_program</literal>, since it allows reading
+ or writing any file or running a program that the server has privileges to
+ access.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Do not confuse <command>COPY</command> with the
+ <application>psql</application> instruction
+ <command><link linkend="app-psql-meta-commands-copy">\copy</link></command>. <command>\copy</command> invokes
+ <command>COPY FROM STDIN</command> or <command>COPY TO
+ STDOUT</command>, and then fetches/stores the data in a file
+ accessible to the <application>psql</application> client. Thus,
+ file accessibility and access rights depend on the client rather
+ than the server when <command>\copy</command> is used.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ It is recommended that the file name used in <command>COPY</command>
+ always be specified as an absolute path. This is enforced by the
+ server in the case of <command>COPY TO</command>, but for
+ <command>COPY FROM</command> you do have the option of reading from
+ a file specified by a relative path. The path will be interpreted
+ relative to the working directory of the server process (normally
+ the cluster's data directory), not the client's working directory.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Executing a command with <literal>PROGRAM</literal> might be restricted
+ by the operating system's access control mechanisms, such as SELinux.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>COPY FROM</command> will invoke any triggers and check
+ constraints on the destination table. However, it will not invoke rules.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For identity columns, the <command>COPY FROM</command> command will always
+ write the column values provided in the input data, like
+ the <command>INSERT</command> option <literal>OVERRIDING SYSTEM
+ VALUE</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>COPY</command> input and output is affected by
+ <varname>DateStyle</varname>. To ensure portability to other
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> installations that might use
+ non-default <varname>DateStyle</varname> settings,
+ <varname>DateStyle</varname> should be set to <literal>ISO</literal> before
+ using <command>COPY TO</command>. It is also a good idea to avoid dumping
+ data with <varname>IntervalStyle</varname> set to
+ <literal>sql_standard</literal>, because negative interval values might be
+ misinterpreted by a server that has a different setting for
+ <varname>IntervalStyle</varname>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Input data is interpreted according to <literal>ENCODING</literal>
+ option or the current client encoding, and output data is encoded
+ in <literal>ENCODING</literal> or the current client encoding, even
+ if the data does not pass through the client but is read from or
+ written to a file directly by the server.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>COPY</command> stops operation at the first error. This
+ should not lead to problems in the event of a <command>COPY
+ TO</command>, but the target table will already have received
+ earlier rows in a <command>COPY FROM</command>. These rows will not
+ be visible or accessible, but they still occupy disk space. This might
+ amount to a considerable amount of wasted disk space if the failure
+ happened well into a large copy operation. You might wish to invoke
+ <command>VACUUM</command> to recover the wasted space.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <literal>FORCE_NULL</literal> and <literal>FORCE_NOT_NULL</literal> can be used
+ simultaneously on the same column. This results in converting quoted
+ null strings to null values and unquoted null strings to empty strings.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>File Formats</title>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Text Format</title>
+
+ <para>
+ When the <literal>text</literal> format is used,
+ the data read or written is a text file with one line per table row.
+ Columns in a row are separated by the delimiter character.
+ The column values themselves are strings generated by the
+ output function, or acceptable to the input function, of each
+ attribute's data type. The specified null string is used in
+ place of columns that are null.
+ <command>COPY FROM</command> will raise an error if any line of the
+ input file contains more or fewer columns than are expected.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ End of data can be represented by a single line containing just
+ backslash-period (<literal>\.</literal>). An end-of-data marker is
+ not necessary when reading from a file, since the end of file
+ serves perfectly well; it is needed only when copying data to or from
+ client applications using pre-3.0 client protocol.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Backslash characters (<literal>\</literal>) can be used in the
+ <command>COPY</command> data to quote data characters that might
+ otherwise be taken as row or column delimiters. In particular, the
+ following characters <emphasis>must</emphasis> be preceded by a backslash if
+ they appear as part of a column value: backslash itself,
+ newline, carriage return, and the current delimiter character.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The specified null string is sent by <command>COPY TO</command> without
+ adding any backslashes; conversely, <command>COPY FROM</command> matches
+ the input against the null string before removing backslashes. Therefore,
+ a null string such as <literal>\N</literal> cannot be confused with
+ the actual data value <literal>\N</literal> (which would be represented
+ as <literal>\\N</literal>).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The following special backslash sequences are recognized by
+ <command>COPY FROM</command>:
+
+ <informaltable>
+ <tgroup cols="2">
+ <thead>
+ <row>
+ <entry>Sequence</entry>
+ <entry>Represents</entry>
+ </row>
+ </thead>
+
+ <tbody>
+ <row>
+ <entry><literal>\b</literal></entry>
+ <entry>Backspace (ASCII 8)</entry>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <entry><literal>\f</literal></entry>
+ <entry>Form feed (ASCII 12)</entry>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <entry><literal>\n</literal></entry>
+ <entry>Newline (ASCII 10)</entry>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <entry><literal>\r</literal></entry>
+ <entry>Carriage return (ASCII 13)</entry>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <entry><literal>\t</literal></entry>
+ <entry>Tab (ASCII 9)</entry>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <entry><literal>\v</literal></entry>
+ <entry>Vertical tab (ASCII 11)</entry>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <entry><literal>\</literal><replaceable>digits</replaceable></entry>
+ <entry>Backslash followed by one to three octal digits specifies
+ the byte with that numeric code</entry>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <entry><literal>\x</literal><replaceable>digits</replaceable></entry>
+ <entry>Backslash <literal>x</literal> followed by one or two hex digits specifies
+ the byte with that numeric code</entry>
+ </row>
+ </tbody>
+ </tgroup>
+ </informaltable>
+
+ Presently, <command>COPY TO</command> will never emit an octal or
+ hex-digits backslash sequence, but it does use the other sequences
+ listed above for those control characters.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Any other backslashed character that is not mentioned in the above table
+ will be taken to represent itself. However, beware of adding backslashes
+ unnecessarily, since that might accidentally produce a string matching the
+ end-of-data marker (<literal>\.</literal>) or the null string (<literal>\N</literal> by
+ default). These strings will be recognized before any other backslash
+ processing is done.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ It is strongly recommended that applications generating <command>COPY</command> data convert
+ data newlines and carriage returns to the <literal>\n</literal> and
+ <literal>\r</literal> sequences respectively. At present it is
+ possible to represent a data carriage return by a backslash and carriage
+ return, and to represent a data newline by a backslash and newline.
+ However, these representations might not be accepted in future releases.
+ They are also highly vulnerable to corruption if the <command>COPY</command> file is
+ transferred across different machines (for example, from Unix to Windows
+ or vice versa).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ All backslash sequences are interpreted after encoding conversion.
+ The bytes specified with the octal and hex-digit backslash sequences must
+ form valid characters in the database encoding.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>COPY TO</command> will terminate each row with a Unix-style
+ newline (<quote><literal>\n</literal></quote>). Servers running on Microsoft Windows instead
+ output carriage return/newline (<quote><literal>\r\n</literal></quote>), but only for
+ <command>COPY</command> to a server file; for consistency across platforms,
+ <command>COPY TO STDOUT</command> always sends <quote><literal>\n</literal></quote>
+ regardless of server platform.
+ <command>COPY FROM</command> can handle lines ending with newlines,
+ carriage returns, or carriage return/newlines. To reduce the risk of
+ error due to un-backslashed newlines or carriage returns that were
+ meant as data, <command>COPY FROM</command> will complain if the line
+ endings in the input are not all alike.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>CSV Format</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This format option is used for importing and exporting the Comma
+ Separated Value (<literal>CSV</literal>) file format used by many other
+ programs, such as spreadsheets. Instead of the escaping rules used by
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s standard text format, it
+ produces and recognizes the common CSV escaping mechanism.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The values in each record are separated by the <literal>DELIMITER</literal>
+ character. If the value contains the delimiter character, the
+ <literal>QUOTE</literal> character, the <literal>NULL</literal> string, a carriage
+ return, or line feed character, then the whole value is prefixed and
+ suffixed by the <literal>QUOTE</literal> character, and any occurrence
+ within the value of a <literal>QUOTE</literal> character or the
+ <literal>ESCAPE</literal> character is preceded by the escape character.
+ You can also use <literal>FORCE_QUOTE</literal> to force quotes when outputting
+ non-<literal>NULL</literal> values in specific columns.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>CSV</literal> format has no standard way to distinguish a
+ <literal>NULL</literal> value from an empty string.
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <command>COPY</command> handles this by quoting.
+ A <literal>NULL</literal> is output as the <literal>NULL</literal> parameter string
+ and is not quoted, while a non-<literal>NULL</literal> value matching the
+ <literal>NULL</literal> parameter string is quoted. For example, with the
+ default settings, a <literal>NULL</literal> is written as an unquoted empty
+ string, while an empty string data value is written with double quotes
+ (<literal>""</literal>). Reading values follows similar rules. You can
+ use <literal>FORCE_NOT_NULL</literal> to prevent <literal>NULL</literal> input
+ comparisons for specific columns. You can also use
+ <literal>FORCE_NULL</literal> to convert quoted null string data values to
+ <literal>NULL</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Because backslash is not a special character in the <literal>CSV</literal>
+ format, <literal>\.</literal>, the end-of-data marker, could also appear
+ as a data value. To avoid any misinterpretation, a <literal>\.</literal>
+ data value appearing as a lone entry on a line is automatically
+ quoted on output, and on input, if quoted, is not interpreted as the
+ end-of-data marker. If you are loading a file created by another
+ application that has a single unquoted column and might have a
+ value of <literal>\.</literal>, you might need to quote that value in the
+ input file.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ In <literal>CSV</literal> format, all characters are significant. A quoted value
+ surrounded by white space, or any characters other than
+ <literal>DELIMITER</literal>, will include those characters. This can cause
+ errors if you import data from a system that pads <literal>CSV</literal>
+ lines with white space out to some fixed width. If such a situation
+ arises you might need to preprocess the <literal>CSV</literal> file to remove
+ the trailing white space, before importing the data into
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ CSV format will both recognize and produce CSV files with quoted
+ values containing embedded carriage returns and line feeds. Thus
+ the files are not strictly one line per table row like text-format
+ files.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ Many programs produce strange and occasionally perverse CSV files,
+ so the file format is more a convention than a standard. Thus you
+ might encounter some files that cannot be imported using this
+ mechanism, and <command>COPY</command> might produce files that other
+ programs cannot process.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Binary Format</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>binary</literal> format option causes all data to be
+ stored/read as binary format rather than as text. It is
+ somewhat faster than the text and <literal>CSV</literal> formats,
+ but a binary-format file is less portable across machine architectures and
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> versions.
+ Also, the binary format is very data type specific; for example
+ it will not work to output binary data from a <type>smallint</type> column
+ and read it into an <type>integer</type> column, even though that would work
+ fine in text format.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>binary</literal> file format consists
+ of a file header, zero or more tuples containing the row data, and
+ a file trailer. Headers and data are in network byte order.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> releases before 7.4 used a
+ different binary file format.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+
+ <refsect3>
+ <title>File Header</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The file header consists of 15 bytes of fixed fields, followed
+ by a variable-length header extension area. The fixed fields are:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term>Signature</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+11-byte sequence <literal>PGCOPY\n\377\r\n\0</literal> &mdash; note that the zero byte
+is a required part of the signature. (The signature is designed to allow
+easy identification of files that have been munged by a non-8-bit-clean
+transfer. This signature will be changed by end-of-line-translation
+filters, dropped zero bytes, dropped high bits, or parity changes.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term>Flags field</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+32-bit integer bit mask to denote important aspects of the file format. Bits
+are numbered from 0 (<acronym>LSB</acronym>) to 31 (<acronym>MSB</acronym>). Note that
+this field is stored in network byte order (most significant byte first),
+as are all the integer fields used in the file format. Bits
+16&ndash;31 are reserved to denote critical file format issues; a reader
+should abort if it finds an unexpected bit set in this range. Bits 0&ndash;15
+are reserved to signal backwards-compatible format issues; a reader
+should simply ignore any unexpected bits set in this range. Currently
+only one flag bit is defined, and the rest must be zero:
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term>Bit 16</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If 1, OIDs are included in the data; if 0, not. Oid system columns
+ are not supported in <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ anymore, but the format still contains the indicator.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist></para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term>Header extension area length</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+32-bit integer, length in bytes of remainder of header, not including self.
+Currently, this is zero, and the first tuple follows
+immediately. Future changes to the format might allow additional data
+to be present in the header. A reader should silently skip over any header
+extension data it does not know what to do with.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+The header extension area is envisioned to contain a sequence of
+self-identifying chunks. The flags field is not intended to tell readers
+what is in the extension area. Specific design of header extension contents
+is left for a later release.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This design allows for both backwards-compatible header additions (add
+ header extension chunks, or set low-order flag bits) and
+ non-backwards-compatible changes (set high-order flag bits to signal such
+ changes, and add supporting data to the extension area if needed).
+ </para>
+ </refsect3>
+
+ <refsect3>
+ <title>Tuples</title>
+ <para>
+Each tuple begins with a 16-bit integer count of the number of fields in the
+tuple. (Presently, all tuples in a table will have the same count, but that
+might not always be true.) Then, repeated for each field in the tuple, there
+is a 32-bit length word followed by that many bytes of field data. (The
+length word does not include itself, and can be zero.) As a special case,
+-1 indicates a NULL field value. No value bytes follow in the NULL case.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+There is no alignment padding or any other extra data between fields.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+Presently, all data values in a binary-format file are
+assumed to be in binary format (format code one). It is anticipated that a
+future extension might add a header field that allows per-column format codes
+to be specified.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+To determine the appropriate binary format for the actual tuple data you
+should consult the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> source, in
+particular the <function>*send</function> and <function>*recv</function> functions for
+each column's data type (typically these functions are found in the
+<filename>src/backend/utils/adt/</filename> directory of the source
+distribution).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+If OIDs are included in the file, the OID field immediately follows the
+field-count word. It is a normal field except that it's not included in the
+field-count. Note that oid system columns are not supported in current
+versions of <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect3>
+
+ <refsect3>
+ <title>File Trailer</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The file trailer consists of a 16-bit integer word containing -1. This
+ is easily distinguished from a tuple's field-count word.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A reader should report an error if a field-count word is neither -1
+ nor the expected number of columns. This provides an extra
+ check against somehow getting out of sync with the data.
+ </para>
+ </refsect3>
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The following example copies a table to the client
+ using the vertical bar (<literal>|</literal>) as the field delimiter:
+<programlisting>
+COPY country TO STDOUT (DELIMITER '|');
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To copy data from a file into the <literal>country</literal> table:
+<programlisting>
+COPY country FROM '/usr1/proj/bray/sql/country_data';
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To copy into a file just the countries whose names start with 'A':
+<programlisting>
+COPY (SELECT * FROM country WHERE country_name LIKE 'A%') TO '/usr1/proj/bray/sql/a_list_countries.copy';
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To copy into a compressed file, you can pipe the output through an external
+ compression program:
+<programlisting>
+COPY country TO PROGRAM 'gzip > /usr1/proj/bray/sql/country_data.gz';
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Here is a sample of data suitable for copying into a table from
+ <literal>STDIN</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+AF AFGHANISTAN
+AL ALBANIA
+DZ ALGERIA
+ZM ZAMBIA
+ZW ZIMBABWE
+</programlisting>
+ Note that the white space on each line is actually a tab character.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The following is the same data, output in binary format.
+ The data is shown after filtering through the
+ Unix utility <command>od -c</command>. The table has three columns;
+ the first has type <type>char(2)</type>, the second has type <type>text</type>,
+ and the third has type <type>integer</type>. All the rows have a null value
+ in the third column.
+<programlisting>
+0000000 P G C O P Y \n 377 \r \n \0 \0 \0 \0 \0 \0
+0000020 \0 \0 \0 \0 003 \0 \0 \0 002 A F \0 \0 \0 013 A
+0000040 F G H A N I S T A N 377 377 377 377 \0 003
+0000060 \0 \0 \0 002 A L \0 \0 \0 007 A L B A N I
+0000100 A 377 377 377 377 \0 003 \0 \0 \0 002 D Z \0 \0 \0
+0000120 007 A L G E R I A 377 377 377 377 \0 003 \0 \0
+0000140 \0 002 Z M \0 \0 \0 006 Z A M B I A 377 377
+0000160 377 377 \0 003 \0 \0 \0 002 Z W \0 \0 \0 \b Z I
+0000200 M B A B W E 377 377 377 377 377 377
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>COPY</command> statement in the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The following syntax was used before <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ version 9.0 and is still supported:
+
+<synopsis>
+COPY <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ...] ) ]
+ FROM { '<replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable>' | STDIN }
+ [ [ WITH ]
+ [ BINARY ]
+ [ DELIMITER [ AS ] '<replaceable class="parameter">delimiter_character</replaceable>' ]
+ [ NULL [ AS ] '<replaceable class="parameter">null_string</replaceable>' ]
+ [ CSV [ HEADER ]
+ [ QUOTE [ AS ] '<replaceable class="parameter">quote_character</replaceable>' ]
+ [ ESCAPE [ AS ] '<replaceable class="parameter">escape_character</replaceable>' ]
+ [ FORCE NOT NULL <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ...] ] ] ]
+
+COPY { <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ...] ) ] | ( <replaceable class="parameter">query</replaceable> ) }
+ TO { '<replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable>' | STDOUT }
+ [ [ WITH ]
+ [ BINARY ]
+ [ DELIMITER [ AS ] '<replaceable class="parameter">delimiter_character</replaceable>' ]
+ [ NULL [ AS ] '<replaceable class="parameter">null_string</replaceable>' ]
+ [ CSV [ HEADER ]
+ [ QUOTE [ AS ] '<replaceable class="parameter">quote_character</replaceable>' ]
+ [ ESCAPE [ AS ] '<replaceable class="parameter">escape_character</replaceable>' ]
+ [ FORCE QUOTE { <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ...] | * } ] ] ]
+</synopsis>
+
+ Note that in this syntax, <literal>BINARY</literal> and <literal>CSV</literal> are
+ treated as independent keywords, not as arguments of a <literal>FORMAT</literal>
+ option.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The following syntax was used before <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ version 7.3 and is still supported:
+
+<synopsis>
+COPY [ BINARY ] <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable>
+ FROM { '<replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable>' | STDIN }
+ [ [USING] DELIMITERS '<replaceable class="parameter">delimiter_character</replaceable>' ]
+ [ WITH NULL AS '<replaceable class="parameter">null_string</replaceable>' ]
+
+COPY [ BINARY ] <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable>
+ TO { '<replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable>' | STDOUT }
+ [ [USING] DELIMITERS '<replaceable class="parameter">delimiter_character</replaceable>' ]
+ [ WITH NULL AS '<replaceable class="parameter">null_string</replaceable>' ]
+</synopsis></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="copy-progress-reporting"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_access_method.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_access_method.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..dae43db
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_access_method.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,122 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_access_method.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-create-access-method">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-create-access-method">
+ <primary>CREATE ACCESS METHOD</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE ACCESS METHOD</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE ACCESS METHOD</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new access method</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE ACCESS METHOD <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ TYPE <replaceable class="parameter">access_method_type</replaceable>
+ HANDLER <replaceable class="parameter">handler_function</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE ACCESS METHOD</command> creates a new access method.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The access method name must be unique within the database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Only superusers can define new access methods.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the access method to be created.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">access_method_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This clause specifies the type of access method to define.
+ Only <literal>TABLE</literal> and <literal>INDEX</literal>
+ are supported at present.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">handler_function</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ <replaceable class="parameter">handler_function</replaceable> is the
+ name (possibly schema-qualified) of a previously registered function
+ that represents the access method. The handler function must be
+ declared to take a single argument of type <type>internal</type>,
+ and its return type depends on the type of access method;
+ for <literal>TABLE</literal> access methods, it must
+ be <type>table_am_handler</type> and for <literal>INDEX</literal>
+ access methods, it must be <type>index_am_handler</type>.
+ The C-level API that the handler function must implement varies
+ depending on the type of access method. The table access method API
+ is described in <xref linkend="tableam"/> and the index access method
+ API is described in <xref linkend="indexam"/>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Create an index access method <literal>heptree</literal> with
+ handler function <literal>heptree_handler</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE ACCESS METHOD heptree TYPE INDEX HANDLER heptree_handler;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE ACCESS METHOD</command> is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-drop-access-method"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createopclass"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createopfamily"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_aggregate.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_aggregate.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..222e0aa
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_aggregate.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,805 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_aggregate.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createaggregate">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createaggregate">
+ <primary>CREATE AGGREGATE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE AGGREGATE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE AGGREGATE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new aggregate function</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE [ OR REPLACE ] AGGREGATE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> ( [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">arg_data_type</replaceable> [ , ... ] ) (
+ SFUNC = <replaceable class="parameter">sfunc</replaceable>,
+ STYPE = <replaceable class="parameter">state_data_type</replaceable>
+ [ , SSPACE = <replaceable class="parameter">state_data_size</replaceable> ]
+ [ , FINALFUNC = <replaceable class="parameter">ffunc</replaceable> ]
+ [ , FINALFUNC_EXTRA ]
+ [ , FINALFUNC_MODIFY = { READ_ONLY | SHAREABLE | READ_WRITE } ]
+ [ , COMBINEFUNC = <replaceable class="parameter">combinefunc</replaceable> ]
+ [ , SERIALFUNC = <replaceable class="parameter">serialfunc</replaceable> ]
+ [ , DESERIALFUNC = <replaceable class="parameter">deserialfunc</replaceable> ]
+ [ , INITCOND = <replaceable class="parameter">initial_condition</replaceable> ]
+ [ , MSFUNC = <replaceable class="parameter">msfunc</replaceable> ]
+ [ , MINVFUNC = <replaceable class="parameter">minvfunc</replaceable> ]
+ [ , MSTYPE = <replaceable class="parameter">mstate_data_type</replaceable> ]
+ [ , MSSPACE = <replaceable class="parameter">mstate_data_size</replaceable> ]
+ [ , MFINALFUNC = <replaceable class="parameter">mffunc</replaceable> ]
+ [ , MFINALFUNC_EXTRA ]
+ [ , MFINALFUNC_MODIFY = { READ_ONLY | SHAREABLE | READ_WRITE } ]
+ [ , MINITCOND = <replaceable class="parameter">minitial_condition</replaceable> ]
+ [ , SORTOP = <replaceable class="parameter">sort_operator</replaceable> ]
+ [ , PARALLEL = { SAFE | RESTRICTED | UNSAFE } ]
+)
+
+CREATE [ OR REPLACE ] AGGREGATE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">arg_data_type</replaceable> [ , ... ] ]
+ ORDER BY [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">arg_data_type</replaceable> [ , ... ] ) (
+ SFUNC = <replaceable class="parameter">sfunc</replaceable>,
+ STYPE = <replaceable class="parameter">state_data_type</replaceable>
+ [ , SSPACE = <replaceable class="parameter">state_data_size</replaceable> ]
+ [ , FINALFUNC = <replaceable class="parameter">ffunc</replaceable> ]
+ [ , FINALFUNC_EXTRA ]
+ [ , FINALFUNC_MODIFY = { READ_ONLY | SHAREABLE | READ_WRITE } ]
+ [ , INITCOND = <replaceable class="parameter">initial_condition</replaceable> ]
+ [ , PARALLEL = { SAFE | RESTRICTED | UNSAFE } ]
+ [ , HYPOTHETICAL ]
+)
+
+<phrase>or the old syntax</phrase>
+
+CREATE [ OR REPLACE ] AGGREGATE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> (
+ BASETYPE = <replaceable class="parameter">base_type</replaceable>,
+ SFUNC = <replaceable class="parameter">sfunc</replaceable>,
+ STYPE = <replaceable class="parameter">state_data_type</replaceable>
+ [ , SSPACE = <replaceable class="parameter">state_data_size</replaceable> ]
+ [ , FINALFUNC = <replaceable class="parameter">ffunc</replaceable> ]
+ [ , FINALFUNC_EXTRA ]
+ [ , FINALFUNC_MODIFY = { READ_ONLY | SHAREABLE | READ_WRITE } ]
+ [ , COMBINEFUNC = <replaceable class="parameter">combinefunc</replaceable> ]
+ [ , SERIALFUNC = <replaceable class="parameter">serialfunc</replaceable> ]
+ [ , DESERIALFUNC = <replaceable class="parameter">deserialfunc</replaceable> ]
+ [ , INITCOND = <replaceable class="parameter">initial_condition</replaceable> ]
+ [ , MSFUNC = <replaceable class="parameter">msfunc</replaceable> ]
+ [ , MINVFUNC = <replaceable class="parameter">minvfunc</replaceable> ]
+ [ , MSTYPE = <replaceable class="parameter">mstate_data_type</replaceable> ]
+ [ , MSSPACE = <replaceable class="parameter">mstate_data_size</replaceable> ]
+ [ , MFINALFUNC = <replaceable class="parameter">mffunc</replaceable> ]
+ [ , MFINALFUNC_EXTRA ]
+ [ , MFINALFUNC_MODIFY = { READ_ONLY | SHAREABLE | READ_WRITE } ]
+ [ , MINITCOND = <replaceable class="parameter">minitial_condition</replaceable> ]
+ [ , SORTOP = <replaceable class="parameter">sort_operator</replaceable> ]
+)
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE AGGREGATE</command> defines a new aggregate function.
+ <command>CREATE OR REPLACE AGGREGATE</command> will either define a new
+ aggregate function or replace an existing definition. Some basic and
+ commonly-used aggregate functions are included with the distribution; they
+ are documented in <xref linkend="functions-aggregate"/>. If one defines new
+ types or needs an aggregate function not already provided, then
+ <command>CREATE AGGREGATE</command> can be used to provide the desired
+ features.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When replacing an existing definition, the argument types, result type,
+ and number of direct arguments may not be changed. Also, the new definition
+ must be of the same kind (ordinary aggregate, ordered-set aggregate, or
+ hypothetical-set aggregate) as the old one.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a schema name is given (for example, <literal>CREATE AGGREGATE
+ myschema.myagg ...</literal>) then the aggregate function is created in the
+ specified schema. Otherwise it is created in the current schema.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ An aggregate function is identified by its name and input data type(s).
+ Two aggregates in the same schema can have the same name if they operate on
+ different input types. The
+ name and input data type(s) of an aggregate must also be distinct from
+ the name and input data type(s) of every ordinary function in the same
+ schema.
+ This behavior is identical to overloading of ordinary function names
+ (see <xref linkend="sql-createfunction"/>).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A simple aggregate function is made from one or two ordinary
+ functions:
+ a state transition function
+ <replaceable class="parameter">sfunc</replaceable>,
+ and an optional final calculation function
+ <replaceable class="parameter">ffunc</replaceable>.
+ These are used as follows:
+<programlisting>
+<replaceable class="parameter">sfunc</replaceable>( internal-state, next-data-values ) ---> next-internal-state
+<replaceable class="parameter">ffunc</replaceable>( internal-state ) ---> aggregate-value
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> creates a temporary variable
+ of data type <replaceable class="parameter">stype</replaceable>
+ to hold the current internal state of the aggregate. At each input row,
+ the aggregate argument value(s) are calculated and
+ the state transition function is invoked with the current state value
+ and the new argument value(s) to calculate a new
+ internal state value. After all the rows have been processed,
+ the final function is invoked once to calculate the aggregate's return
+ value. If there is no final function then the ending state value
+ is returned as-is.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ An aggregate function can provide an initial condition,
+ that is, an initial value for the internal state value.
+ This is specified and stored in the database as a value of type
+ <type>text</type>, but it must be a valid external representation
+ of a constant of the state value data type. If it is not supplied
+ then the state value starts out null.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the state transition function is declared <quote>strict</quote>,
+ then it cannot be called with null inputs. With such a transition
+ function, aggregate execution behaves as follows. Rows with any null input
+ values are ignored (the function is not called and the previous state value
+ is retained). If the initial state value is null, then at the first row
+ with all-nonnull input values, the first argument value replaces the state
+ value, and the transition function is invoked at each subsequent row with
+ all-nonnull input values.
+ This is handy for implementing aggregates like <function>max</function>.
+ Note that this behavior is only available when
+ <replaceable class="parameter">state_data_type</replaceable>
+ is the same as the first
+ <replaceable class="parameter">arg_data_type</replaceable>.
+ When these types are different, you must supply a nonnull initial
+ condition or use a nonstrict transition function.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the state transition function is not strict, then it will be called
+ unconditionally at each input row, and must deal with null inputs
+ and null state values for itself. This allows the aggregate
+ author to have full control over the aggregate's handling of null values.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the final function is declared <quote>strict</quote>, then it will not
+ be called when the ending state value is null; instead a null result
+ will be returned automatically. (Of course this is just the normal
+ behavior of strict functions.) In any case the final function has
+ the option of returning a null value. For example, the final function for
+ <function>avg</function> returns null when it sees there were zero
+ input rows.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Sometimes it is useful to declare the final function as taking not just
+ the state value, but extra parameters corresponding to the aggregate's
+ input values. The main reason for doing this is if the final function
+ is polymorphic and the state value's data type would be inadequate to
+ pin down the result type. These extra parameters are always passed as
+ NULL (and so the final function must not be strict when
+ the <literal>FINALFUNC_EXTRA</literal> option is used), but nonetheless they
+ are valid parameters. The final function could for example make use
+ of <function>get_fn_expr_argtype</function> to identify the actual argument type
+ in the current call.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ An aggregate can optionally support <firstterm>moving-aggregate mode</firstterm>,
+ as described in <xref linkend="xaggr-moving-aggregates"/>. This requires
+ specifying the <literal>MSFUNC</literal>, <literal>MINVFUNC</literal>,
+ and <literal>MSTYPE</literal> parameters, and optionally
+ the <literal>MSSPACE</literal>, <literal>MFINALFUNC</literal>,
+ <literal>MFINALFUNC_EXTRA</literal>, <literal>MFINALFUNC_MODIFY</literal>,
+ and <literal>MINITCOND</literal> parameters. Except for <literal>MINVFUNC</literal>,
+ these parameters work like the corresponding simple-aggregate parameters
+ without <literal>M</literal>; they define a separate implementation of the
+ aggregate that includes an inverse transition function.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The syntax with <literal>ORDER BY</literal> in the parameter list creates
+ a special type of aggregate called an <firstterm>ordered-set
+ aggregate</firstterm>; or if <literal>HYPOTHETICAL</literal> is specified, then
+ a <firstterm>hypothetical-set aggregate</firstterm> is created. These
+ aggregates operate over groups of sorted values in order-dependent ways,
+ so that specification of an input sort order is an essential part of a
+ call. Also, they can have <firstterm>direct</firstterm> arguments, which are
+ arguments that are evaluated only once per aggregation rather than once
+ per input row. Hypothetical-set aggregates are a subclass of ordered-set
+ aggregates in which some of the direct arguments are required to match,
+ in number and data types, the aggregated argument columns. This allows
+ the values of those direct arguments to be added to the collection of
+ aggregate-input rows as an additional <quote>hypothetical</quote> row.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ An aggregate can optionally support <firstterm>partial aggregation</firstterm>,
+ as described in <xref linkend="xaggr-partial-aggregates"/>.
+ This requires specifying the <literal>COMBINEFUNC</literal> parameter.
+ If the <replaceable class="parameter">state_data_type</replaceable>
+ is <type>internal</type>, it's usually also appropriate to provide the
+ <literal>SERIALFUNC</literal> and <literal>DESERIALFUNC</literal> parameters so that
+ parallel aggregation is possible. Note that the aggregate must also be
+ marked <literal>PARALLEL SAFE</literal> to enable parallel aggregation.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Aggregates that behave like <function>MIN</function> or <function>MAX</function> can
+ sometimes be optimized by looking into an index instead of scanning every
+ input row. If this aggregate can be so optimized, indicate it by
+ specifying a <firstterm>sort operator</firstterm>. The basic requirement is that
+ the aggregate must yield the first element in the sort ordering induced by
+ the operator; in other words:
+<programlisting>
+SELECT agg(col) FROM tab;
+</programlisting>
+ must be equivalent to:
+<programlisting>
+SELECT col FROM tab ORDER BY col USING sortop LIMIT 1;
+</programlisting>
+ Further assumptions are that the aggregate ignores null inputs, and that
+ it delivers a null result if and only if there were no non-null inputs.
+ Ordinarily, a data type's <literal>&lt;</literal> operator is the proper sort
+ operator for <function>MIN</function>, and <literal>&gt;</literal> is the proper sort
+ operator for <function>MAX</function>. Note that the optimization will never
+ actually take effect unless the specified operator is the <quote>less
+ than</quote> or <quote>greater than</quote> strategy member of a B-tree
+ index operator class.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To be able to create an aggregate function, you must
+ have <literal>USAGE</literal> privilege on the argument types, the state
+ type(s), and the return type, as well as <literal>EXECUTE</literal>
+ privilege on the supporting functions.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the aggregate function
+ to create.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The mode of an argument: <literal>IN</literal> or <literal>VARIADIC</literal>.
+ (Aggregate functions do not support <literal>OUT</literal> arguments.)
+ If omitted, the default is <literal>IN</literal>. Only the last argument
+ can be marked <literal>VARIADIC</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an argument. This is currently only useful for
+ documentation purposes. If omitted, the argument has no name.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">arg_data_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An input data type on which this aggregate function operates.
+ To create a zero-argument aggregate function, write <literal>*</literal>
+ in place of the list of argument specifications. (An example of such an
+ aggregate is <function>count(*)</function>.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">base_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ In the old syntax for <command>CREATE AGGREGATE</command>, the input data type
+ is specified by a <literal>basetype</literal> parameter rather than being
+ written next to the aggregate name. Note that this syntax allows
+ only one input parameter. To define a zero-argument aggregate function
+ with this syntax, specify the <literal>basetype</literal> as
+ <literal>"ANY"</literal> (not <literal>*</literal>).
+ Ordered-set aggregates cannot be defined with the old syntax.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">sfunc</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the state transition function to be called for each
+ input row. For a normal <replaceable class="parameter">N</replaceable>-argument
+ aggregate function, the <replaceable class="parameter">sfunc</replaceable>
+ must take <replaceable class="parameter">N</replaceable>+1 arguments,
+ the first being of type <replaceable
+ class="parameter">state_data_type</replaceable> and the rest
+ matching the declared input data type(s) of the aggregate.
+ The function must return a value of type <replaceable
+ class="parameter">state_data_type</replaceable>. This function
+ takes the current state value and the current input data value(s),
+ and returns the next state value.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For ordered-set (including hypothetical-set) aggregates, the state
+ transition function receives only the current state value and the
+ aggregated arguments, not the direct arguments. Otherwise it is the
+ same.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">state_data_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The data type for the aggregate's state value.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">state_data_size</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The approximate average size (in bytes) of the aggregate's state value.
+ If this parameter is omitted or is zero, a default estimate is used
+ based on the <replaceable>state_data_type</replaceable>.
+ The planner uses this value to estimate the memory required for a
+ grouped aggregate query.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">ffunc</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the final function called to compute the aggregate's
+ result after all input rows have been traversed.
+ For a normal aggregate, this function
+ must take a single argument of type <replaceable
+ class="parameter">state_data_type</replaceable>. The return
+ data type of the aggregate is defined as the return type of this
+ function. If <replaceable class="parameter">ffunc</replaceable>
+ is not specified, then the ending state value is used as the
+ aggregate's result, and the return type is <replaceable
+ class="parameter">state_data_type</replaceable>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For ordered-set (including hypothetical-set) aggregates, the
+ final function receives not only the final state value,
+ but also the values of all the direct arguments.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If <literal>FINALFUNC_EXTRA</literal> is specified, then in addition to the
+ final state value and any direct arguments, the final function
+ receives extra NULL values corresponding to the aggregate's regular
+ (aggregated) arguments. This is mainly useful to allow correct
+ resolution of the aggregate result type when a polymorphic aggregate
+ is being defined.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>FINALFUNC_MODIFY</literal> = { <literal>READ_ONLY</literal> | <literal>SHAREABLE</literal> | <literal>READ_WRITE</literal> }</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option specifies whether the final function is a pure function
+ that does not modify its arguments. <literal>READ_ONLY</literal> indicates
+ it does not; the other two values indicate that it may change the
+ transition state value. See <xref linkend="sql-createaggregate-notes"/>
+ below for more detail. The
+ default is <literal>READ_ONLY</literal>, except for ordered-set aggregates,
+ for which the default is <literal>READ_WRITE</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">combinefunc</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <replaceable class="parameter">combinefunc</replaceable> function
+ may optionally be specified to allow the aggregate function to support
+ partial aggregation. If provided,
+ the <replaceable class="parameter">combinefunc</replaceable> must
+ combine two <replaceable class="parameter">state_data_type</replaceable>
+ values, each containing the result of aggregation over some subset of
+ the input values, to produce a
+ new <replaceable class="parameter">state_data_type</replaceable> that
+ represents the result of aggregating over both sets of inputs. This
+ function can be thought of as
+ an <replaceable class="parameter">sfunc</replaceable>, where instead of
+ acting upon an individual input row and adding it to the running
+ aggregate state, it adds another aggregate state to the running state.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <replaceable class="parameter">combinefunc</replaceable> must be
+ declared as taking two arguments of
+ the <replaceable class="parameter">state_data_type</replaceable> and
+ returning a value of
+ the <replaceable class="parameter">state_data_type</replaceable>.
+ Optionally this function may be <quote>strict</quote>. In this case the
+ function will not be called when either of the input states are null;
+ the other state will be taken as the correct result.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For aggregate functions
+ whose <replaceable class="parameter">state_data_type</replaceable>
+ is <type>internal</type>,
+ the <replaceable class="parameter">combinefunc</replaceable> must not
+ be strict. In this case
+ the <replaceable class="parameter">combinefunc</replaceable> must
+ ensure that null states are handled correctly and that the state being
+ returned is properly stored in the aggregate memory context.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">serialfunc</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An aggregate function
+ whose <replaceable class="parameter">state_data_type</replaceable>
+ is <type>internal</type> can participate in parallel aggregation only if it
+ has a <replaceable class="parameter">serialfunc</replaceable> function,
+ which must serialize the aggregate state into a <type>bytea</type> value for
+ transmission to another process. This function must take a single
+ argument of type <type>internal</type> and return type <type>bytea</type>. A
+ corresponding <replaceable class="parameter">deserialfunc</replaceable>
+ is also required.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">deserialfunc</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Deserialize a previously serialized aggregate state back into
+ <replaceable class="parameter">state_data_type</replaceable>. This
+ function must take two arguments of types <type>bytea</type>
+ and <type>internal</type>, and produce a result of type <type>internal</type>.
+ (Note: the second, <type>internal</type> argument is unused, but is required
+ for type safety reasons.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">initial_condition</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The initial setting for the state value. This must be a string
+ constant in the form accepted for the data type <replaceable
+ class="parameter">state_data_type</replaceable>. If not
+ specified, the state value starts out null.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">msfunc</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the forward state transition function to be called for each
+ input row in moving-aggregate mode. This is exactly like the regular
+ transition function, except that its first argument and result are of
+ type <replaceable>mstate_data_type</replaceable>, which might be different
+ from <replaceable>state_data_type</replaceable>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">minvfunc</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the inverse state transition function to be used in
+ moving-aggregate mode. This function has the same argument and
+ result types as <replaceable>msfunc</replaceable>, but it is used to remove
+ a value from the current aggregate state, rather than add a value to
+ it. The inverse transition function must have the same strictness
+ attribute as the forward state transition function.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">mstate_data_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The data type for the aggregate's state value, when using
+ moving-aggregate mode.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">mstate_data_size</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The approximate average size (in bytes) of the aggregate's state
+ value, when using moving-aggregate mode. This works the same as
+ <replaceable>state_data_size</replaceable>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">mffunc</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the final function called to compute the aggregate's
+ result after all input rows have been traversed, when using
+ moving-aggregate mode. This works the same as <replaceable>ffunc</replaceable>,
+ except that its first argument's type
+ is <replaceable>mstate_data_type</replaceable> and extra dummy arguments are
+ specified by writing <literal>MFINALFUNC_EXTRA</literal>.
+ The aggregate result type determined by <replaceable>mffunc</replaceable>
+ or <replaceable>mstate_data_type</replaceable> must match that determined by the
+ aggregate's regular implementation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>MFINALFUNC_MODIFY</literal> = { <literal>READ_ONLY</literal> | <literal>SHAREABLE</literal> | <literal>READ_WRITE</literal> }</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option is like <literal>FINALFUNC_MODIFY</literal>, but it describes
+ the behavior of the moving-aggregate final function.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">minitial_condition</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The initial setting for the state value, when using moving-aggregate
+ mode. This works the same as <replaceable>initial_condition</replaceable>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">sort_operator</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The associated sort operator for a <function>MIN</function>- or
+ <function>MAX</function>-like aggregate.
+ This is just an operator name (possibly schema-qualified).
+ The operator is assumed to have the same input data types as
+ the aggregate (which must be a single-argument normal aggregate).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>PARALLEL =</literal> { <literal>SAFE</literal> | <literal>RESTRICTED</literal> | <literal>UNSAFE</literal> }</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The meanings of <literal>PARALLEL SAFE</literal>, <literal>PARALLEL
+ RESTRICTED</literal>, and <literal>PARALLEL UNSAFE</literal> are the same as
+ in <link linkend="sql-createfunction"><command>CREATE FUNCTION</command></link>. An aggregate will not be
+ considered for parallelization if it is marked <literal>PARALLEL
+ UNSAFE</literal> (which is the default!) or <literal>PARALLEL RESTRICTED</literal>.
+ Note that the parallel-safety markings of the aggregate's support
+ functions are not consulted by the planner, only the marking of the
+ aggregate itself.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>HYPOTHETICAL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ For ordered-set aggregates only, this flag specifies that the aggregate
+ arguments are to be processed according to the requirements for
+ hypothetical-set aggregates: that is, the last few direct arguments must
+ match the data types of the aggregated (<literal>WITHIN GROUP</literal>)
+ arguments. The <literal>HYPOTHETICAL</literal> flag has no effect on
+ run-time behavior, only on parse-time resolution of the data types and
+ collations of the aggregate's arguments.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ The parameters of <command>CREATE AGGREGATE</command> can be
+ written in any order, not just the order illustrated above.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createaggregate-notes" xreflabel="Notes">
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ In parameters that specify support function names, you can write
+ a schema name if needed, for example <literal>SFUNC = public.sum</literal>.
+ Do not write argument types there, however &mdash; the argument types
+ of the support functions are determined from other parameters.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Ordinarily, PostgreSQL functions are expected to be true functions that
+ do not modify their input values. However, an aggregate transition
+ function, <emphasis>when used in the context of an aggregate</emphasis>,
+ is allowed to cheat and modify its transition-state argument in place.
+ This can provide substantial performance benefits compared to making
+ a fresh copy of the transition state each time.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Likewise, while an aggregate final function is normally expected not to
+ modify its input values, sometimes it is impractical to avoid modifying
+ the transition-state argument. Such behavior must be declared using
+ the <literal>FINALFUNC_MODIFY</literal> parameter.
+ The <literal>READ_WRITE</literal>
+ value indicates that the final function modifies the transition state in
+ unspecified ways. This value prevents use of the aggregate as a window
+ function, and it also prevents merging of transition states for aggregate
+ calls that share the same input values and transition functions.
+ The <literal>SHAREABLE</literal> value indicates that the transition function
+ cannot be applied after the final function, but multiple final-function
+ calls can be performed on the ending transition state value. This value
+ prevents use of the aggregate as a window function, but it allows merging
+ of transition states. (That is, the optimization of interest here is not
+ applying the same final function repeatedly, but applying different final
+ functions to the same ending transition state value. This is allowed as
+ long as none of the final functions are marked <literal>READ_WRITE</literal>.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If an aggregate supports moving-aggregate mode, it will improve
+ calculation efficiency when the aggregate is used as a window function
+ for a window with moving frame start (that is, a frame start mode other
+ than <literal>UNBOUNDED PRECEDING</literal>). Conceptually, the forward
+ transition function adds input values to the aggregate's state when
+ they enter the window frame from the bottom, and the inverse transition
+ function removes them again when they leave the frame at the top. So,
+ when values are removed, they are always removed in the same order they
+ were added. Whenever the inverse transition function is invoked, it will
+ thus receive the earliest added but not yet removed argument value(s).
+ The inverse transition function can assume that at least one row will
+ remain in the current state after it removes the oldest row. (When this
+ would not be the case, the window function mechanism simply starts a
+ fresh aggregation, rather than using the inverse transition function.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The forward transition function for moving-aggregate mode is not
+ allowed to return NULL as the new state value. If the inverse
+ transition function returns NULL, this is taken as an indication that
+ the inverse function cannot reverse the state calculation for this
+ particular input, and so the aggregate calculation will be redone from
+ scratch for the current frame starting position. This convention
+ allows moving-aggregate mode to be used in situations where there are
+ some infrequent cases that are impractical to reverse out of the
+ running state value.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If no moving-aggregate implementation is supplied,
+ the aggregate can still be used with moving frames,
+ but <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> will recompute the whole
+ aggregation whenever the start of the frame moves.
+ Note that whether or not the aggregate supports moving-aggregate
+ mode, <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> can handle a moving frame
+ end without recalculation; this is done by continuing to add new values
+ to the aggregate's state. This is why use of an aggregate as a window
+ function requires that the final function be read-only: it must
+ not damage the aggregate's state value, so that the aggregation can be
+ continued even after an aggregate result value has been obtained for
+ one set of frame boundaries.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The syntax for ordered-set aggregates allows <literal>VARIADIC</literal>
+ to be specified for both the last direct parameter and the last
+ aggregated (<literal>WITHIN GROUP</literal>) parameter. However, the
+ current implementation restricts use of <literal>VARIADIC</literal>
+ in two ways. First, ordered-set aggregates can only use
+ <literal>VARIADIC "any"</literal>, not other variadic array types.
+ Second, if the last direct parameter is <literal>VARIADIC "any"</literal>,
+ then there can be only one aggregated parameter and it must also
+ be <literal>VARIADIC "any"</literal>. (In the representation used in the
+ system catalogs, these two parameters are merged into a single
+ <literal>VARIADIC "any"</literal> item, since <structname>pg_proc</structname> cannot
+ represent functions with more than one <literal>VARIADIC</literal> parameter.)
+ If the aggregate is a hypothetical-set aggregate, the direct arguments
+ that match the <literal>VARIADIC "any"</literal> parameter are the hypothetical
+ ones; any preceding parameters represent additional direct arguments
+ that are not constrained to match the aggregated arguments.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Currently, ordered-set aggregates do not need to support
+ moving-aggregate mode, since they cannot be used as window functions.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Partial (including parallel) aggregation is currently not supported for
+ ordered-set aggregates. Also, it will never be used for aggregate calls
+ that include <literal>DISTINCT</literal> or <literal>ORDER BY</literal> clauses, since
+ those semantics cannot be supported during partial aggregation.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ See <xref linkend="xaggr"/>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE AGGREGATE</command> is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> language extension. The SQL
+ standard does not provide for user-defined aggregate functions.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alteraggregate"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropaggregate"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_cast.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_cast.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..bad75bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_cast.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,424 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_cast.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createcast">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createcast">
+ <primary>CREATE CAST</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE CAST</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE CAST</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new cast</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE CAST (<replaceable>source_type</replaceable> AS <replaceable>target_type</replaceable>)
+ WITH FUNCTION <replaceable>function_name</replaceable> [ (<replaceable>argument_type</replaceable> [, ...]) ]
+ [ AS ASSIGNMENT | AS IMPLICIT ]
+
+CREATE CAST (<replaceable>source_type</replaceable> AS <replaceable>target_type</replaceable>)
+ WITHOUT FUNCTION
+ [ AS ASSIGNMENT | AS IMPLICIT ]
+
+CREATE CAST (<replaceable>source_type</replaceable> AS <replaceable>target_type</replaceable>)
+ WITH INOUT
+ [ AS ASSIGNMENT | AS IMPLICIT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createcast-description">
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE CAST</command> defines a new cast. A cast
+ specifies how to perform a conversion between
+ two data types. For example,
+<programlisting>
+SELECT CAST(42 AS float8);
+</programlisting>
+ converts the integer constant 42 to type <type>float8</type> by
+ invoking a previously specified function, in this case
+ <literal>float8(int4)</literal>. (If no suitable cast has been defined, the
+ conversion fails.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Two types can be <firstterm>binary coercible</firstterm>, which
+ means that the conversion can be performed <quote>for free</quote>
+ without invoking any function. This requires that corresponding
+ values use the same internal representation. For instance, the
+ types <type>text</type> and <type>varchar</type> are binary
+ coercible both ways. Binary coercibility is not necessarily a
+ symmetric relationship. For example, the cast
+ from <type>xml</type> to <type>text</type> can be performed for
+ free in the present implementation, but the reverse direction
+ requires a function that performs at least a syntax check. (Two
+ types that are binary coercible both ways are also referred to as
+ binary compatible.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You can define a cast as an <firstterm>I/O conversion cast</firstterm> by using
+ the <literal>WITH INOUT</literal> syntax. An I/O conversion cast is
+ performed by invoking the output function of the source data type, and
+ passing the resulting string to the input function of the target data type.
+ In many common cases, this feature avoids the need to write a separate
+ cast function for conversion. An I/O conversion cast acts the same as
+ a regular function-based cast; only the implementation is different.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ By default, a cast can be invoked only by an explicit cast request,
+ that is an explicit <literal>CAST(<replaceable>x</replaceable> AS
+ <replaceable>typename</replaceable>)</literal> or
+ <replaceable>x</replaceable><literal>::</literal><replaceable>typename</replaceable>
+ construct.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the cast is marked <literal>AS ASSIGNMENT</literal> then it can be invoked
+ implicitly when assigning a value to a column of the target data type.
+ For example, supposing that <literal>foo.f1</literal> is a column of
+ type <type>text</type>, then:
+<programlisting>
+INSERT INTO foo (f1) VALUES (42);
+</programlisting>
+ will be allowed if the cast from type <type>integer</type> to type
+ <type>text</type> is marked <literal>AS ASSIGNMENT</literal>, otherwise not.
+ (We generally use the term <firstterm>assignment
+ cast</firstterm> to describe this kind of cast.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the cast is marked <literal>AS IMPLICIT</literal> then it can be invoked
+ implicitly in any context, whether assignment or internally in an
+ expression. (We generally use the term <firstterm>implicit
+ cast</firstterm> to describe this kind of cast.)
+ For example, consider this query:
+<programlisting>
+SELECT 2 + 4.0;
+</programlisting>
+ The parser initially marks the constants as being of type <type>integer</type>
+ and <type>numeric</type> respectively. There is no <type>integer</type>
+ <literal>+</literal> <type>numeric</type> operator in the system catalogs,
+ but there is a <type>numeric</type> <literal>+</literal> <type>numeric</type> operator.
+ The query will therefore succeed if a cast from <type>integer</type> to
+ <type>numeric</type> is available and is marked <literal>AS IMPLICIT</literal> &mdash;
+ which in fact it is. The parser will apply the implicit cast and resolve
+ the query as if it had been written
+<programlisting>
+SELECT CAST ( 2 AS numeric ) + 4.0;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Now, the catalogs also provide a cast from <type>numeric</type> to
+ <type>integer</type>. If that cast were marked <literal>AS IMPLICIT</literal> &mdash;
+ which it is not &mdash; then the parser would be faced with choosing
+ between the above interpretation and the alternative of casting the
+ <type>numeric</type> constant to <type>integer</type> and applying the
+ <type>integer</type> <literal>+</literal> <type>integer</type> operator. Lacking any
+ knowledge of which choice to prefer, it would give up and declare the
+ query ambiguous. The fact that only one of the two casts is
+ implicit is the way in which we teach the parser to prefer resolution
+ of a mixed <type>numeric</type>-and-<type>integer</type> expression as
+ <type>numeric</type>; there is no built-in knowledge about that.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ It is wise to be conservative about marking casts as implicit. An
+ overabundance of implicit casting paths can cause
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> to choose surprising
+ interpretations of commands, or to be unable to resolve commands at
+ all because there are multiple possible interpretations. A good
+ rule of thumb is to make a cast implicitly invokable only for
+ information-preserving transformations between types in the same
+ general type category. For example, the cast from <type>int2</type> to
+ <type>int4</type> can reasonably be implicit, but the cast from
+ <type>float8</type> to <type>int4</type> should probably be
+ assignment-only. Cross-type-category casts, such as <type>text</type>
+ to <type>int4</type>, are best made explicit-only.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ Sometimes it is necessary for usability or standards-compliance reasons
+ to provide multiple implicit casts among a set of types, resulting in
+ ambiguity that cannot be avoided as above. The parser has a fallback
+ heuristic based on <firstterm>type categories</firstterm> and <firstterm>preferred
+ types</firstterm> that can help to provide desired behavior in such cases. See
+ <xref linkend="sql-createtype"/> for
+ more information.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+
+ <para>
+ To be able to create a cast, you must own the source or the target data type
+ and have <literal>USAGE</literal> privilege on the other type. To create a
+ binary-coercible cast, you must be superuser. (This restriction is made
+ because an erroneous binary-coercible cast conversion can easily crash the
+ server.)
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>source_type</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the source data type of the cast.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>target_type</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the target data type of the cast.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal><replaceable>function_name</replaceable>[(<replaceable>argument_type</replaceable> [, ...])]</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The function used to perform the cast. The function name can
+ be schema-qualified. If it is not, the function will be looked
+ up in the schema search path. The function's result data type must
+ match the target type of the cast. Its arguments are discussed below.
+ If no argument list is specified, the function name must be unique in
+ its schema.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>WITHOUT FUNCTION</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Indicates that the source type is binary-coercible to the target type,
+ so no function is required to perform the cast.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>WITH INOUT</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Indicates that the cast is an I/O conversion cast, performed by
+ invoking the output function of the source data type, and passing the
+ resulting string to the input function of the target data type.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>AS ASSIGNMENT</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Indicates that the cast can be invoked implicitly in assignment
+ contexts.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>AS IMPLICIT</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Indicates that the cast can be invoked implicitly in any context.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ Cast implementation functions can have one to three arguments.
+ The first argument type must be identical to or binary-coercible from
+ the cast's source type. The second argument,
+ if present, must be type <type>integer</type>; it receives the type
+ modifier associated with the destination type, or <literal>-1</literal>
+ if there is none. The third argument,
+ if present, must be type <type>boolean</type>; it receives <literal>true</literal>
+ if the cast is an explicit cast, <literal>false</literal> otherwise.
+ (Bizarrely, the SQL standard demands different behaviors for explicit and
+ implicit casts in some cases. This argument is supplied for functions
+ that must implement such casts. It is not recommended that you design
+ your own data types so that this matters.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The return type of a cast function must be identical to or
+ binary-coercible to the cast's target type.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Ordinarily a cast must have different source and target data types.
+ However, it is allowed to declare a cast with identical source and
+ target types if it has a cast implementation function with more than one
+ argument. This is used to represent type-specific length coercion
+ functions in the system catalogs. The named function is used to
+ coerce a value of the type to the type modifier value given by its
+ second argument.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When a cast has different source and
+ target types and a function that takes more than one argument, it
+ supports converting from one type to another and applying a length
+ coercion in a single step. When no such entry is available, coercion
+ to a type that uses a type modifier involves two cast steps, one to
+ convert between data types and a second to apply the modifier.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A cast to or from a domain type currently has no effect. Casting
+ to or from a domain uses the casts associated with its underlying type.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createcast-notes">
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Use <link linkend="sql-dropcast"><command>DROP CAST</command></link> to remove user-defined casts.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Remember that if you want to be able to convert types both ways you
+ need to declare casts both ways explicitly.
+ </para>
+
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createcast">
+ <primary>cast</primary>
+ <secondary>I/O conversion</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <para>
+ It is normally not necessary to create casts between user-defined types
+ and the standard string types (<type>text</type>, <type>varchar</type>, and
+ <type>char(<replaceable>n</replaceable>)</type>, as well as user-defined types that
+ are defined to be in the string category). <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ provides automatic I/O conversion casts for that. The automatic casts to
+ string types are treated as assignment casts, while the automatic casts
+ from string types are
+ explicit-only. You can override this behavior by declaring your own
+ cast to replace an automatic cast, but usually the only reason to
+ do so is if you want the conversion to be more easily invokable than the
+ standard assignment-only or explicit-only setting. Another possible
+ reason is that you want the conversion to behave differently from the
+ type's I/O function; but that is sufficiently surprising that you
+ should think twice about whether it's a good idea. (A small number of
+ the built-in types do indeed have different behaviors for conversions,
+ mostly because of requirements of the SQL standard.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ While not required, it is recommended that you continue to follow this old
+ convention of naming cast implementation functions after the target data
+ type. Many users are used to being able to cast data types using a
+ function-style notation, that is
+ <replaceable>typename</replaceable>(<replaceable>x</replaceable>). This notation is in fact
+ nothing more nor less than a call of the cast implementation function; it
+ is not specially treated as a cast. If your conversion functions are not
+ named to support this convention then you will have surprised users.
+ Since <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> allows overloading of the same function
+ name with different argument types, there is no difficulty in having
+ multiple conversion functions from different types that all use the
+ target type's name.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ Actually the preceding paragraph is an oversimplification: there are
+ two cases in which a function-call construct will be treated as a cast
+ request without having matched it to an actual function.
+ If a function call <replaceable>name</replaceable>(<replaceable>x</replaceable>) does not
+ exactly match any existing function, but <replaceable>name</replaceable> is the name
+ of a data type and <structname>pg_cast</structname> provides a binary-coercible cast
+ to this type from the type of <replaceable>x</replaceable>, then the call will be
+ construed as a binary-coercible cast. This exception is made so that
+ binary-coercible casts can be invoked using functional syntax, even
+ though they lack any function. Likewise, if there is no
+ <structname>pg_cast</structname> entry but the cast would be to or from a string
+ type, the call will be construed as an I/O conversion cast. This
+ exception allows I/O conversion casts to be invoked using functional
+ syntax.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ There is also an exception to the exception: I/O conversion casts from
+ composite types to string types cannot be invoked using functional
+ syntax, but must be written in explicit cast syntax (either
+ <literal>CAST</literal> or <literal>::</literal> notation). This exception was added
+ because after the introduction of automatically-provided I/O conversion
+ casts, it was found too easy to accidentally invoke such a cast when
+ a function or column reference was intended.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createcast-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To create an assignment cast from type <type>bigint</type> to type
+ <type>int4</type> using the function <literal>int4(bigint)</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE CAST (bigint AS int4) WITH FUNCTION int4(bigint) AS ASSIGNMENT;
+</programlisting>
+ (This cast is already predefined in the system.)
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createcast-compat">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>CREATE CAST</command> command conforms to the
+ <acronym>SQL</acronym> standard,
+ except that SQL does not make provisions for binary-coercible
+ types or extra arguments to implementation functions.
+ <literal>AS IMPLICIT</literal> is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension, too.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createcast-seealso">
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <xref linkend="sql-createfunction"/>,
+ <xref linkend="sql-createtype"/>,
+ <xref linkend="sql-dropcast"/>
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_collation.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_collation.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..58f5f0c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_collation.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,263 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_collation.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createcollation">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createcollation">
+ <primary>CREATE COLLATION</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE COLLATION</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE COLLATION</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new collation</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE COLLATION [ IF NOT EXISTS ] <replaceable>name</replaceable> (
+ [ LOCALE = <replaceable>locale</replaceable>, ]
+ [ LC_COLLATE = <replaceable>lc_collate</replaceable>, ]
+ [ LC_CTYPE = <replaceable>lc_ctype</replaceable>, ]
+ [ PROVIDER = <replaceable>provider</replaceable>, ]
+ [ DETERMINISTIC = <replaceable>boolean</replaceable>, ]
+ [ VERSION = <replaceable>version</replaceable> ]
+)
+CREATE COLLATION [ IF NOT EXISTS ] <replaceable>name</replaceable> FROM <replaceable>existing_collation</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createcollation-description">
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE COLLATION</command> defines a new collation using
+ the specified operating system locale settings,
+ or by copying an existing collation.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To be able to create a collation, you must
+ have <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on the destination schema.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF NOT EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if a collation with the same name already exists.
+ A notice is issued in this case. Note that there is no guarantee that
+ the existing collation is anything like the one that would have been created.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>name</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the collation. The collation name can be
+ schema-qualified. If it is not, the collation is defined in the
+ current schema. The collation name must be unique within that
+ schema. (The system catalogs can contain collations with the
+ same name for other encodings, but these are ignored if the
+ database encoding does not match.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>locale</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This is a shortcut for setting <symbol>LC_COLLATE</symbol>
+ and <symbol>LC_CTYPE</symbol> at once. If you specify this,
+ you cannot specify either of those parameters.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>lc_collate</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Use the specified operating system locale for
+ the <symbol>LC_COLLATE</symbol> locale category.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>lc_ctype</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Use the specified operating system locale for
+ the <symbol>LC_CTYPE</symbol> locale category.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>provider</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the provider to use for locale services associated with this
+ collation. Possible values
+ are: <literal>icu</literal>,<indexterm><primary>ICU</primary></indexterm>
+ <literal>libc</literal>.
+ <literal>libc</literal> is the default.
+ The available choices depend on the operating system and build options.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DETERMINISTIC</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether the collation should use deterministic comparisons.
+ The default is true. A deterministic comparison considers strings that
+ are not byte-wise equal to be unequal even if they are considered
+ logically equal by the comparison. PostgreSQL breaks ties using a
+ byte-wise comparison. Comparison that is not deterministic can make the
+ collation be, say, case- or accent-insensitive. For that, you need to
+ choose an appropriate <literal>LC_COLLATE</literal> setting
+ <emphasis>and</emphasis> set the collation to not deterministic here.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Nondeterministic collations are only supported with the ICU provider.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>version</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the version string to store with the collation. Normally,
+ this should be omitted, which will cause the version to be computed
+ from the actual version of the collation as provided by the operating
+ system. This option is intended to be used
+ by <command>pg_upgrade</command> for copying the version from an
+ existing installation.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ See also <xref linkend="sql-altercollation"/> for how to handle
+ collation version mismatches.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>existing_collation</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an existing collation to copy. The new collation
+ will have the same properties as the existing one, but it
+ will be an independent object.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createcollation-notes">
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE COLLATION</command> takes a <literal>SHARE ROW
+ EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock, which is self-conflicting, on the
+ <structname>pg_collation</structname> system catalog, so only one
+ <command>CREATE COLLATION</command> command can run at a time.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Use <command>DROP COLLATION</command> to remove user-defined collations.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ See <xref linkend="collation-create"/> for more information on how to create collations.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When using the <literal>libc</literal> collation provider, the locale must
+ be applicable to the current database encoding.
+ See <xref linkend="sql-createdatabase"/> for the precise rules.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createcollation-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To create a collation from the operating system locale
+ <literal>fr_FR.utf8</literal>
+ (assuming the current database encoding is <literal>UTF8</literal>):
+<programlisting>
+CREATE COLLATION french (locale = 'fr_FR.utf8');
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To create a collation using the ICU provider using German phone book sort order:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE COLLATION german_phonebook (provider = icu, locale = 'de-u-co-phonebk');
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To create a collation from an existing collation:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE COLLATION german FROM "de_DE";
+</programlisting>
+ This can be convenient to be able to use operating-system-independent
+ collation names in applications.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createcollation-compat">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is a <command>CREATE COLLATION</command> statement in the SQL
+ standard, but it is limited to copying an existing collation. The
+ syntax to create a new collation is
+ a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createcollation-seealso">
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altercollation"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropcollation"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_conversion.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_conversion.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..75d7b00
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_conversion.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,189 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_conversion.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createconversion">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createconversion">
+ <primary>CREATE CONVERSION</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE CONVERSION</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE CONVERSION</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new encoding conversion</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE [ DEFAULT ] CONVERSION <replaceable>name</replaceable>
+ FOR <replaceable>source_encoding</replaceable> TO <replaceable>dest_encoding</replaceable> FROM <replaceable>function_name</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createconversion-description">
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE CONVERSION</command> defines a new conversion between
+ two character set encodings.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Conversions that are marked <literal>DEFAULT</literal> can be used for
+ automatic encoding conversion between client and server. To support that
+ usage, two conversions, from encoding A to B <emphasis>and</emphasis>
+ from encoding B to A, must be defined.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To be able to create a conversion, you must have <literal>EXECUTE</literal> privilege
+ on the function and <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on the destination schema.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DEFAULT</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>DEFAULT</literal> clause indicates that this conversion
+ is the default for this particular source to destination
+ encoding. There should be only one default encoding in a schema
+ for the encoding pair.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>name</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the conversion. The conversion name can be
+ schema-qualified. If it is not, the conversion is defined in the
+ current schema. The conversion name must be unique within a
+ schema.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>source_encoding</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The source encoding name.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>dest_encoding</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The destination encoding name.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>function_name</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The function used to perform the conversion. The function name can
+ be schema-qualified. If it is not, the function will be looked
+ up in the path.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The function must have the following signature:
+
+<programlisting>
+conv_proc(
+ integer, -- source encoding ID
+ integer, -- destination encoding ID
+ cstring, -- source string (null terminated C string)
+ internal, -- destination (fill with a null terminated C string)
+ integer, -- source string length
+ boolean -- if true, don't throw an error if conversion fails
+) RETURNS integer;
+</programlisting>
+ The return value is the number of source bytes that were successfully
+ converted. If the last argument is false, the function must throw an
+ error on invalid input, and the return value is always equal to the
+ source string length.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createconversion-notes">
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Neither the source nor the destination encoding can
+ be <literal>SQL_ASCII</literal>, as the server's behavior for cases
+ involving the <literal>SQL_ASCII</literal> <quote>encoding</quote> is
+ hard-wired.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Use <command>DROP CONVERSION</command> to remove user-defined conversions.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The privileges required to create a conversion might be changed in a future
+ release.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createconversion-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To create a conversion from encoding <literal>UTF8</literal> to
+ <literal>LATIN1</literal> using <function>myfunc</function>:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE CONVERSION myconv FOR 'UTF8' TO 'LATIN1' FROM myfunc;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createconversion-compat">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE CONVERSION</command>
+ is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ There is no <command>CREATE CONVERSION</command>
+ statement in the SQL standard, but a <command>CREATE TRANSLATION</command>
+ statement that is very similar in purpose and syntax.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createconversion-seealso">
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterconversion"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createfunction"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropconversion"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_database.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_database.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..41cb406
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_database.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,359 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_database.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createdatabase">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createdatabase">
+ <primary>CREATE DATABASE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE DATABASE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE DATABASE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>create a new database</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE DATABASE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ [ [ WITH ] [ OWNER [=] <replaceable class="parameter">user_name</replaceable> ]
+ [ TEMPLATE [=] <replaceable class="parameter">template</replaceable> ]
+ [ ENCODING [=] <replaceable class="parameter">encoding</replaceable> ]
+ [ LOCALE [=] <replaceable class="parameter">locale</replaceable> ]
+ [ LC_COLLATE [=] <replaceable class="parameter">lc_collate</replaceable> ]
+ [ LC_CTYPE [=] <replaceable class="parameter">lc_ctype</replaceable> ]
+ [ TABLESPACE [=] <replaceable class="parameter">tablespace_name</replaceable> ]
+ [ ALLOW_CONNECTIONS [=] <replaceable class="parameter">allowconn</replaceable> ]
+ [ CONNECTION LIMIT [=] <replaceable class="parameter">connlimit</replaceable> ]
+ [ IS_TEMPLATE [=] <replaceable class="parameter">istemplate</replaceable> ] ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE DATABASE</command> creates a new
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To create a database, you must be a superuser or have the special
+ <literal>CREATEDB</literal> privilege.
+ See <xref linkend="sql-createrole"/>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ By default, the new database will be created by cloning the standard
+ system database <literal>template1</literal>. A different template can be
+ specified by writing <literal>TEMPLATE
+ <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></literal>. In particular,
+ by writing <literal>TEMPLATE template0</literal>, you can create a pristine
+ database (one where no user-defined objects exist and where the system
+ objects have not been altered)
+ containing only the standard objects predefined by your
+ version of <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>. This is useful
+ if you wish to avoid copying
+ any installation-local objects that might have been added to
+ <literal>template1</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a database to create.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">user_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The role name of the user who will own the new database,
+ or <literal>DEFAULT</literal> to use the default (namely, the
+ user executing the command). To create a database owned by another
+ role, you must be a direct or indirect member of that role,
+ or be a superuser.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">template</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the template from which to create the new database,
+ or <literal>DEFAULT</literal> to use the default template
+ (<literal>template1</literal>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">encoding</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Character set encoding to use in the new database. Specify
+ a string constant (e.g., <literal>'SQL_ASCII'</literal>),
+ or an integer encoding number, or <literal>DEFAULT</literal>
+ to use the default encoding (namely, the encoding of the
+ template database). The character sets supported by the
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> server are described in
+ <xref linkend="multibyte-charset-supported"/>. See below for
+ additional restrictions.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">locale</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This is a shortcut for setting <symbol>LC_COLLATE</symbol>
+ and <symbol>LC_CTYPE</symbol> at once. If you specify this,
+ you cannot specify either of those parameters.
+ </para>
+ <tip>
+ <para>
+ The other locale settings <xref linkend="guc-lc-messages"/>, <xref
+ linkend="guc-lc-monetary"/>, <xref linkend="guc-lc-numeric"/>, and
+ <xref linkend="guc-lc-time"/> are not fixed per database and are not
+ set by this command. If you want to make them the default for a
+ specific database, you can use <literal>ALTER DATABASE
+ ... SET</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </tip>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">lc_collate</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Collation order (<literal>LC_COLLATE</literal>) to use in the new database.
+ This affects the sort order applied to strings, e.g., in queries with
+ ORDER BY, as well as the order used in indexes on text columns.
+ The default is to use the collation order of the template database.
+ See below for additional restrictions.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">lc_ctype</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Character classification (<literal>LC_CTYPE</literal>) to use in the new
+ database. This affects the categorization of characters, e.g., lower,
+ upper and digit. The default is to use the character classification of
+ the template database. See below for additional restrictions.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">tablespace_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the tablespace that will be associated with the
+ new database, or <literal>DEFAULT</literal> to use the
+ template database's tablespace. This
+ tablespace will be the default tablespace used for objects
+ created in this database. See
+ <xref linkend="sql-createtablespace"/>
+ for more information.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">allowconn</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If false then no one can connect to this database. The default is
+ true, allowing connections (except as restricted by other mechanisms,
+ such as <literal>GRANT</literal>/<literal>REVOKE CONNECT</literal>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">connlimit</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ How many concurrent connections can be made
+ to this database. -1 (the default) means no limit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">istemplate</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If true, then this database can be cloned by any user with <literal>CREATEDB</literal>
+ privileges; if false (the default), then only superusers or the owner
+ of the database can clone it.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ Optional parameters can be written in any order, not only the order
+ illustrated above.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE DATABASE</command> cannot be executed inside a transaction
+ block.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Errors along the line of <quote>could not initialize database directory</quote>
+ are most likely related to insufficient permissions on the data
+ directory, a full disk, or other file system problems.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Use <link linkend="sql-dropdatabase"><command>DROP DATABASE</command></link> to remove a database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The program <xref linkend="app-createdb"/> is a
+ wrapper program around this command, provided for convenience.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Database-level configuration parameters (set via <link
+ linkend="sql-alterdatabase"><command>ALTER DATABASE</command></link>) and database-level permissions (set via
+ <link linkend="sql-grant"><command>GRANT</command></link>) are not copied from the template database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Although it is possible to copy a database other than <literal>template1</literal>
+ by specifying its name as the template, this is not (yet) intended as
+ a general-purpose <quote><command>COPY DATABASE</command></quote> facility.
+ The principal limitation is that no other sessions can be connected to
+ the template database while it is being copied. <command>CREATE
+ DATABASE</command> will fail if any other connection exists when it starts;
+ otherwise, new connections to the template database are locked out
+ until <command>CREATE DATABASE</command> completes.
+ See <xref linkend="manage-ag-templatedbs"/> for more information.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The character set encoding specified for the new database must be
+ compatible with the chosen locale settings (<literal>LC_COLLATE</literal> and
+ <literal>LC_CTYPE</literal>). If the locale is <literal>C</literal> (or equivalently
+ <literal>POSIX</literal>), then all encodings are allowed, but for other
+ locale settings there is only one encoding that will work properly.
+ (On Windows, however, UTF-8 encoding can be used with any locale.)
+ <command>CREATE DATABASE</command> will allow superusers to specify
+ <literal>SQL_ASCII</literal> encoding regardless of the locale settings,
+ but this choice is deprecated and may result in misbehavior of
+ character-string functions if data that is not encoding-compatible
+ with the locale is stored in the database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The encoding and locale settings must match those of the template database,
+ except when <literal>template0</literal> is used as template. This is because
+ other databases might contain data that does not match the specified
+ encoding, or might contain indexes whose sort ordering is affected by
+ <literal>LC_COLLATE</literal> and <literal>LC_CTYPE</literal>. Copying such data would
+ result in a database that is corrupt according to the new settings.
+ <literal>template0</literal>, however, is known to not contain any data or
+ indexes that would be affected.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>CONNECTION LIMIT</literal> option is only enforced approximately;
+ if two new sessions start at about the same time when just one
+ connection <quote>slot</quote> remains for the database, it is possible that
+ both will fail. Also, the limit is not enforced against superusers or
+ background worker processes.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To create a new database:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE DATABASE lusiadas;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To create a database <literal>sales</literal> owned by user <literal>salesapp</literal>
+ with a default tablespace of <literal>salesspace</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE DATABASE sales OWNER salesapp TABLESPACE salesspace;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To create a database <literal>music</literal> with a different locale:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE DATABASE music
+ LOCALE 'sv_SE.utf8'
+ TEMPLATE template0;
+</programlisting>
+ In this example, the <literal>TEMPLATE template0</literal> clause is required if
+ the specified locale is different from the one in <literal>template1</literal>.
+ (If it is not, then specifying the locale explicitly is redundant.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To create a database <literal>music2</literal> with a different locale and a
+ different character set encoding:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE DATABASE music2
+ LOCALE 'sv_SE.iso885915'
+ ENCODING LATIN9
+ TEMPLATE template0;
+</programlisting>
+ The specified locale and encoding settings must match, or an error will be
+ reported.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Note that locale names are specific to the operating system, so that the
+ above commands might not work in the same way everywhere.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>CREATE DATABASE</command> statement in the SQL
+ standard. Databases are equivalent to catalogs, whose creation is
+ implementation-defined.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterdatabase"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropdatabase"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_domain.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_domain.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..82a0b87
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_domain.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,288 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_domain.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createdomain">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createdomain">
+ <primary>CREATE DOMAIN</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE DOMAIN</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE DOMAIN</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new domain</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE DOMAIN <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ AS ] <replaceable class="parameter">data_type</replaceable>
+ [ COLLATE <replaceable>collation</replaceable> ]
+ [ DEFAULT <replaceable>expression</replaceable> ]
+ [ <replaceable class="parameter">constraint</replaceable> [ ... ] ]
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">constraint</replaceable> is:</phrase>
+
+[ CONSTRAINT <replaceable class="parameter">constraint_name</replaceable> ]
+{ NOT NULL | NULL | CHECK (<replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable>) }
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE DOMAIN</command> creates a new domain. A domain is
+ essentially a data type with optional constraints (restrictions on
+ the allowed set of values).
+ The user who defines a domain becomes its owner.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a schema name is given (for example, <literal>CREATE DOMAIN
+ myschema.mydomain ...</literal>) then the domain is created in the
+ specified schema. Otherwise it is created in the current schema.
+ The domain name must be unique among the types and domains existing
+ in its schema.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Domains are useful for abstracting common constraints on fields into
+ a single location for maintenance. For example, several tables might
+ contain email address columns, all requiring the same CHECK constraint
+ to verify the address syntax.
+ Define a domain rather than setting up each table's constraint
+ individually.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To be able to create a domain, you must have <literal>USAGE</literal>
+ privilege on the underlying type.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of a domain to be created.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">data_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The underlying data type of the domain. This can include array
+ specifiers.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>collation</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An optional collation for the domain. If no collation is
+ specified, the domain has the same collation behavior as its
+ underlying data type.
+ The underlying type must be collatable if <literal>COLLATE</literal>
+ is specified.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DEFAULT <replaceable>expression</replaceable></literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>DEFAULT</literal> clause specifies a default value for
+ columns of the domain data type. The value is any
+ variable-free expression (but subqueries are not allowed).
+ The data type of the default expression must match the data
+ type of the domain. If no default value is specified, then
+ the default value is the null value.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The default expression will be used in any insert operation
+ that does not specify a value for the column. If a default
+ value is defined for a particular column, it overrides any
+ default associated with the domain. In turn, the domain
+ default overrides any default value associated with the
+ underlying data type.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CONSTRAINT <replaceable class="parameter">constraint_name</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An optional name for a constraint. If not specified,
+ the system generates a name.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>NOT NULL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Values of this domain are prevented from being null
+ (but see notes below).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>NULL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Values of this domain are allowed to be null. This is the default.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This clause is only intended for compatibility with
+ nonstandard SQL databases. Its use is discouraged in new
+ applications.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CHECK (<replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable>)</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para><literal>CHECK</literal> clauses specify integrity constraints or tests
+ which values of the domain must satisfy.
+ Each constraint must be an expression
+ producing a Boolean result. It should use the key word <literal>VALUE</literal>
+ to refer to the value being tested. Expressions evaluating
+ to TRUE or UNKNOWN succeed. If the expression produces a FALSE result,
+ an error is reported and the value is not allowed to be converted
+ to the domain type.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Currently, <literal>CHECK</literal> expressions cannot contain
+ subqueries nor refer to variables other than <literal>VALUE</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When a domain has multiple <literal>CHECK</literal> constraints,
+ they will be tested in alphabetical order by name.
+ (<productname>PostgreSQL</productname> versions before 9.5 did not honor any
+ particular firing order for <literal>CHECK</literal> constraints.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Domain constraints, particularly <literal>NOT NULL</literal>, are checked when
+ converting a value to the domain type. It is possible for a column that
+ is nominally of the domain type to read as null despite there being such
+ a constraint. For example, this can happen in an outer-join query, if
+ the domain column is on the nullable side of the outer join. A more
+ subtle example is
+<programlisting>
+INSERT INTO tab (domcol) VALUES ((SELECT domcol FROM tab WHERE false));
+</programlisting>
+ The empty scalar sub-SELECT will produce a null value that is considered
+ to be of the domain type, so no further constraint checking is applied
+ to it, and the insertion will succeed.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ It is very difficult to avoid such problems, because of SQL's general
+ assumption that a null value is a valid value of every data type. Best practice
+ therefore is to design a domain's constraints so that a null value is allowed,
+ and then to apply column <literal>NOT NULL</literal> constraints to columns of
+ the domain type as needed, rather than directly to the domain type.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> assumes that
+ <literal>CHECK</literal> constraints' conditions are immutable, that is,
+ they will always give the same result for the same input value. This
+ assumption is what justifies examining <literal>CHECK</literal>
+ constraints only when a value is first converted to be of a domain type,
+ and not at other times. (This is essentially the same as the treatment
+ of table <literal>CHECK</literal> constraints, as described in
+ <xref linkend="ddl-constraints-check-constraints"/>.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ An example of a common way to break this assumption is to reference a
+ user-defined function in a <literal>CHECK</literal> expression, and then
+ change the behavior of that
+ function. <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> does not disallow that,
+ but it will not notice if there are stored values of the domain type that
+ now violate the <literal>CHECK</literal> constraint. That would cause a
+ subsequent database dump and restore to fail. The recommended way to
+ handle such a change is to drop the constraint (using <command>ALTER
+ DOMAIN</command>), adjust the function definition, and re-add the
+ constraint, thereby rechecking it against stored data.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This example creates the <type>us_postal_code</type> data type and
+ then uses the type in a table definition. A regular expression test
+ is used to verify that the value looks like a valid US postal code:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE DOMAIN us_postal_code AS TEXT
+CHECK(
+ VALUE ~ '^\d{5}$'
+OR VALUE ~ '^\d{5}-\d{4}$'
+);
+
+CREATE TABLE us_snail_addy (
+ address_id SERIAL PRIMARY KEY,
+ street1 TEXT NOT NULL,
+ street2 TEXT,
+ street3 TEXT,
+ city TEXT NOT NULL,
+ postal us_postal_code NOT NULL
+);
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createdomain-compatibility">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The command <command>CREATE DOMAIN</command> conforms to the SQL
+ standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createdomain-see-also">
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterdomain"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropdomain"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_event_trigger.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_event_trigger.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..22c8119
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_event_trigger.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,170 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_event_trigger.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createeventtrigger">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createeventtrigger">
+ <primary>CREATE EVENT TRIGGER</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE EVENT TRIGGER</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE EVENT TRIGGER</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new event trigger</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE EVENT TRIGGER <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ ON <replaceable class="parameter">event</replaceable>
+ [ WHEN <replaceable class="parameter">filter_variable</replaceable> IN (<replaceable class="parameter">filter_value</replaceable> [, ... ]) [ AND ... ] ]
+ EXECUTE { FUNCTION | PROCEDURE } <replaceable class="parameter">function_name</replaceable>()
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE EVENT TRIGGER</command> creates a new event trigger.
+ Whenever the designated event occurs and the <literal>WHEN</literal> condition
+ associated with the trigger, if any, is satisfied, the trigger function
+ will be executed. For a general introduction to event triggers, see
+ <xref linkend="event-triggers"/>. The user who creates an event trigger
+ becomes its owner.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name to give the new trigger. This name must be unique within
+ the database.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">event</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the event that triggers a call to the given function.
+ See <xref linkend="event-trigger-definition"/> for more information
+ on event names.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">filter_variable</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a variable used to filter events. This makes it possible
+ to restrict the firing of the trigger to a subset of the cases in which
+ it is supported. Currently the only supported
+ <replaceable class="parameter">filter_variable</replaceable>
+ is <literal>TAG</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">filter_value</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A list of values for the
+ associated <replaceable class="parameter">filter_variable</replaceable>
+ for which the trigger should fire. For <literal>TAG</literal>, this means a
+ list of command tags (e.g., <literal>'DROP FUNCTION'</literal>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">function_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A user-supplied function that is declared as taking no argument and
+ returning type <literal>event_trigger</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In the syntax of <literal>CREATE EVENT TRIGGER</literal>, the keywords
+ <literal>FUNCTION</literal> and <literal>PROCEDURE</literal> are
+ equivalent, but the referenced function must in any case be a function,
+ not a procedure. The use of the keyword <literal>PROCEDURE</literal>
+ here is historical and deprecated.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createeventtrigger-notes">
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Only superusers can create event triggers.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Event triggers are disabled in single-user mode (see <xref
+ linkend="app-postgres"/>). If an erroneous event trigger disables the
+ database so much that you can't even drop the trigger, restart in
+ single-user mode and you'll be able to do that.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createeventtrigger-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Forbid the execution of any <link linkend="ddl">DDL</link> command:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION abort_any_command()
+ RETURNS event_trigger
+ LANGUAGE plpgsql
+ AS $$
+BEGIN
+ RAISE EXCEPTION 'command % is disabled', tg_tag;
+END;
+$$;
+
+CREATE EVENT TRIGGER abort_ddl ON ddl_command_start
+ EXECUTE FUNCTION abort_any_command();
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createeventtrigger-compatibility">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>CREATE EVENT TRIGGER</command> statement in the
+ SQL standard.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altereventtrigger"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropeventtrigger"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createfunction"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_extension.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_extension.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ca2b80d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_extension.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,247 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_extension.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createextension">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createextension">
+ <primary>CREATE EXTENSION</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE EXTENSION</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE EXTENSION</refname>
+ <refpurpose>install an extension</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE EXTENSION [ IF NOT EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">extension_name</replaceable>
+ [ WITH ] [ SCHEMA <replaceable class="parameter">schema_name</replaceable> ]
+ [ VERSION <replaceable class="parameter">version</replaceable> ]
+ [ CASCADE ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE EXTENSION</command> loads a new extension into the current
+ database. There must not be an extension of the same name already loaded.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Loading an extension essentially amounts to running the extension's script
+ file. The script will typically create new <acronym>SQL</acronym> objects such as
+ functions, data types, operators and index support methods.
+ <command>CREATE EXTENSION</command> additionally records the identities
+ of all the created objects, so that they can be dropped again if
+ <command>DROP EXTENSION</command> is issued.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The user who runs <command>CREATE EXTENSION</command> becomes the
+ owner of the extension for purposes of later privilege checks, and
+ normally also becomes the owner of any objects created by the
+ extension's script.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Loading an extension ordinarily requires the same privileges that would
+ be required to create its component objects. For many extensions this
+ means superuser privileges are needed.
+ However, if the extension is marked <firstterm>trusted</firstterm> in
+ its control file, then it can be installed by any user who has
+ <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on the current database.
+ In this case the extension object itself will be owned by the calling
+ user, but the contained objects will be owned by the bootstrap superuser
+ (unless the extension's script explicitly assigns them to the calling
+ user). This configuration gives the calling user the right to drop the
+ extension, but not to modify individual objects within it.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF NOT EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if an extension with the same name already
+ exists. A notice is issued in this case. Note that there is no
+ guarantee that the existing extension is anything like the one that
+ would have been created from the currently-available script file.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">extension_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the extension to be
+ installed. <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> will create the
+ extension using details from the file
+ <literal>SHAREDIR/extension/</literal><replaceable class="parameter">extension_name</replaceable><literal>.control</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">schema_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the schema in which to install the extension's
+ objects, given that the extension allows its contents to be
+ relocated. The named schema must already exist.
+ If not specified, and the extension's control file does not specify a
+ schema either, the current default object creation schema is used.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the extension specifies a <literal>schema</literal> parameter in its
+ control file, then that schema cannot be overridden with
+ a <literal>SCHEMA</literal> clause. Normally, an error will be raised if
+ a <literal>SCHEMA</literal> clause is given and it conflicts with the
+ extension's <literal>schema</literal> parameter. However, if
+ the <literal>CASCADE</literal> clause is also given,
+ then <replaceable class="parameter">schema_name</replaceable> is
+ ignored when it conflicts. The
+ given <replaceable class="parameter">schema_name</replaceable> will be
+ used for installation of any needed extensions that do not
+ specify <literal>schema</literal> in their control files.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Remember that the extension itself is not considered to be within any
+ schema: extensions have unqualified names that must be unique
+ database-wide. But objects belonging to the extension can be within
+ schemas.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">version</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The version of the extension to install. This can be written as
+ either an identifier or a string literal. The default version is
+ whatever is specified in the extension's control file.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically install any extensions that this extension depends on
+ that are not already installed. Their dependencies are likewise
+ automatically installed, recursively. The <literal>SCHEMA</literal> clause,
+ if given, applies to all extensions that get installed this way.
+ Other options of the statement are not applied to
+ automatically-installed extensions; in particular, their default
+ versions are always selected.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Before you can use <command>CREATE EXTENSION</command> to load an extension
+ into a database, the extension's supporting files must be installed.
+ Information about installing the extensions supplied with
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> can be found in
+ <link linkend="contrib">Additional Supplied Modules</link>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The extensions currently available for loading can be identified from the
+ <link linkend="view-pg-available-extensions"><structname>pg_available_extensions</structname></link>
+ or
+ <link linkend="view-pg-available-extension-versions"><structname>pg_available_extension_versions</structname></link>
+ system views.
+ </para>
+
+ <caution>
+ <para>
+ Installing an extension as superuser requires trusting that the
+ extension's author wrote the extension installation script in a secure
+ fashion. It is not terribly difficult for a malicious user to create
+ trojan-horse objects that will compromise later execution of a
+ carelessly-written extension script, allowing that user to acquire
+ superuser privileges. However, trojan-horse objects are only hazardous
+ if they are in the <varname>search_path</varname> during script
+ execution, meaning that they are in the extension's installation target
+ schema or in the schema of some extension it depends on. Therefore, a
+ good rule of thumb when dealing with extensions whose scripts have not
+ been carefully vetted is to install them only into schemas for which
+ CREATE privilege has not been and will not be granted to any untrusted
+ users. Likewise for any extensions they depend on.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The extensions supplied with <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> are
+ believed to be secure against installation-time attacks of this sort,
+ except for a few that depend on other extensions. As stated in the
+ documentation for those extensions, they should be installed into secure
+ schemas, or installed into the same schemas as the extensions they
+ depend on, or both.
+ </para>
+ </caution>
+
+ <para>
+ For information about writing new extensions, see
+ <xref linkend="extend-extensions"/>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Install the <link linkend="hstore">hstore</link> extension into the
+ current database, placing its objects in schema <literal>addons</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE EXTENSION hstore SCHEMA addons;
+</programlisting>
+ Another way to accomplish the same thing:
+<programlisting>
+SET search_path = addons;
+CREATE EXTENSION hstore;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE EXTENSION</command> is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterextension"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropextension"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_foreign_data_wrapper.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_foreign_data_wrapper.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0fcba18
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_foreign_data_wrapper.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,183 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_foreign_data_wrapper.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createforeigndatawrapper">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createforeigndatawrapper">
+ <primary>CREATE FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new foreign-data wrapper</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ [ HANDLER <replaceable class="parameter">handler_function</replaceable> | NO HANDLER ]
+ [ VALIDATOR <replaceable class="parameter">validator_function</replaceable> | NO VALIDATOR ]
+ [ OPTIONS ( <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> '<replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>' [, ... ] ) ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER</command> creates a new
+ foreign-data wrapper. The user who defines a foreign-data wrapper
+ becomes its owner.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The foreign-data wrapper name must be unique within the database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Only superusers can create foreign-data wrappers.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the foreign-data wrapper to be created.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>HANDLER <replaceable class="parameter">handler_function</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para><replaceable class="parameter">handler_function</replaceable> is the
+ name of a previously registered function that will be called to
+ retrieve the execution functions for foreign tables.
+ The handler function must take no arguments, and
+ its return type must be <type>fdw_handler</type>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ It is possible to create a foreign-data wrapper with no handler
+ function, but foreign tables using such a wrapper can only be declared,
+ not accessed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>VALIDATOR <replaceable class="parameter">validator_function</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para><replaceable class="parameter">validator_function</replaceable>
+ is the name of a previously registered function that will be called to
+ check the generic options given to the foreign-data wrapper, as
+ well as options for foreign servers, user mappings and foreign tables
+ using the foreign-data wrapper. If no validator function or <literal>NO
+ VALIDATOR</literal> is specified, then options will not be
+ checked at creation time. (Foreign-data wrappers will possibly
+ ignore or reject invalid option specifications at run time,
+ depending on the implementation.) The validator function must
+ take two arguments: one of type <type>text[]</type>, which will
+ contain the array of options as stored in the system catalogs,
+ and one of type <type>oid</type>, which will be the OID of the
+ system catalog containing the options. The return type is ignored;
+ the function should report invalid options using the
+ <function>ereport(ERROR)</function> function.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>OPTIONS ( <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> '<replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>' [, ... ] )</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This clause specifies options for the new foreign-data wrapper.
+ The allowed option names and values are specific to each foreign
+ data wrapper and are validated using the foreign-data wrapper's
+ validator function. Option names must be unique.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s foreign-data functionality is still under
+ active development. Optimization of queries is primitive (and mostly left
+ to the wrapper, too). Thus, there is considerable room for future
+ performance improvements.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a useless foreign-data wrapper <literal>dummy</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER dummy;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a foreign-data wrapper <literal>file</literal> with
+ handler function <literal>file_fdw_handler</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER file HANDLER file_fdw_handler;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a foreign-data wrapper <literal>mywrapper</literal> with some
+ options:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER mywrapper
+ OPTIONS (debug 'true');
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER</command> conforms to ISO/IEC
+ 9075-9 (SQL/MED), with the exception that the <literal>HANDLER</literal>
+ and <literal>VALIDATOR</literal> clauses are extensions and the standard
+ clauses <literal>LIBRARY</literal> and <literal>LANGUAGE</literal>
+ are not implemented in <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Note, however, that the SQL/MED functionality as a whole is not yet
+ conforming.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterforeigndatawrapper"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropforeigndatawrapper"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createserver"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createusermapping"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createforeigntable"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_foreign_table.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_foreign_table.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..23c7f66
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_foreign_table.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,455 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_foreign_table.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createforeigntable">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createforeigntable">
+ <primary>CREATE FOREIGN TABLE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE FOREIGN TABLE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE FOREIGN TABLE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new foreign table</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE FOREIGN TABLE [ IF NOT EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> ( [
+ { <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> <replaceable class="parameter">data_type</replaceable> [ OPTIONS ( <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> '<replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>' [, ... ] ) ] [ COLLATE <replaceable>collation</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">column_constraint</replaceable> [ ... ] ]
+ | <replaceable>table_constraint</replaceable> }
+ [, ... ]
+] )
+[ INHERITS ( <replaceable>parent_table</replaceable> [, ... ] ) ]
+ SERVER <replaceable class="parameter">server_name</replaceable>
+[ OPTIONS ( <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> '<replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>' [, ... ] ) ]
+
+CREATE FOREIGN TABLE [ IF NOT EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable>
+ PARTITION OF <replaceable class="parameter">parent_table</replaceable> [ (
+ { <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [ WITH OPTIONS ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">column_constraint</replaceable> [ ... ] ]
+ | <replaceable>table_constraint</replaceable> }
+ [, ... ]
+) ]
+{ FOR VALUES <replaceable class="parameter">partition_bound_spec</replaceable> | DEFAULT }
+ SERVER <replaceable class="parameter">server_name</replaceable>
+[ OPTIONS ( <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> '<replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>' [, ... ] ) ]
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">column_constraint</replaceable> is:</phrase>
+
+[ CONSTRAINT <replaceable class="parameter">constraint_name</replaceable> ]
+{ NOT NULL |
+ NULL |
+ CHECK ( <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> ) [ NO INHERIT ] |
+ DEFAULT <replaceable>default_expr</replaceable> |
+ GENERATED ALWAYS AS ( <replaceable>generation_expr</replaceable> ) STORED }
+
+<phrase>and <replaceable class="parameter">table_constraint</replaceable> is:</phrase>
+
+[ CONSTRAINT <replaceable class="parameter">constraint_name</replaceable> ]
+CHECK ( <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> ) [ NO INHERIT ]
+
+<phrase>and <replaceable class="parameter">partition_bound_spec</replaceable> is:</phrase>
+
+IN ( <replaceable class="parameter">partition_bound_expr</replaceable> [, ...] ) |
+FROM ( { <replaceable class="parameter">partition_bound_expr</replaceable> | MINVALUE | MAXVALUE } [, ...] )
+ TO ( { <replaceable class="parameter">partition_bound_expr</replaceable> | MINVALUE | MAXVALUE } [, ...] ) |
+WITH ( MODULUS <replaceable class="parameter">numeric_literal</replaceable>, REMAINDER <replaceable class="parameter">numeric_literal</replaceable> )
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createforeigntable-description">
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE FOREIGN TABLE</command> creates a new foreign table
+ in the current database. The table will be owned by the user issuing the
+ command.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a schema name is given (for example, <literal>CREATE FOREIGN TABLE
+ myschema.mytable ...</literal>) then the table is created in the specified
+ schema. Otherwise it is created in the current schema.
+ The name of the foreign table must be
+ distinct from the name of any other foreign table, table, sequence, index,
+ view, or materialized view in the same schema.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE FOREIGN TABLE</command> also automatically creates a data
+ type that represents the composite type corresponding to one row of
+ the foreign table. Therefore, foreign tables cannot have the same
+ name as any existing data type in the same schema.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If <literal>PARTITION OF</literal> clause is specified then the table is
+ created as a partition of <literal>parent_table</literal> with specified
+ bounds.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To be able to create a foreign table, you must have <literal>USAGE</literal>
+ privilege on the foreign server, as well as <literal>USAGE</literal>
+ privilege on all column types used in the table.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF NOT EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if a relation with the same name already exists.
+ A notice is issued in this case. Note that there is no guarantee that
+ the existing relation is anything like the one that would have been
+ created.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the table to be created.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a column to be created in the new table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">data_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The data type of the column. This can include array
+ specifiers. For more information on the data types supported by
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>, refer to <xref
+ linkend="datatype"/>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>COLLATE <replaceable>collation</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>COLLATE</literal> clause assigns a collation to
+ the column (which must be of a collatable data type).
+ If not specified, the column data type's default collation is used.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>INHERITS ( <replaceable>parent_table</replaceable> [, ... ] )</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The optional <literal>INHERITS</literal> clause specifies a list of
+ tables from which the new foreign table automatically inherits
+ all columns. Parent tables can be plain tables or foreign tables.
+ See the similar form of
+ <link linkend="sql-createtable"><command>CREATE TABLE</command></link> for more details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>PARTITION OF <replaceable>parent_table</replaceable> { FOR VALUES <replaceable class="parameter">partition_bound_spec</replaceable> | DEFAULT }</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form can be used to create the foreign table as partition of
+ the given parent table with specified partition bound values.
+ See the similar form of
+ <link linkend="sql-createtable"><command>CREATE TABLE</command></link> for more details.
+ Note that it is currently not allowed to create the foreign table as a
+ partition of the parent table if there are <literal>UNIQUE</literal>
+ indexes on the parent table. (See also
+ <link linkend="sql-altertable"><command>ALTER TABLE ATTACH PARTITION</command></link>.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CONSTRAINT <replaceable class="parameter">constraint_name</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An optional name for a column or table constraint. If the
+ constraint is violated, the constraint name is present in error messages,
+ so constraint names like <literal>col must be positive</literal> can be used
+ to communicate helpful constraint information to client applications.
+ (Double-quotes are needed to specify constraint names that contain spaces.)
+ If a constraint name is not specified, the system generates a name.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>NOT NULL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The column is not allowed to contain null values.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>NULL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The column is allowed to contain null values. This is the default.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This clause is only provided for compatibility with
+ non-standard SQL databases. Its use is discouraged in new
+ applications.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CHECK ( <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> ) [ NO INHERIT ] </literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>CHECK</literal> clause specifies an expression producing a
+ Boolean result which each row in the foreign table is expected
+ to satisfy; that is, the expression should produce TRUE or UNKNOWN,
+ never FALSE, for all rows in the foreign table.
+ A check constraint specified as a column constraint should
+ reference that column's value only, while an expression
+ appearing in a table constraint can reference multiple columns.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Currently, <literal>CHECK</literal> expressions cannot contain
+ subqueries nor refer to variables other than columns of the
+ current row. The system column <literal>tableoid</literal>
+ may be referenced, but not any other system column.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A constraint marked with <literal>NO INHERIT</literal> will not propagate to
+ child tables.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DEFAULT
+ <replaceable>default_expr</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>DEFAULT</literal> clause assigns a default data value for
+ the column whose column definition it appears within. The value
+ is any variable-free expression (subqueries and cross-references
+ to other columns in the current table are not allowed). The
+ data type of the default expression must match the data type of the
+ column.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The default expression will be used in any insert operation that
+ does not specify a value for the column. If there is no default
+ for a column, then the default is null.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>GENERATED ALWAYS AS ( <replaceable>generation_expr</replaceable> ) STORED</literal><indexterm><primary>generated column</primary></indexterm></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This clause creates the column as a <firstterm>generated
+ column</firstterm>. The column cannot be written to, and when read the
+ result of the specified expression will be returned.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The keyword <literal>STORED</literal> is required to signify that the
+ column will be computed on write. (The computed value will be presented
+ to the foreign-data wrapper for storage and must be returned on
+ reading.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The generation expression can refer to other columns in the table, but
+ not other generated columns. Any functions and operators used must be
+ immutable. References to other tables are not allowed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">server_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an existing foreign server to use for the foreign table.
+ For details on defining a server, see <xref
+ linkend="sql-createserver"/>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>OPTIONS ( <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> '<replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>' [, ...] )</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Options to be associated with the new foreign table or one of its
+ columns.
+ The allowed option names and values are specific to each foreign
+ data wrapper and are validated using the foreign-data wrapper's
+ validator function. Duplicate option names are not allowed (although
+ it's OK for a table option and a column option to have the same name).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Constraints on foreign tables (such as <literal>CHECK</literal>
+ or <literal>NOT NULL</literal> clauses) are not enforced by the
+ core <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> system, and most foreign data wrappers
+ do not attempt to enforce them either; that is, the constraint is
+ simply assumed to hold true. There would be little point in such
+ enforcement since it would only apply to rows inserted or updated via
+ the foreign table, and not to rows modified by other means, such as
+ directly on the remote server. Instead, a constraint attached to a
+ foreign table should represent a constraint that is being enforced by
+ the remote server.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Some special-purpose foreign data wrappers might be the only access
+ mechanism for the data they access, and in that case it might be
+ appropriate for the foreign data wrapper itself to perform constraint
+ enforcement. But you should not assume that a wrapper does that
+ unless its documentation says so.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Although <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> does not attempt to enforce
+ constraints on foreign tables, it does assume that they are correct
+ for purposes of query optimization. If there are rows visible in the
+ foreign table that do not satisfy a declared constraint, queries on
+ the table might produce errors or incorrect answers. It is the user's
+ responsibility to ensure that the constraint definition matches
+ reality.
+ </para>
+
+ <caution>
+ <para>
+ When a foreign table is used as a partition of a partitioned table,
+ there is an implicit constraint that its contents must satisfy the
+ partitioning rule. Again, it is the user's responsibility to ensure
+ that that is true, which is best done by installing a matching
+ constraint on the remote server.
+ </para>
+ </caution>
+
+ <para>
+ Within a partitioned table containing foreign-table partitions,
+ an <command>UPDATE</command> that changes the partition key value can
+ cause a row to be moved from a local partition to a foreign-table
+ partition, provided the foreign data wrapper supports tuple routing.
+ However it is not currently possible to move a row from a
+ foreign-table partition to another partition.
+ An <command>UPDATE</command> that would require doing that will fail
+ due to the partitioning constraint, assuming that that is properly
+ enforced by the remote server.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Similar considerations apply to generated columns. Stored generated
+ columns are computed on insert or update on the local
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> server and handed to the
+ foreign-data wrapper for writing out to the foreign data store, but it is
+ not enforced that a query of the foreign table returns values for stored
+ generated columns that are consistent with the generation expression.
+ Again, this might result in incorrect query results.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createforeigntable-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Create foreign table <structname>films</structname>, which will be accessed through
+ the server <structname>film_server</structname>:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE FOREIGN TABLE films (
+ code char(5) NOT NULL,
+ title varchar(40) NOT NULL,
+ did integer NOT NULL,
+ date_prod date,
+ kind varchar(10),
+ len interval hour to minute
+)
+SERVER film_server;
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create foreign table <structname>measurement_y2016m07</structname>, which will be
+ accessed through the server <structname>server_07</structname>, as a partition
+ of the range partitioned table <structname>measurement</structname>:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE FOREIGN TABLE measurement_y2016m07
+ PARTITION OF measurement FOR VALUES FROM ('2016-07-01') TO ('2016-08-01')
+ SERVER server_07;
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createforeigntable-compatibility">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>CREATE FOREIGN TABLE</command> command largely conforms to the
+ <acronym>SQL</acronym> standard; however, much as with
+ <link linkend="sql-createtable"><command>CREATE TABLE</command></link>,
+ <literal>NULL</literal> constraints and zero-column foreign tables are permitted.
+ The ability to specify column default values is also
+ a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension. Table inheritance, in the form
+ defined by <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>, is nonstandard.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterforeigntable"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropforeigntable"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createtable"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createserver"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-importforeignschema"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_function.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_function.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7e6d52c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_function.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,935 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_function.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createfunction">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createfunction">
+ <primary>CREATE FUNCTION</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE FUNCTION</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE FUNCTION</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new function</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE [ OR REPLACE ] FUNCTION
+ <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable> [ { DEFAULT | = } <replaceable class="parameter">default_expr</replaceable> ] [, ...] ] )
+ [ RETURNS <replaceable class="parameter">rettype</replaceable>
+ | RETURNS TABLE ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> <replaceable class="parameter">column_type</replaceable> [, ...] ) ]
+ { LANGUAGE <replaceable class="parameter">lang_name</replaceable>
+ | TRANSFORM { FOR TYPE <replaceable class="parameter">type_name</replaceable> } [, ... ]
+ | WINDOW
+ | { IMMUTABLE | STABLE | VOLATILE }
+ | [ NOT ] LEAKPROOF
+ | { CALLED ON NULL INPUT | RETURNS NULL ON NULL INPUT | STRICT }
+ | { [ EXTERNAL ] SECURITY INVOKER | [ EXTERNAL ] SECURITY DEFINER }
+ | PARALLEL { UNSAFE | RESTRICTED | SAFE }
+ | COST <replaceable class="parameter">execution_cost</replaceable>
+ | ROWS <replaceable class="parameter">result_rows</replaceable>
+ | SUPPORT <replaceable class="parameter">support_function</replaceable>
+ | SET <replaceable class="parameter">configuration_parameter</replaceable> { TO <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> | = <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> | FROM CURRENT }
+ | AS '<replaceable class="parameter">definition</replaceable>'
+ | AS '<replaceable class="parameter">obj_file</replaceable>', '<replaceable class="parameter">link_symbol</replaceable>'
+ | <replaceable class="parameter">sql_body</replaceable>
+ } ...
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createfunction-description">
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE FUNCTION</command> defines a new function.
+ <command>CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION</command> will either create a
+ new function, or replace an existing definition.
+ To be able to define a function, the user must have the
+ <literal>USAGE</literal> privilege on the language.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a schema name is included, then the function is created in the
+ specified schema. Otherwise it is created in the current schema.
+ The name of the new function must not match any existing function or procedure
+ with the same input argument types in the same schema. However,
+ functions and procedures of different argument types can share a name (this is
+ called <firstterm>overloading</firstterm>).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To replace the current definition of an existing function, use
+ <command>CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION</command>. It is not possible
+ to change the name or argument types of a function this way (if you
+ tried, you would actually be creating a new, distinct function).
+ Also, <command>CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION</command> will not let
+ you change the return type of an existing function. To do that,
+ you must drop and recreate the function. (When using <literal>OUT</literal>
+ parameters, that means you cannot change the types of any
+ <literal>OUT</literal> parameters except by dropping the function.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When <command>CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION</command> is used to replace an
+ existing function, the ownership and permissions of the function
+ do not change. All other function properties are assigned the
+ values specified or implied in the command. You must own the function
+ to replace it (this includes being a member of the owning role).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If you drop and then recreate a function, the new function is not
+ the same entity as the old; you will have to drop existing rules, views,
+ triggers, etc. that refer to the old function. Use
+ <command>CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION</command> to change a function
+ definition without breaking objects that refer to the function.
+ Also, <command>ALTER FUNCTION</command> can be used to change most of the
+ auxiliary properties of an existing function.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The user that creates the function becomes the owner of the function.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To be able to create a function, you must have <literal>USAGE</literal>
+ privilege on the argument types and the return type.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Refer to <xref linkend="xfunc"/> for further information on writing
+ functions.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the function to create.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The mode of an argument: <literal>IN</literal>, <literal>OUT</literal>,
+ <literal>INOUT</literal>, or <literal>VARIADIC</literal>.
+ If omitted, the default is <literal>IN</literal>.
+ Only <literal>OUT</literal> arguments can follow a <literal>VARIADIC</literal> one.
+ Also, <literal>OUT</literal> and <literal>INOUT</literal> arguments cannot be used
+ together with the <literal>RETURNS TABLE</literal> notation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an argument. Some languages (including SQL and PL/pgSQL)
+ let you use the name in the function body. For other languages the
+ name of an input argument is just extra documentation, so far as
+ the function itself is concerned; but you can use input argument names
+ when calling a function to improve readability (see <xref
+ linkend="sql-syntax-calling-funcs"/>). In any case, the name
+ of an output argument is significant, because it defines the column
+ name in the result row type. (If you omit the name for an output
+ argument, the system will choose a default column name.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The data type(s) of the function's arguments (optionally
+ schema-qualified), if any. The argument types can be base, composite,
+ or domain types, or can reference the type of a table column.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Depending on the implementation language it might also be allowed
+ to specify <quote>pseudo-types</quote> such as <type>cstring</type>.
+ Pseudo-types indicate that the actual argument type is either
+ incompletely specified, or outside the set of ordinary SQL data types.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The type of a column is referenced by writing
+ <literal><replaceable
+ class="parameter">table_name</replaceable>.<replaceable
+ class="parameter">column_name</replaceable>%TYPE</literal>.
+ Using this feature can sometimes help make a function independent of
+ changes to the definition of a table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">default_expr</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An expression to be used as default value if the parameter is
+ not specified. The expression has to be coercible to the
+ argument type of the parameter.
+ Only input (including <literal>INOUT</literal>) parameters can have a default
+ value. All input parameters following a
+ parameter with a default value must have default values as well.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">rettype</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The return data type (optionally schema-qualified). The return type
+ can be a base, composite, or domain type,
+ or can reference the type of a table column.
+ Depending on the implementation language it might also be allowed
+ to specify <quote>pseudo-types</quote> such as <type>cstring</type>.
+ If the function is not supposed to return a value, specify
+ <type>void</type> as the return type.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ When there are <literal>OUT</literal> or <literal>INOUT</literal> parameters,
+ the <literal>RETURNS</literal> clause can be omitted. If present, it
+ must agree with the result type implied by the output parameters:
+ <literal>RECORD</literal> if there are multiple output parameters, or
+ the same type as the single output parameter.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>SETOF</literal>
+ modifier indicates that the function will return a set of
+ items, rather than a single item.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The type of a column is referenced by writing
+ <literal><replaceable
+ class="parameter">table_name</replaceable>.<replaceable
+ class="parameter">column_name</replaceable>%TYPE</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an output column in the <literal>RETURNS TABLE</literal>
+ syntax. This is effectively another way of declaring a named
+ <literal>OUT</literal> parameter, except that <literal>RETURNS TABLE</literal>
+ also implies <literal>RETURNS SETOF</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">column_type</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The data type of an output column in the <literal>RETURNS TABLE</literal>
+ syntax.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">lang_name</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the language that the function is implemented in.
+ It can be <literal>sql</literal>, <literal>c</literal>,
+ <literal>internal</literal>, or the name of a user-defined
+ procedural language, e.g., <literal>plpgsql</literal>. The default is
+ <literal>sql</literal> if <replaceable
+ class="parameter">sql_body</replaceable> is specified. Enclosing the
+ name in single quotes is deprecated and requires matching case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>TRANSFORM { FOR TYPE <replaceable class="parameter">type_name</replaceable> } [, ... ] }</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists which transforms a call to the function should apply. Transforms
+ convert between SQL types and language-specific data types;
+ see <xref linkend="sql-createtransform"/>. Procedural language
+ implementations usually have hardcoded knowledge of the built-in types,
+ so those don't need to be listed here. If a procedural language
+ implementation does not know how to handle a type and no transform is
+ supplied, it will fall back to a default behavior for converting data
+ types, but this depends on the implementation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>WINDOW</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para><literal>WINDOW</literal> indicates that the function is a
+ <firstterm>window function</firstterm> rather than a plain function.
+ This is currently only useful for functions written in C.
+ The <literal>WINDOW</literal> attribute cannot be changed when
+ replacing an existing function definition.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IMMUTABLE</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>STABLE</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>VOLATILE</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These attributes inform the query optimizer about the behavior
+ of the function. At most one choice
+ can be specified. If none of these appear,
+ <literal>VOLATILE</literal> is the default assumption.
+ </para>
+
+ <para><literal>IMMUTABLE</literal> indicates that the function
+ cannot modify the database and always
+ returns the same result when given the same argument values; that
+ is, it does not do database lookups or otherwise use information not
+ directly present in its argument list. If this option is given,
+ any call of the function with all-constant arguments can be
+ immediately replaced with the function value.
+ </para>
+
+ <para><literal>STABLE</literal> indicates that the function
+ cannot modify the database,
+ and that within a single table scan it will consistently
+ return the same result for the same argument values, but that its
+ result could change across SQL statements. This is the appropriate
+ selection for functions whose results depend on database lookups,
+ parameter variables (such as the current time zone), etc. (It is
+ inappropriate for <literal>AFTER</literal> triggers that wish to
+ query rows modified by the current command.) Also note
+ that the <function>current_timestamp</function> family of functions qualify
+ as stable, since their values do not change within a transaction.
+ </para>
+
+ <para><literal>VOLATILE</literal> indicates that the function value can
+ change even within a single table scan, so no optimizations can be
+ made. Relatively few database functions are volatile in this sense;
+ some examples are <literal>random()</literal>, <literal>currval()</literal>,
+ <literal>timeofday()</literal>. But note that any function that has
+ side-effects must be classified volatile, even if its result is quite
+ predictable, to prevent calls from being optimized away; an example is
+ <literal>setval()</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For additional details see <xref linkend="xfunc-volatility"/>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>LEAKPROOF</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ <literal>LEAKPROOF</literal> indicates that the function has no side
+ effects. It reveals no information about its arguments other than by
+ its return value. For example, a function which throws an error message
+ for some argument values but not others, or which includes the argument
+ values in any error message, is not leakproof. This affects how the
+ system executes queries against views created with the
+ <literal>security_barrier</literal> option or tables with row level
+ security enabled. The system will enforce conditions from security
+ policies and security barrier views before any user-supplied conditions
+ from the query itself that contain non-leakproof functions, in order to
+ prevent the inadvertent exposure of data. Functions and operators
+ marked as leakproof are assumed to be trustworthy, and may be executed
+ before conditions from security policies and security barrier views.
+ In addition, functions which do not take arguments or which are not
+ passed any arguments from the security barrier view or table do not have
+ to be marked as leakproof to be executed before security conditions. See
+ <xref linkend="sql-createview"/> and <xref linkend="rules-privileges"/>.
+ This option can only be set by the superuser.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CALLED ON NULL INPUT</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>RETURNS NULL ON NULL INPUT</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>STRICT</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para><literal>CALLED ON NULL INPUT</literal> (the default) indicates
+ that the function will be called normally when some of its
+ arguments are null. It is then the function author's
+ responsibility to check for null values if necessary and respond
+ appropriately.
+ </para>
+
+ <para><literal>RETURNS NULL ON NULL INPUT</literal> or
+ <literal>STRICT</literal> indicates that the function always
+ returns null whenever any of its arguments are null. If this
+ parameter is specified, the function is not executed when there
+ are null arguments; instead a null result is assumed
+ automatically.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal><optional>EXTERNAL</optional> SECURITY INVOKER</literal></term>
+ <term><literal><optional>EXTERNAL</optional> SECURITY DEFINER</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para><literal>SECURITY INVOKER</literal> indicates that the function
+ is to be executed with the privileges of the user that calls it.
+ That is the default. <literal>SECURITY DEFINER</literal>
+ specifies that the function is to be executed with the
+ privileges of the user that owns it.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The key word <literal>EXTERNAL</literal> is allowed for SQL
+ conformance, but it is optional since, unlike in SQL, this feature
+ applies to all functions not only external ones.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>PARALLEL</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para><literal>PARALLEL UNSAFE</literal> indicates that the function
+ can't be executed in parallel mode and the presence of such a
+ function in an SQL statement forces a serial execution plan. This is
+ the default. <literal>PARALLEL RESTRICTED</literal> indicates that
+ the function can be executed in parallel mode, but the execution is
+ restricted to parallel group leader. <literal>PARALLEL SAFE</literal>
+ indicates that the function is safe to run in parallel mode without
+ restriction.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Functions should be labeled parallel unsafe if they modify any database
+ state, or if they make changes to the transaction such as using
+ sub-transactions, or if they access sequences or attempt to make
+ persistent changes to settings (e.g., <literal>setval</literal>). They should
+ be labeled as parallel restricted if they access temporary tables,
+ client connection state, cursors, prepared statements, or miscellaneous
+ backend-local state which the system cannot synchronize in parallel mode
+ (e.g., <literal>setseed</literal> cannot be executed other than by the group
+ leader because a change made by another process would not be reflected
+ in the leader). In general, if a function is labeled as being safe when
+ it is restricted or unsafe, or if it is labeled as being restricted when
+ it is in fact unsafe, it may throw errors or produce wrong answers
+ when used in a parallel query. C-language functions could in theory
+ exhibit totally undefined behavior if mislabeled, since there is no way
+ for the system to protect itself against arbitrary C code, but in most
+ likely cases the result will be no worse than for any other function.
+ If in doubt, functions should be labeled as <literal>UNSAFE</literal>, which is
+ the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>COST</literal> <replaceable class="parameter">execution_cost</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A positive number giving the estimated execution cost for the function,
+ in units of <xref linkend="guc-cpu-operator-cost"/>. If the function
+ returns a set, this is the cost per returned row. If the cost is
+ not specified, 1 unit is assumed for C-language and internal functions,
+ and 100 units for functions in all other languages. Larger values
+ cause the planner to try to avoid evaluating the function more often
+ than necessary.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ROWS</literal> <replaceable class="parameter">result_rows</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A positive number giving the estimated number of rows that the planner
+ should expect the function to return. This is only allowed when the
+ function is declared to return a set. The default assumption is
+ 1000 rows.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SUPPORT</literal> <replaceable class="parameter">support_function</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of a <firstterm>planner support
+ function</firstterm> to use for this function. See
+ <xref linkend="xfunc-optimization"/> for details.
+ You must be superuser to use this option.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>configuration_parameter</replaceable></term>
+ <term><replaceable>value</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>SET</literal> clause causes the specified configuration
+ parameter to be set to the specified value when the function is
+ entered, and then restored to its prior value when the function exits.
+ <literal>SET FROM CURRENT</literal> saves the value of the parameter that
+ is current when <command>CREATE FUNCTION</command> is executed as the value
+ to be applied when the function is entered.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a <literal>SET</literal> clause is attached to a function, then
+ the effects of a <command>SET LOCAL</command> command executed inside the
+ function for the same variable are restricted to the function: the
+ configuration parameter's prior value is still restored at function exit.
+ However, an ordinary
+ <command>SET</command> command (without <literal>LOCAL</literal>) overrides the
+ <literal>SET</literal> clause, much as it would do for a previous <command>SET
+ LOCAL</command> command: the effects of such a command will persist after
+ function exit, unless the current transaction is rolled back.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ See <xref linkend="sql-set"/> and
+ <xref linkend="runtime-config"/>
+ for more information about allowed parameter names and values.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">definition</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A string constant defining the function; the meaning depends on the
+ language. It can be an internal function name, the path to an
+ object file, an SQL command, or text in a procedural language.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ It is often helpful to use dollar quoting (see <xref
+ linkend="sql-syntax-dollar-quoting"/>) to write the function definition
+ string, rather than the normal single quote syntax. Without dollar
+ quoting, any single quotes or backslashes in the function definition must
+ be escaped by doubling them.
+ </para>
+
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal><replaceable class="parameter">obj_file</replaceable>, <replaceable class="parameter">link_symbol</replaceable></literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form of the <literal>AS</literal> clause is used for
+ dynamically loadable C language functions when the function name
+ in the C language source code is not the same as the name of
+ the SQL function. The string <replaceable
+ class="parameter">obj_file</replaceable> is the name of the shared
+ library file containing the compiled C function, and is interpreted
+ as for the <link linkend="sql-load"><command>LOAD</command></link> command. The string
+ <replaceable class="parameter">link_symbol</replaceable> is the
+ function's link symbol, that is, the name of the function in the C
+ language source code. If the link symbol is omitted, it is assumed to
+ be the same as the name of the SQL function being defined. The C names
+ of all functions must be different, so you must give overloaded C
+ functions different C names (for example, use the argument types as
+ part of the C names).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When repeated <command>CREATE FUNCTION</command> calls refer to
+ the same object file, the file is only loaded once per session.
+ To unload and
+ reload the file (perhaps during development), start a new session.
+ </para>
+
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">sql_body</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The body of a <literal>LANGUAGE SQL</literal> function. This can
+ either be a single statement
+<programlisting>
+RETURN <replaceable>expression</replaceable>
+</programlisting>
+ or a block
+<programlisting>
+BEGIN ATOMIC
+ <replaceable>statement</replaceable>;
+ <replaceable>statement</replaceable>;
+ ...
+ <replaceable>statement</replaceable>;
+END
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This is similar to writing the text of the function body as a string
+ constant (see <replaceable>definition</replaceable> above), but there
+ are some differences: This form only works for <literal>LANGUAGE
+ SQL</literal>, the string constant form works for all languages. This
+ form is parsed at function definition time, the string constant form is
+ parsed at execution time; therefore this form cannot support
+ polymorphic argument types and other constructs that are not resolvable
+ at function definition time. This form tracks dependencies between the
+ function and objects used in the function body, so <literal>DROP
+ ... CASCADE</literal> will work correctly, whereas the form using
+ string literals may leave dangling functions. Finally, this form is
+ more compatible with the SQL standard and other SQL implementations.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createfunction-overloading">
+ <title>Overloading</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> allows function
+ <firstterm>overloading</firstterm>; that is, the same name can be
+ used for several different functions so long as they have distinct
+ input argument types. Whether or not you use it, this capability entails
+ security precautions when calling functions in databases where some users
+ mistrust other users; see <xref linkend="typeconv-func"/>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Two functions are considered the same if they have the same names and
+ <emphasis>input</emphasis> argument types, ignoring any <literal>OUT</literal>
+ parameters. Thus for example these declarations conflict:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE FUNCTION foo(int) ...
+CREATE FUNCTION foo(int, out text) ...
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Functions that have different argument type lists will not be considered
+ to conflict at creation time, but if defaults are provided they might
+ conflict in use. For example, consider
+<programlisting>
+CREATE FUNCTION foo(int) ...
+CREATE FUNCTION foo(int, int default 42) ...
+</programlisting>
+ A call <literal>foo(10)</literal> will fail due to the ambiguity about which
+ function should be called.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createfunction-notes">
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The full <acronym>SQL</acronym> type syntax is allowed for
+ declaring a function's arguments and return value. However,
+ parenthesized type modifiers (e.g., the precision field for
+ type <type>numeric</type>) are discarded by <command>CREATE FUNCTION</command>.
+ Thus for example
+ <literal>CREATE FUNCTION foo (varchar(10)) ...</literal>
+ is exactly the same as
+ <literal>CREATE FUNCTION foo (varchar) ...</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When replacing an existing function with <command>CREATE OR REPLACE
+ FUNCTION</command>, there are restrictions on changing parameter names.
+ You cannot change the name already assigned to any input parameter
+ (although you can add names to parameters that had none before).
+ If there is more than one output parameter, you cannot change the
+ names of the output parameters, because that would change the
+ column names of the anonymous composite type that describes the
+ function's result. These restrictions are made to ensure that
+ existing calls of the function do not stop working when it is replaced.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a function is declared <literal>STRICT</literal> with a <literal>VARIADIC</literal>
+ argument, the strictness check tests that the variadic array <emphasis>as
+ a whole</emphasis> is non-null. The function will still be called if the
+ array has null elements.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createfunction-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Add two integers using an SQL function:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE FUNCTION add(integer, integer) RETURNS integer
+ AS 'select $1 + $2;'
+ LANGUAGE SQL
+ IMMUTABLE
+ RETURNS NULL ON NULL INPUT;
+</programlisting>
+ The same function written in a more SQL-conforming style, using argument
+ names and an unquoted body:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE FUNCTION add(a integer, b integer) RETURNS integer
+ LANGUAGE SQL
+ IMMUTABLE
+ RETURNS NULL ON NULL INPUT
+ RETURN a + b;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Increment an integer, making use of an argument name, in
+ <application>PL/pgSQL</application>:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION increment(i integer) RETURNS integer AS $$
+ BEGIN
+ RETURN i + 1;
+ END;
+$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Return a record containing multiple output parameters:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE FUNCTION dup(in int, out f1 int, out f2 text)
+ AS $$ SELECT $1, CAST($1 AS text) || ' is text' $$
+ LANGUAGE SQL;
+
+SELECT * FROM dup(42);
+</programlisting>
+ You can do the same thing more verbosely with an explicitly named
+ composite type:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TYPE dup_result AS (f1 int, f2 text);
+
+CREATE FUNCTION dup(int) RETURNS dup_result
+ AS $$ SELECT $1, CAST($1 AS text) || ' is text' $$
+ LANGUAGE SQL;
+
+SELECT * FROM dup(42);
+</programlisting>
+ Another way to return multiple columns is to use a <literal>TABLE</literal>
+ function:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE FUNCTION dup(int) RETURNS TABLE(f1 int, f2 text)
+ AS $$ SELECT $1, CAST($1 AS text) || ' is text' $$
+ LANGUAGE SQL;
+
+SELECT * FROM dup(42);
+</programlisting>
+ However, a <literal>TABLE</literal> function is different from the
+ preceding examples, because it actually returns a <emphasis>set</emphasis>
+ of records, not just one record.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createfunction-security">
+ <title>Writing <literal>SECURITY DEFINER</literal> Functions Safely</title>
+
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>search_path</varname> configuration parameter</primary>
+ <secondary>use in securing functions</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <para>
+ Because a <literal>SECURITY DEFINER</literal> function is executed
+ with the privileges of the user that owns it, care is needed to
+ ensure that the function cannot be misused. For security,
+ <xref linkend="guc-search-path"/> should be set to exclude any schemas
+ writable by untrusted users. This prevents
+ malicious users from creating objects (e.g., tables, functions, and
+ operators) that mask objects intended to be used by the function.
+ Particularly important in this regard is the
+ temporary-table schema, which is searched first by default, and
+ is normally writable by anyone. A secure arrangement can be obtained
+ by forcing the temporary schema to be searched last. To do this,
+ write <literal>pg_temp</literal><indexterm><primary>pg_temp</primary><secondary>securing functions</secondary></indexterm> as the last entry in <varname>search_path</varname>.
+ This function illustrates safe usage:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE FUNCTION check_password(uname TEXT, pass TEXT)
+RETURNS BOOLEAN AS $$
+DECLARE passed BOOLEAN;
+BEGIN
+ SELECT (pwd = $2) INTO passed
+ FROM pwds
+ WHERE username = $1;
+
+ RETURN passed;
+END;
+$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql
+ SECURITY DEFINER
+ -- Set a secure search_path: trusted schema(s), then 'pg_temp'.
+ SET search_path = admin, pg_temp;
+</programlisting>
+
+ This function's intention is to access a table <literal>admin.pwds</literal>.
+ But without the <literal>SET</literal> clause, or with a <literal>SET</literal> clause
+ mentioning only <literal>admin</literal>, the function could be subverted by
+ creating a temporary table named <literal>pwds</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Before <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> version 8.3, the
+ <literal>SET</literal> clause was not available, and so older functions may
+ contain rather complicated logic to save, set, and restore
+ <varname>search_path</varname>. The <literal>SET</literal> clause is far easier
+ to use for this purpose.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Another point to keep in mind is that by default, execute privilege
+ is granted to <literal>PUBLIC</literal> for newly created functions
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-priv"/> for more
+ information). Frequently you will wish to restrict use of a security
+ definer function to only some users. To do that, you must revoke
+ the default <literal>PUBLIC</literal> privileges and then grant execute
+ privilege selectively. To avoid having a window where the new function
+ is accessible to all, create it and set the privileges within a single
+ transaction. For example:
+ </para>
+
+<programlisting>
+BEGIN;
+CREATE FUNCTION check_password(uname TEXT, pass TEXT) ... SECURITY DEFINER;
+REVOKE ALL ON FUNCTION check_password(uname TEXT, pass TEXT) FROM PUBLIC;
+GRANT EXECUTE ON FUNCTION check_password(uname TEXT, pass TEXT) TO admins;
+COMMIT;
+</programlisting>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createfunction-compat">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ A <command>CREATE FUNCTION</command> command is defined in the SQL
+ standard. The <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> implementation can be
+ used in a compatible way but has many extensions. Conversely, the SQL
+ standard specifies a number of optional features that are not implemented
+ in <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The following are important compatibility issues:
+
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ <literal>OR REPLACE</literal> is a PostgreSQL extension.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ For compatibility with some other database systems, <replaceable
+ class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> can be written either before or
+ after <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable>. But only
+ the first way is standard-compliant.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ For parameter defaults, the SQL standard specifies only the syntax with
+ the <literal>DEFAULT</literal> key word. The syntax with
+ <literal>=</literal> is used in T-SQL and Firebird.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>SETOF</literal> modifier is a PostgreSQL extension.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Only <literal>SQL</literal> is standardized as a language.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ All other attributes except <literal>CALLED ON NULL INPUT</literal> and
+ <literal>RETURNS NULL ON NULL INPUT</literal> are not standardized.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ For the body of <literal>LANGUAGE SQL</literal> functions, the SQL
+ standard only specifies the <replaceable>sql_body</replaceable> form.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Simple <literal>LANGUAGE SQL</literal> functions can be written in a way
+ that is both standard-conforming and portable to other implementations.
+ More complex functions using advanced features, optimization attributes, or
+ other languages will necessarily be specific to PostgreSQL in a significant
+ way.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterfunction"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropfunction"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-grant"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-load"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-revoke"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_group.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_group.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d124c98
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_group.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,72 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_group.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-creategroup">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-creategroup">
+ <primary>CREATE GROUP</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE GROUP</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE GROUP</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new database role</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE GROUP <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ [ WITH ] <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> [ ... ] ]
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> can be:</phrase>
+
+ SUPERUSER | NOSUPERUSER
+ | CREATEDB | NOCREATEDB
+ | CREATEROLE | NOCREATEROLE
+ | INHERIT | NOINHERIT
+ | LOGIN | NOLOGIN
+ | REPLICATION | NOREPLICATION
+ | BYPASSRLS | NOBYPASSRLS
+ | CONNECTION LIMIT <replaceable class="parameter">connlimit</replaceable>
+ | [ ENCRYPTED ] PASSWORD '<replaceable class="parameter">password</replaceable>' | PASSWORD NULL
+ | VALID UNTIL '<replaceable class="parameter">timestamp</replaceable>'
+ | IN ROLE <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ | IN GROUP <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ | ROLE <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ | ADMIN <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ | USER <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ | SYSID <replaceable class="parameter">uid</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE GROUP</command> is now an alias for
+ <xref linkend="sql-createrole"/>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>CREATE GROUP</command> statement in the SQL
+ standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createrole"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_index.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_index.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f50c88f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_index.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,982 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_index.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createindex">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createindex">
+ <primary>CREATE INDEX</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE INDEX</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE INDEX</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new index</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE [ UNIQUE ] INDEX [ CONCURRENTLY ] [ [ IF NOT EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> ] ON [ ONLY ] <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [ USING <replaceable class="parameter">method</replaceable> ]
+ ( { <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> | ( <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> ) } [ COLLATE <replaceable class="parameter">collation</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">opclass</replaceable> [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">opclass_parameter</replaceable> = <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> [, ... ] ) ] ] [ ASC | DESC ] [ NULLS { FIRST | LAST } ] [, ...] )
+ [ INCLUDE ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ...] ) ]
+ [ WITH ( <replaceable class="parameter">storage_parameter</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>] [, ... ] ) ]
+ [ TABLESPACE <replaceable class="parameter">tablespace_name</replaceable> ]
+ [ WHERE <replaceable class="parameter">predicate</replaceable> ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE INDEX</command> constructs an index on the specified column(s)
+ of the specified relation, which can be a table or a materialized view.
+ Indexes are primarily used to enhance database performance (though
+ inappropriate use can result in slower performance).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The key field(s) for the index are specified as column names,
+ or alternatively as expressions written in parentheses.
+ Multiple fields can be specified if the index method supports
+ multicolumn indexes.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ An index field can be an expression computed from the values of
+ one or more columns of the table row. This feature can be used
+ to obtain fast access to data based on some transformation of
+ the basic data. For example, an index computed on
+ <literal>upper(col)</literal> would allow the clause
+ <literal>WHERE upper(col) = 'JIM'</literal> to use an index.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> provides the index methods
+ B-tree, hash, GiST, SP-GiST, GIN, and BRIN. Users can also define their own
+ index methods, but that is fairly complicated.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When the <literal>WHERE</literal> clause is present, a
+ <firstterm>partial index</firstterm> is created.
+ A partial index is an index that contains entries for only a portion of
+ a table, usually a portion that is more useful for indexing than the
+ rest of the table. For example, if you have a table that contains both
+ billed and unbilled orders where the unbilled orders take up a small
+ fraction of the total table and yet that is an often used section, you
+ can improve performance by creating an index on just that portion.
+ Another possible application is to use <literal>WHERE</literal> with
+ <literal>UNIQUE</literal> to enforce uniqueness over a subset of a
+ table. See <xref linkend="indexes-partial"/> for more discussion.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The expression used in the <literal>WHERE</literal> clause can refer
+ only to columns of the underlying table, but it can use all columns,
+ not just the ones being indexed. Presently, subqueries and
+ aggregate expressions are also forbidden in <literal>WHERE</literal>.
+ The same restrictions apply to index fields that are expressions.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ All functions and operators used in an index definition must be
+ <quote>immutable</quote>, that is, their results must depend only on
+ their arguments and never on any outside influence (such as
+ the contents of another table or the current time). This restriction
+ ensures that the behavior of the index is well-defined. To use a
+ user-defined function in an index expression or <literal>WHERE</literal>
+ clause, remember to mark the function immutable when you create it.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>UNIQUE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Causes the system to check for
+ duplicate values in the table when the index is created (if data
+ already exist) and each time data is added. Attempts to
+ insert or update data which would result in duplicate entries
+ will generate an error.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Additional restrictions apply when unique indexes are applied to
+ partitioned tables; see <xref linkend="sql-createtable" />.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CONCURRENTLY</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ When this option is used, <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> will build the
+ index without taking any locks that prevent concurrent inserts,
+ updates, or deletes on the table; whereas a standard index build
+ locks out writes (but not reads) on the table until it's done.
+ There are several caveats to be aware of when using this option
+ &mdash; see <xref linkend="sql-createindex-concurrently"/> below.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ For temporary tables, <command>CREATE INDEX</command> is always
+ non-concurrent, as no other session can access them, and
+ non-concurrent index creation is cheaper.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF NOT EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if a relation with the same name already exists.
+ A notice is issued in this case. Note that there is no guarantee that
+ the existing index is anything like the one that would have been created.
+ Index name is required when <literal>IF NOT EXISTS</literal> is specified.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>INCLUDE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The optional <literal>INCLUDE</literal> clause specifies a
+ list of columns which will be included in the index
+ as <firstterm>non-key</firstterm> columns. A non-key column cannot
+ be used in an index scan search qualification, and it is disregarded
+ for purposes of any uniqueness or exclusion constraint enforced by
+ the index. However, an index-only scan can return the contents of
+ non-key columns without having to visit the index's table, since
+ they are available directly from the index entry. Thus, addition of
+ non-key columns allows index-only scans to be used for queries that
+ otherwise could not use them.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ It's wise to be conservative about adding non-key columns to an
+ index, especially wide columns. If an index tuple exceeds the
+ maximum size allowed for the index type, data insertion will fail.
+ In any case, non-key columns duplicate data from the index's table
+ and bloat the size of the index, thus potentially slowing searches.
+ Furthermore, B-tree deduplication is never used with indexes
+ that have a non-key column.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Columns listed in the <literal>INCLUDE</literal> clause don't need
+ appropriate operator classes; the clause can include
+ columns whose data types don't have operator classes defined for
+ a given access method.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Expressions are not supported as included columns since they cannot be
+ used in index-only scans.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Currently, the B-tree, GiST and SP-GiST index access methods support
+ this feature. In these indexes, the values of columns listed
+ in the <literal>INCLUDE</literal> clause are included in leaf tuples
+ which correspond to heap tuples, but are not included in upper-level
+ index entries used for tree navigation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the index to be created. No schema name can be included
+ here; the index is always created in the same schema as its parent
+ table. If the name is omitted, <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> chooses a
+ suitable name based on the parent table's name and the indexed column
+ name(s).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ONLY</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Indicates not to recurse creating indexes on partitions, if the
+ table is partitioned. The default is to recurse.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (possibly schema-qualified) of the table to be indexed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">method</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the index method to be used. Choices are
+ <literal>btree</literal>, <literal>hash</literal>,
+ <literal>gist</literal>, <literal>spgist</literal>, <literal>gin</literal>, and
+ <literal>brin</literal>.
+ The default method is <literal>btree</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a column of the table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An expression based on one or more columns of the table. The
+ expression usually must be written with surrounding parentheses,
+ as shown in the syntax. However, the parentheses can be omitted
+ if the expression has the form of a function call.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">collation</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the collation to use for the index. By default,
+ the index uses the collation declared for the column to be
+ indexed or the result collation of the expression to be
+ indexed. Indexes with non-default collations can be useful for
+ queries that involve expressions using non-default collations.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">opclass</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an operator class. See below for details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">opclass_parameter</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an operator class parameter. See below for details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ASC</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies ascending sort order (which is the default).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DESC</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies descending sort order.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>NULLS FIRST</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies that nulls sort before non-nulls. This is the default
+ when <literal>DESC</literal> is specified.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>NULLS LAST</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies that nulls sort after non-nulls. This is the default
+ when <literal>DESC</literal> is not specified.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">storage_parameter</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an index-method-specific storage parameter. See
+ <xref linkend="sql-createindex-storage-parameters"/> below
+ for details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">tablespace_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The tablespace in which to create the index. If not specified,
+ <xref linkend="guc-default-tablespace"/> is consulted, or
+ <xref linkend="guc-temp-tablespaces"/> for indexes on temporary
+ tables.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">predicate</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The constraint expression for a partial index.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <refsect2 id="sql-createindex-storage-parameters" xreflabel="Index Storage Parameters">
+ <title>Index Storage Parameters</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The optional <literal>WITH</literal> clause specifies <firstterm>storage
+ parameters</firstterm> for the index. Each index method has its own set of allowed
+ storage parameters. The B-tree, hash, GiST and SP-GiST index methods all
+ accept this parameter:
+ </para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry id="index-reloption-fillfactor" xreflabel="fillfactor">
+ <term><literal>fillfactor</literal> (<type>integer</type>)
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>fillfactor</varname> storage parameter</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The fillfactor for an index is a percentage that determines how full
+ the index method will try to pack index pages. For B-trees, leaf pages
+ are filled to this percentage during initial index builds, and also
+ when extending the index at the right (adding new largest key values).
+ If pages
+ subsequently become completely full, they will be split, leading to
+ fragmentation of the on-disk index structure. B-trees use a default
+ fillfactor of 90, but any integer value from 10 to 100 can be selected.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ B-tree indexes on tables where many inserts and/or updates are
+ anticipated can benefit from lower fillfactor settings at
+ <command>CREATE INDEX</command> time (following bulk loading into the
+ table). Values in the range of 50 - 90 can usefully <quote>smooth
+ out</quote> the <emphasis>rate</emphasis> of page splits during the
+ early life of the B-tree index (lowering fillfactor like this may even
+ lower the absolute number of page splits, though this effect is highly
+ workload dependent). The B-tree bottom-up index deletion technique
+ described in <xref linkend="btree-deletion"/> is dependent on having
+ some <quote>extra</quote> space on pages to store <quote>extra</quote>
+ tuple versions, and so can be affected by fillfactor (though the effect
+ is usually not significant).
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ In other specific cases it might be useful to increase fillfactor to
+ 100 at <command>CREATE INDEX</command> time as a way of maximizing
+ space utilization. You should only consider this when you are
+ completely sure that the table is static (i.e. that it will never be
+ affected by either inserts or updates). A fillfactor setting of 100
+ otherwise risks <emphasis>harming</emphasis> performance: even a few
+ updates or inserts will cause a sudden flood of page splits.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The other index methods use fillfactor in different but roughly
+ analogous ways; the default fillfactor varies between methods.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ B-tree indexes additionally accept this parameter:
+ </para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry id="index-reloption-deduplicate-items" xreflabel="deduplicate_items">
+ <term><literal>deduplicate_items</literal> (<type>boolean</type>)
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>deduplicate_items</varname> storage parameter</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Controls usage of the B-tree deduplication technique described
+ in <xref linkend="btree-deduplication"/>. Set to
+ <literal>ON</literal> or <literal>OFF</literal> to enable or
+ disable the optimization. (Alternative spellings of
+ <literal>ON</literal> and <literal>OFF</literal> are allowed as
+ described in <xref linkend="config-setting"/>.) The default is
+ <literal>ON</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ Turning <literal>deduplicate_items</literal> off via
+ <command>ALTER INDEX</command> prevents future insertions from
+ triggering deduplication, but does not in itself make existing
+ posting list tuples use the standard tuple representation.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ GiST indexes additionally accept this parameter:
+ </para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry id="index-reloption-buffering" xreflabel="buffering">
+ <term><literal>buffering</literal> (<type>enum</type>)
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>buffering</varname> storage parameter</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Determines whether the buffered build technique described in
+ <xref linkend="gist-buffering-build"/> is used to build the index. With
+ <literal>OFF</literal> buffering is disabled, with <literal>ON</literal>
+ it is enabled, and with <literal>AUTO</literal> it is initially disabled,
+ but is turned on on-the-fly once the index size reaches
+ <xref linkend="guc-effective-cache-size"/>. The default
+ is <literal>AUTO</literal>.
+ Note that if sorted build is possible, it will be used instead of
+ buffered build unless <literal>buffering=ON</literal> is specified.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ GIN indexes accept different parameters:
+ </para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry id="index-reloption-fastupdate" xreflabel="fastupdate">
+ <term><literal>fastupdate</literal> (<type>boolean</type>)
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>fastupdate</varname> storage parameter</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This setting controls usage of the fast update technique described in
+ <xref linkend="gin-fast-update"/>. It is a Boolean parameter:
+ <literal>ON</literal> enables fast update, <literal>OFF</literal> disables it.
+ The default is <literal>ON</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ Turning <literal>fastupdate</literal> off via <command>ALTER INDEX</command> prevents
+ future insertions from going into the list of pending index entries,
+ but does not in itself flush previous entries. You might want to
+ <command>VACUUM</command> the table or call <function>gin_clean_pending_list</function>
+ function afterward to ensure the pending list is emptied.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry id="index-reloption-gin-pending-list-limit" xreflabel="gin_pending_list_limit">
+ <term><literal>gin_pending_list_limit</literal> (<type>integer</type>)
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>gin_pending_list_limit</varname></primary>
+ <secondary>storage parameter</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Custom <xref linkend="guc-gin-pending-list-limit"/> parameter.
+ This value is specified in kilobytes.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ <acronym>BRIN</acronym> indexes accept different parameters:
+ </para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry id="index-reloption-pages-per-range" xreflabel="pages_per_range">
+ <term><literal>pages_per_range</literal> (<type>integer</type>)
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>pages_per_range</varname> storage parameter</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Defines the number of table blocks that make up one block range for
+ each entry of a <acronym>BRIN</acronym> index (see <xref linkend="brin-intro"/>
+ for more details). The default is <literal>128</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="index-reloption-autosummarize" xreflabel="autosummarize">
+ <term><literal>autosummarize</literal> (<type>boolean</type>)
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>autosummarize</varname> storage parameter</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Defines whether a summarization run is queued for the previous page
+ range whenever an insertion is detected on the next one.
+ See <xref linkend="brin-operation"/> for more details.
+ The default is <literal>off</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2 id="sql-createindex-concurrently" xreflabel="Building Indexes Concurrently">
+ <title>Building Indexes Concurrently</title>
+
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createindex-concurrently">
+ <primary>index</primary>
+ <secondary>building concurrently</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <para>
+ Creating an index can interfere with regular operation of a database.
+ Normally <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> locks the table to be indexed against
+ writes and performs the entire index build with a single scan of the
+ table. Other transactions can still read the table, but if they try to
+ insert, update, or delete rows in the table they will block until the
+ index build is finished. This could have a severe effect if the system is
+ a live production database. Very large tables can take many hours to be
+ indexed, and even for smaller tables, an index build can lock out writers
+ for periods that are unacceptably long for a production system.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> supports building indexes without locking
+ out writes. This method is invoked by specifying the
+ <literal>CONCURRENTLY</literal> option of <command>CREATE INDEX</command>.
+ When this option is used,
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> must perform two scans of the table, and in
+ addition it must wait for all existing transactions that could potentially
+ modify or use the index to terminate. Thus
+ this method requires more total work than a standard index build and takes
+ significantly longer to complete. However, since it allows normal
+ operations to continue while the index is built, this method is useful for
+ adding new indexes in a production environment. Of course, the extra CPU
+ and I/O load imposed by the index creation might slow other operations.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In a concurrent index build, the index is actually entered as an
+ <quote>invalid</quote> index into
+ the system catalogs in one transaction, then two table scans occur in
+ two more transactions. Before each table scan, the index build must
+ wait for existing transactions that have modified the table to terminate.
+ After the second scan, the index build must wait for any transactions
+ that have a snapshot (see <xref linkend="mvcc"/>) predating the second
+ scan to terminate, including transactions used by any phase of concurrent
+ index builds on other tables, if the indexes involved are partial or have
+ columns that are not simple column references.
+ Then finally the index can be marked <quote>valid</quote> and ready for use,
+ and the <command>CREATE INDEX</command> command terminates.
+ Even then, however, the index may not be immediately usable for queries:
+ in the worst case, it cannot be used as long as transactions exist that
+ predate the start of the index build.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a problem arises while scanning the table, such as a deadlock or a
+ uniqueness violation in a unique index, the <command>CREATE INDEX</command>
+ command will fail but leave behind an <quote>invalid</quote> index. This index
+ will be ignored for querying purposes because it might be incomplete;
+ however it will still consume update overhead. The <application>psql</application>
+ <command>\d</command> command will report such an index as <literal>INVALID</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+postgres=# \d tab
+ Table "public.tab"
+ Column | Type | Collation | Nullable | Default
+--------+---------+-----------+----------+---------
+ col | integer | | |
+Indexes:
+ "idx" btree (col) INVALID
+</programlisting>
+
+ The recommended recovery
+ method in such cases is to drop the index and try again to perform
+ <command>CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY</command>. (Another possibility is
+ to rebuild the index with <command>REINDEX INDEX CONCURRENTLY</command>).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Another caveat when building a unique index concurrently is that the
+ uniqueness constraint is already being enforced against other transactions
+ when the second table scan begins. This means that constraint violations
+ could be reported in other queries prior to the index becoming available
+ for use, or even in cases where the index build eventually fails. Also,
+ if a failure does occur in the second scan, the <quote>invalid</quote> index
+ continues to enforce its uniqueness constraint afterwards.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Concurrent builds of expression indexes and partial indexes are supported.
+ Errors occurring in the evaluation of these expressions could cause
+ behavior similar to that described above for unique constraint violations.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Regular index builds permit other regular index builds on the
+ same table to occur simultaneously, but only one concurrent index build
+ can occur on a table at a time. In either case, schema modification of the
+ table is not allowed while the index is being built. Another difference is
+ that a regular <command>CREATE INDEX</command> command can be performed
+ within a transaction block, but <command>CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY</command>
+ cannot.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Concurrent builds for indexes on partitioned tables are currently not
+ supported. However, you may concurrently build the index on each
+ partition individually and then finally create the partitioned index
+ non-concurrently in order to reduce the time where writes to the
+ partitioned table will be locked out. In this case, building the
+ partitioned index is a metadata only operation.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ See <xref linkend="indexes"/> for information about when indexes can
+ be used, when they are not used, and in which particular situations
+ they can be useful.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Currently, only the B-tree, GiST, GIN, and BRIN index methods support
+ multiple-key-column indexes. Whether there can be multiple key
+ columns is independent of whether <literal>INCLUDE</literal> columns
+ can be added to the index. Indexes can have up to 32 columns,
+ including <literal>INCLUDE</literal> columns.
+ (This limit can be altered when building
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>.) Only B-tree currently
+ supports unique indexes.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ An <firstterm>operator class</firstterm> with optional parameters
+ can be specified for each column of an index.
+ The operator class identifies the operators to be
+ used by the index for that column. For example, a B-tree index on
+ four-byte integers would use the <literal>int4_ops</literal> class;
+ this operator class includes comparison functions for four-byte
+ integers. In practice the default operator class for the column's data
+ type is usually sufficient. The main point of having operator classes
+ is that for some data types, there could be more than one meaningful
+ ordering. For example, we might want to sort a complex-number data
+ type either by absolute value or by real part. We could do this by
+ defining two operator classes for the data type and then selecting
+ the proper class when creating an index. More information about
+ operator classes is in <xref linkend="indexes-opclass"/> and in <xref
+ linkend="xindex"/>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When <literal>CREATE INDEX</literal> is invoked on a partitioned
+ table, the default behavior is to recurse to all partitions to ensure
+ they all have matching indexes.
+ Each partition is first checked to determine whether an equivalent
+ index already exists, and if so, that index will become attached as a
+ partition index to the index being created, which will become its
+ parent index.
+ If no matching index exists, a new index will be created and
+ automatically attached; the name of the new index in each partition
+ will be determined as if no index name had been specified in the
+ command.
+ If the <literal>ONLY</literal> option is specified, no recursion
+ is done, and the index is marked invalid.
+ (<command>ALTER INDEX ... ATTACH PARTITION</command> marks the index
+ valid, once all partitions acquire matching indexes.) Note, however,
+ that any partition that is created in the future using
+ <command>CREATE TABLE ... PARTITION OF</command> will automatically
+ have a matching index, regardless of whether <literal>ONLY</literal> is
+ specified.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For index methods that support ordered scans (currently, only B-tree),
+ the optional clauses <literal>ASC</literal>, <literal>DESC</literal>, <literal>NULLS
+ FIRST</literal>, and/or <literal>NULLS LAST</literal> can be specified to modify
+ the sort ordering of the index. Since an ordered index can be
+ scanned either forward or backward, it is not normally useful to create a
+ single-column <literal>DESC</literal> index &mdash; that sort ordering is already
+ available with a regular index. The value of these options is that
+ multicolumn indexes can be created that match the sort ordering requested
+ by a mixed-ordering query, such as <literal>SELECT ... ORDER BY x ASC, y
+ DESC</literal>. The <literal>NULLS</literal> options are useful if you need to support
+ <quote>nulls sort low</quote> behavior, rather than the default <quote>nulls
+ sort high</quote>, in queries that depend on indexes to avoid sorting steps.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The system regularly collects statistics on all of a table's
+ columns. Newly-created non-expression indexes can immediately
+ use these statistics to determine an index's usefulness.
+ For new expression indexes, it is necessary to run <link
+ linkend="sql-analyze"><command>ANALYZE</command></link> or wait for
+ the <link linkend="autovacuum">autovacuum daemon</link> to analyze
+ the table to generate statistics for these indexes.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For most index methods, the speed of creating an index is
+ dependent on the setting of <xref linkend="guc-maintenance-work-mem"/>.
+ Larger values will reduce the time needed for index creation, so long
+ as you don't make it larger than the amount of memory really available,
+ which would drive the machine into swapping.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> can build indexes while
+ leveraging multiple CPUs in order to process the table rows faster.
+ This feature is known as <firstterm>parallel index
+ build</firstterm>. For index methods that support building indexes
+ in parallel (currently, only B-tree),
+ <varname>maintenance_work_mem</varname> specifies the maximum
+ amount of memory that can be used by each index build operation as
+ a whole, regardless of how many worker processes were started.
+ Generally, a cost model automatically determines how many worker
+ processes should be requested, if any.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Parallel index builds may benefit from increasing
+ <varname>maintenance_work_mem</varname> where an equivalent serial
+ index build will see little or no benefit. Note that
+ <varname>maintenance_work_mem</varname> may influence the number of
+ worker processes requested, since parallel workers must have at
+ least a <literal>32MB</literal> share of the total
+ <varname>maintenance_work_mem</varname> budget. There must also be
+ a remaining <literal>32MB</literal> share for the leader process.
+ Increasing <xref linkend="guc-max-parallel-maintenance-workers"/>
+ may allow more workers to be used, which will reduce the time
+ needed for index creation, so long as the index build is not
+ already I/O bound. Of course, there should also be sufficient
+ CPU capacity that would otherwise lie idle.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Setting a value for <literal>parallel_workers</literal> via <link
+ linkend="sql-altertable"><command>ALTER TABLE</command></link> directly controls how many parallel
+ worker processes will be requested by a <command>CREATE
+ INDEX</command> against the table. This bypasses the cost model
+ completely, and prevents <varname>maintenance_work_mem</varname>
+ from affecting how many parallel workers are requested. Setting
+ <literal>parallel_workers</literal> to 0 via <command>ALTER
+ TABLE</command> will disable parallel index builds on the table in
+ all cases.
+ </para>
+
+ <tip>
+ <para>
+ You might want to reset <literal>parallel_workers</literal> after
+ setting it as part of tuning an index build. This avoids
+ inadvertent changes to query plans, since
+ <literal>parallel_workers</literal> affects
+ <emphasis>all</emphasis> parallel table scans.
+ </para>
+ </tip>
+
+ <para>
+ While <command>CREATE INDEX</command> with the
+ <literal>CONCURRENTLY</literal> option supports parallel builds
+ without special restrictions, only the first table scan is actually
+ performed in parallel.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Use <link linkend="sql-dropindex"><command>DROP INDEX</command></link>
+ to remove an index.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Like any long-running transaction, <command>CREATE INDEX</command> on a
+ table can affect which tuples can be removed by concurrent
+ <command>VACUUM</command> on any other table.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Prior releases of <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> also had an
+ R-tree index method. This method has been removed because
+ it had no significant advantages over the GiST method.
+ If <literal>USING rtree</literal> is specified, <command>CREATE INDEX</command>
+ will interpret it as <literal>USING gist</literal>, to simplify conversion
+ of old databases to GiST.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Each backend running <command>CREATE INDEX</command> will report its
+ progress in the <structname>pg_stat_progress_create_index</structname>
+ view. See <xref linkend="create-index-progress-reporting"/> for details.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To create a unique B-tree index on the column <literal>title</literal> in
+ the table <literal>films</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE UNIQUE INDEX title_idx ON films (title);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To create a unique B-tree index on the column <literal>title</literal>
+ with included columns <literal>director</literal>
+ and <literal>rating</literal> in the table <literal>films</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE UNIQUE INDEX title_idx ON films (title) INCLUDE (director, rating);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To create a B-Tree index with deduplication disabled:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE INDEX title_idx ON films (title) WITH (deduplicate_items = off);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To create an index on the expression <literal>lower(title)</literal>,
+ allowing efficient case-insensitive searches:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE INDEX ON films ((lower(title)));
+</programlisting>
+ (In this example we have chosen to omit the index name, so the system
+ will choose a name, typically <literal>films_lower_idx</literal>.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To create an index with non-default collation:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE INDEX title_idx_german ON films (title COLLATE "de_DE");
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To create an index with non-default sort ordering of nulls:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE INDEX title_idx_nulls_low ON films (title NULLS FIRST);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To create an index with non-default fill factor:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE UNIQUE INDEX title_idx ON films (title) WITH (fillfactor = 70);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To create a <acronym>GIN</acronym> index with fast updates disabled:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE INDEX gin_idx ON documents_table USING GIN (locations) WITH (fastupdate = off);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To create an index on the column <literal>code</literal> in the table
+ <literal>films</literal> and have the index reside in the tablespace
+ <literal>indexspace</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE INDEX code_idx ON films (code) TABLESPACE indexspace;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To create a GiST index on a point attribute so that we
+ can efficiently use box operators on the result of the
+ conversion function:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE INDEX pointloc
+ ON points USING gist (box(location,location));
+SELECT * FROM points
+ WHERE box(location,location) &amp;&amp; '(0,0),(1,1)'::box;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To create an index without locking out writes to the table:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY sales_quantity_index ON sales_table (quantity);
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE INDEX</command> is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> language extension. There
+ are no provisions for indexes in the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterindex"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropindex"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-reindex"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="create-index-progress-reporting"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_language.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_language.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..102efe5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_language.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,250 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_language.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createlanguage">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createlanguage">
+ <primary>CREATE LANGUAGE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE LANGUAGE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE LANGUAGE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new procedural language</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE [ OR REPLACE ] [ TRUSTED ] [ PROCEDURAL ] LANGUAGE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ HANDLER <replaceable class="parameter">call_handler</replaceable> [ INLINE <replaceable class="parameter">inline_handler</replaceable> ] [ VALIDATOR <replaceable>valfunction</replaceable> ]
+CREATE [ OR REPLACE ] [ TRUSTED ] [ PROCEDURAL ] LANGUAGE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createlanguage-description">
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE LANGUAGE</command> registers a new
+ procedural language with a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ database. Subsequently, functions and procedures can be
+ defined in this new language.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE LANGUAGE</command> effectively associates the
+ language name with handler function(s) that are responsible for executing
+ functions written in the language. Refer to <xref linkend="plhandler"/>
+ for more information about language handlers.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE OR REPLACE LANGUAGE</command> will either create a
+ new language, or replace an existing definition. If the language
+ already exists, its parameters are updated according to the command,
+ but the language's ownership and permissions settings do not change,
+ and any existing functions written in the language are assumed to still
+ be valid.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ One must have the
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> superuser privilege to
+ register a new language or change an existing language's parameters.
+ However, once the language is created it is valid to assign ownership of
+ it to a non-superuser, who may then drop it, change its permissions,
+ rename it, or assign it to a new owner. (Do not, however, assign
+ ownership of the underlying C functions to a non-superuser; that would
+ create a privilege escalation path for that user.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The form of <command>CREATE LANGUAGE</command> that does not supply
+ any handler function is obsolete. For backwards compatibility with
+ old dump files, it is interpreted as <command>CREATE EXTENSION</command>.
+ That will work if the language has been packaged into an extension of
+ the same name, which is the conventional way to set up procedural
+ languages.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createlanguage-parameters">
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>TRUSTED</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para><literal>TRUSTED</literal> specifies that the language does
+ not grant access to data that the user would not otherwise
+ have. If this key word is omitted
+ when registering the language, only users with the
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> superuser privilege can
+ use this language to create new functions.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>PROCEDURAL</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This is a noise word.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the new procedural language.
+ The name must be unique among the languages in the database.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>HANDLER</literal> <replaceable class="parameter">call_handler</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para><replaceable class="parameter">call_handler</replaceable> is
+ the name of a previously registered function that will be
+ called to execute the procedural language's functions. The call
+ handler for a procedural language must be written in a compiled
+ language such as C with version 1 call convention and
+ registered with <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> as a
+ function taking no arguments and returning the
+ <type>language_handler</type> type, a placeholder type that is
+ simply used to identify the function as a call handler.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>INLINE</literal> <replaceable class="parameter">inline_handler</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para><replaceable class="parameter">inline_handler</replaceable> is the
+ name of a previously registered function that will be called
+ to execute an anonymous code block
+ (<link linkend="sql-do"><command>DO</command></link> command)
+ in this language.
+ If no <replaceable class="parameter">inline_handler</replaceable>
+ function is specified, the language does not support anonymous code
+ blocks.
+ The handler function must take one argument of
+ type <type>internal</type>, which will be the <command>DO</command> command's
+ internal representation, and it will typically return
+ <type>void</type>. The return value of the handler is ignored.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>VALIDATOR</literal> <replaceable class="parameter">valfunction</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para><replaceable class="parameter">valfunction</replaceable> is the
+ name of a previously registered function that will be called
+ when a new function in the language is created, to validate the
+ new function.
+ If no
+ validator function is specified, then a new function will not
+ be checked when it is created.
+ The validator function must take one argument of
+ type <type>oid</type>, which will be the OID of the
+ to-be-created function, and will typically return <type>void</type>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A validator function would typically inspect the function body
+ for syntactical correctness, but it can also look at other
+ properties of the function, for example if the language cannot
+ handle certain argument types. To signal an error, the
+ validator function should use the <function>ereport()</function>
+ function. The return value of the function is ignored.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createlanguage-notes">
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Use <link linkend="sql-droplanguage"><command>DROP LANGUAGE</command></link> to drop procedural languages.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The system catalog <classname>pg_language</classname> (see <xref
+ linkend="catalog-pg-language"/>) records information about the
+ currently installed languages. Also, the <application>psql</application>
+ command <command>\dL</command> lists the installed languages.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To create functions in a procedural language, a user must have the
+ <literal>USAGE</literal> privilege for the language. By default,
+ <literal>USAGE</literal> is granted to <literal>PUBLIC</literal> (i.e., everyone)
+ for trusted languages. This can be revoked if desired.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Procedural languages are local to individual databases.
+ However, a language can be installed into the <literal>template1</literal>
+ database, which will cause it to be available automatically in
+ all subsequently-created databases.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createlanguage-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ A minimal sequence for creating a new procedural language is:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE FUNCTION plsample_call_handler() RETURNS language_handler
+ AS '$libdir/plsample'
+ LANGUAGE C;
+CREATE LANGUAGE plsample
+ HANDLER plsample_call_handler;
+</programlisting>
+ Typically that would be written in an extension's creation script,
+ and users would do this to install the extension:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE EXTENSION plsample;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createlanguage-compat">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE LANGUAGE</command> is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterlanguage"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createfunction"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droplanguage"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-grant"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-revoke"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_materialized_view.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_materialized_view.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d8c4825
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_materialized_view.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,185 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_materialized_view.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-creatematerializedview">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-creatematerializedview">
+ <primary>CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new materialized view</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW [ IF NOT EXISTS ] <replaceable>table_name</replaceable>
+ [ (<replaceable>column_name</replaceable> [, ...] ) ]
+ [ USING <replaceable class="parameter">method</replaceable> ]
+ [ WITH ( <replaceable class="parameter">storage_parameter</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>] [, ... ] ) ]
+ [ TABLESPACE <replaceable class="parameter">tablespace_name</replaceable> ]
+ AS <replaceable>query</replaceable>
+ [ WITH [ NO ] DATA ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW</command> defines a materialized view of
+ a query. The query is executed and used to populate the view at the time
+ the command is issued (unless <command>WITH NO DATA</command> is used) and may be
+ refreshed later using <command>REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW</command>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW</command> is similar to
+ <command>CREATE TABLE AS</command>, except that it also remembers the query used
+ to initialize the view, so that it can be refreshed later upon demand.
+ A materialized view has many of the same properties as a table, but there
+ is no support for temporary materialized views.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW</command> requires
+ <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on the schema used for the materialized
+ view.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF NOT EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if a materialized view with the same name already
+ exists. A notice is issued in this case. Note that there is no guarantee
+ that the existing materialized view is anything like the one that would
+ have been created.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>table_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the materialized view to be
+ created.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>column_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a column in the new materialized view. If column names are
+ not provided, they are taken from the output column names of the query.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>USING <replaceable class="parameter">method</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This optional clause specifies the table access method to use to store
+ the contents for the new materialized view; the method needs be an
+ access method of type <literal>TABLE</literal>. See <xref
+ linkend="tableam"/> for more information. If this option is not
+ specified, the default table access method is chosen for the new
+ materialized view. See <xref linkend="guc-default-table-access-method"/>
+ for more information.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>WITH ( <replaceable class="parameter">storage_parameter</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>] [, ... ] )</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This clause specifies optional storage parameters for the new
+ materialized view; see
+ <xref linkend="sql-createtable-storage-parameters"/> in the
+ <xref linkend="sql-createtable"/> documentation for more
+ information. All parameters supported for <literal>CREATE
+ TABLE</literal> are also supported for <literal>CREATE MATERIALIZED
+ VIEW</literal>.
+ See <xref linkend="sql-createtable"/> for more information.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>TABLESPACE <replaceable class="parameter">tablespace_name</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <replaceable class="parameter">tablespace_name</replaceable> is the name
+ of the tablespace in which the new materialized view is to be created.
+ If not specified, <xref linkend="guc-default-tablespace"/> is consulted.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>query</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A <link linkend="sql-select"><command>SELECT</command></link>, <link linkend="sql-table"><command>TABLE</command></link>,
+ or <link linkend="sql-values"><command>VALUES</command></link> command. This query will run within a
+ security-restricted operation; in particular, calls to functions that
+ themselves create temporary tables will fail.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>WITH [ NO ] DATA</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This clause specifies whether or not the materialized view should be
+ populated at creation time. If not, the materialized view will be
+ flagged as unscannable and cannot be queried until <command>REFRESH
+ MATERIALIZED VIEW</command> is used.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW</command> is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altermaterializedview"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createtableas"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createview"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropmaterializedview"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-refreshmaterializedview"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_opclass.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_opclass.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f1d6a4c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_opclass.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,330 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_opclass.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createopclass">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createopclass">
+ <primary>CREATE OPERATOR CLASS</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE OPERATOR CLASS</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE OPERATOR CLASS</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new operator class</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE OPERATOR CLASS <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ DEFAULT ] FOR TYPE <replaceable class="parameter">data_type</replaceable>
+ USING <replaceable class="parameter">index_method</replaceable> [ FAMILY <replaceable class="parameter">family_name</replaceable> ] AS
+ { OPERATOR <replaceable class="parameter">strategy_number</replaceable> <replaceable class="parameter">operator_name</replaceable> [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">op_type</replaceable>, <replaceable class="parameter">op_type</replaceable> ) ] [ FOR SEARCH | FOR ORDER BY <replaceable class="parameter">sort_family_name</replaceable> ]
+ | FUNCTION <replaceable class="parameter">support_number</replaceable> [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">op_type</replaceable> [ , <replaceable class="parameter">op_type</replaceable> ] ) ] <replaceable class="parameter">function_name</replaceable> ( <replaceable class="parameter">argument_type</replaceable> [, ...] )
+ | STORAGE <replaceable class="parameter">storage_type</replaceable>
+ } [, ... ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE OPERATOR CLASS</command> creates a new operator class.
+ An operator class defines how a particular data type can be used with
+ an index. The operator class specifies that certain operators will fill
+ particular roles or <quote>strategies</quote> for this data type and this
+ index method. The operator class also specifies the support functions to
+ be used by
+ the index method when the operator class is selected for an
+ index column. All the operators and functions used by an operator
+ class must be defined before the operator class can be created.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a schema name is given then the operator class is created in the
+ specified schema. Otherwise it is created in the current schema.
+ Two operator classes in the same schema can have the same name only if they
+ are for different index methods.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The user who defines an operator class becomes its owner. Presently,
+ the creating user must be a superuser. (This restriction is made because
+ an erroneous operator class definition could confuse or even crash the
+ server.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE OPERATOR CLASS</command> does not presently check
+ whether the operator class definition includes all the operators and
+ functions required by the index method, nor whether the operators and
+ functions form a self-consistent set. It is the user's
+ responsibility to define a valid operator class.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Related operator classes can be grouped into <firstterm>operator
+ families</firstterm>. To add a new operator class to an existing family,
+ specify the <literal>FAMILY</literal> option in <command>CREATE OPERATOR
+ CLASS</command>. Without this option, the new class is placed into
+ a family named the same as the new class (creating that family if
+ it doesn't already exist).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Refer to <xref linkend="xindex"/> for further information.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the operator class to be created. The name can be
+ schema-qualified.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DEFAULT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If present, the operator class will become the default
+ operator class for its data type. At most one operator class
+ can be the default for a specific data type and index method.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">data_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The column data type that this operator class is for.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">index_method</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the index method this operator class is for.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">family_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the existing operator family to add this operator class to.
+ If not specified, a family named the same as the operator class is
+ used (creating it, if it doesn't already exist).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">strategy_number</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The index method's strategy number for an operator
+ associated with the operator class.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">operator_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an operator associated
+ with the operator class.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">op_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ In an <literal>OPERATOR</literal> clause,
+ the operand data type(s) of the operator, or <literal>NONE</literal> to
+ signify a prefix operator. The operand data
+ types can be omitted in the normal case where they are the same
+ as the operator class's data type.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In a <literal>FUNCTION</literal> clause, the operand data type(s) the
+ function is intended to support, if different from
+ the input data type(s) of the function (for B-tree comparison functions
+ and hash functions)
+ or the class's data type (for B-tree sort support functions,
+ B-tree equal image functions, and all functions in GiST,
+ SP-GiST, GIN and BRIN operator classes). These defaults are
+ correct, and so <replaceable
+ class="parameter">op_type</replaceable> need not be specified
+ in <literal>FUNCTION</literal> clauses, except for the case of a
+ B-tree sort support function that is meant to support
+ cross-data-type comparisons.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">sort_family_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing <literal>btree</literal> operator
+ family that describes the sort ordering associated with an ordering
+ operator.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If neither <literal>FOR SEARCH</literal> nor <literal>FOR ORDER BY</literal> is
+ specified, <literal>FOR SEARCH</literal> is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">support_number</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The index method's support function number for a
+ function associated with the operator class.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">function_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of a function that is an
+ index method support function for the operator class.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argument_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The parameter data type(s) of the function.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">storage_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The data type actually stored in the index. Normally this is
+ the same as the column data type, but some index methods
+ (currently GiST, GIN, SP-GiST and BRIN) allow it to be different. The
+ <literal>STORAGE</literal> clause must be omitted unless the index
+ method allows a different type to be used.
+ If the column <replaceable class="parameter">data_type</replaceable> is specified
+ as <type>anyarray</type>, the <replaceable class="parameter">storage_type</replaceable>
+ can be declared as <type>anyelement</type> to indicate that the index
+ entries are members of the element type belonging to the actual array
+ type that each particular index is created for.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>OPERATOR</literal>, <literal>FUNCTION</literal>, and <literal>STORAGE</literal>
+ clauses can appear in any order.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Because the index machinery does not check access permissions on functions
+ before using them, including a function or operator in an operator class
+ is tantamount to granting public execute permission on it. This is usually
+ not an issue for the sorts of functions that are useful in an operator
+ class.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The operators should not be defined by SQL functions. An SQL function
+ is likely to be inlined into the calling query, which will prevent
+ the optimizer from recognizing that the query matches an index.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Before <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 8.4, the <literal>OPERATOR</literal>
+ clause could include a <literal>RECHECK</literal> option. This is no longer
+ supported because whether an index operator is <quote>lossy</quote> is now
+ determined on-the-fly at run time. This allows efficient handling of
+ cases where an operator might or might not be lossy.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The following example command defines a GiST index operator class
+ for the data type <literal>_int4</literal> (array of <type>int4</type>). See the
+ <xref linkend="intarray"/> module for the complete example.
+ </para>
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE OPERATOR CLASS gist__int_ops
+ DEFAULT FOR TYPE _int4 USING gist AS
+ OPERATOR 3 &amp;&amp;,
+ OPERATOR 6 = (anyarray, anyarray),
+ OPERATOR 7 @&gt;,
+ OPERATOR 8 &lt;@,
+ OPERATOR 20 @@ (_int4, query_int),
+ FUNCTION 1 g_int_consistent (internal, _int4, smallint, oid, internal),
+ FUNCTION 2 g_int_union (internal, internal),
+ FUNCTION 3 g_int_compress (internal),
+ FUNCTION 4 g_int_decompress (internal),
+ FUNCTION 5 g_int_penalty (internal, internal, internal),
+ FUNCTION 6 g_int_picksplit (internal, internal),
+ FUNCTION 7 g_int_same (_int4, _int4, internal);
+</programlisting>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE OPERATOR CLASS</command> is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension. There is no
+ <command>CREATE OPERATOR CLASS</command> statement in the SQL
+ standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alteropclass"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropopclass"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createopfamily"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alteropfamily"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_operator.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_operator.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e27512f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_operator.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,299 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_operator.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createoperator">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createoperator">
+ <primary>CREATE OPERATOR</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE OPERATOR</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE OPERATOR</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new operator</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE OPERATOR <replaceable>name</replaceable> (
+ {FUNCTION|PROCEDURE} = <replaceable class="parameter">function_name</replaceable>
+ [, LEFTARG = <replaceable class="parameter">left_type</replaceable> ] [, RIGHTARG = <replaceable class="parameter">right_type</replaceable> ]
+ [, COMMUTATOR = <replaceable class="parameter">com_op</replaceable> ] [, NEGATOR = <replaceable class="parameter">neg_op</replaceable> ]
+ [, RESTRICT = <replaceable class="parameter">res_proc</replaceable> ] [, JOIN = <replaceable class="parameter">join_proc</replaceable> ]
+ [, HASHES ] [, MERGES ]
+)
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE OPERATOR</command> defines a new operator,
+ <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>. The user who
+ defines an operator becomes its owner. If a schema name is given
+ then the operator is created in the specified schema. Otherwise it
+ is created in the current schema.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The operator name is a sequence of up to <symbol>NAMEDATALEN</symbol>-1
+ (63 by default) characters from the following list:
+<literallayout>
++ - * / &lt; &gt; = ~ ! @ # % ^ &amp; | ` ?
+</literallayout>
+
+ There are a few restrictions on your choice of name:
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para><literal>--</literal> and <literal>/*</literal> cannot appear anywhere in an operator name,
+ since they will be taken as the start of a comment.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A multicharacter operator name cannot end in <literal>+</literal> or
+ <literal>-</literal>,
+ unless the name also contains at least one of these characters:
+<literallayout>
+~ ! @ # % ^ &amp; | ` ?
+</literallayout>
+ For example, <literal>@-</literal> is an allowed operator name,
+ but <literal>*-</literal> is not.
+ This restriction allows <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> to
+ parse SQL-compliant commands without requiring spaces between tokens.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The use of <literal>=&gt;</literal> as an operator name is deprecated. It may
+ be disallowed altogether in a future release.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The operator <literal>!=</literal> is mapped to
+ <literal>&lt;&gt;</literal> on input, so these two names are always
+ equivalent.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For binary operators, both <literal>LEFTARG</literal> and
+ <literal>RIGHTARG</literal> must be defined. For prefix operators only
+ <literal>RIGHTARG</literal> should be defined.
+ The <replaceable class="parameter">function_name</replaceable>
+ function must have been previously defined using <command>CREATE
+ FUNCTION</command> and must be defined to accept the correct number
+ of arguments (either one or two) of the indicated types.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In the syntax of <literal>CREATE OPERATOR</literal>, the keywords
+ <literal>FUNCTION</literal> and <literal>PROCEDURE</literal> are
+ equivalent, but the referenced function must in any case be a function, not
+ a procedure. The use of the keyword <literal>PROCEDURE</literal> here is
+ historical and deprecated.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The other clauses specify optional operator optimization clauses.
+ Their meaning is detailed in <xref linkend="xoper-optimization"/>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To be able to create an operator, you must have <literal>USAGE</literal>
+ privilege on the argument types and the return type, as well
+ as <literal>EXECUTE</literal> privilege on the underlying function. If a
+ commutator or negator operator is specified, you must own these operators.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the operator to be defined. See above for allowable
+ characters. The name can be schema-qualified, for example
+ <literal>CREATE OPERATOR myschema.+ (...)</literal>. If not, then
+ the operator is created in the current schema. Two operators
+ in the same schema can have the same name if they operate on
+ different data types. This is called
+ <firstterm>overloading</firstterm>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">function_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The function used to implement this operator.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">left_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The data type of the operator's left operand, if any.
+ This option would be omitted for a prefix operator.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">right_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The data type of the operator's right operand.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">com_op</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The commutator of this operator.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">neg_op</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The negator of this operator.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">res_proc</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The restriction selectivity estimator function for this operator.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">join_proc</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The join selectivity estimator function for this operator.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>HASHES</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Indicates this operator can support a hash join.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>MERGES</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Indicates this operator can support a merge join.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ To give a schema-qualified operator name in <replaceable
+ class="parameter">com_op</replaceable> or the other optional
+ arguments, use the <literal>OPERATOR()</literal> syntax, for example:
+<programlisting>
+COMMUTATOR = OPERATOR(myschema.===) ,
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Refer to <xref linkend="xoper"/> for further information.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ It is not possible to specify an operator's lexical precedence in
+ <command>CREATE OPERATOR</command>, because the parser's precedence behavior
+ is hard-wired. See <xref linkend="sql-precedence"/> for precedence details.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The obsolete options <literal>SORT1</literal>, <literal>SORT2</literal>,
+ <literal>LTCMP</literal>, and <literal>GTCMP</literal> were formerly used to
+ specify the names of sort operators associated with a merge-joinable
+ operator. This is no longer necessary, since information about
+ associated operators is found by looking at B-tree operator families
+ instead. If one of these options is given, it is ignored except
+ for implicitly setting <literal>MERGES</literal> true.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Use <link linkend="sql-dropoperator"><command>DROP OPERATOR</command></link> to delete user-defined operators
+ from a database. Use <link linkend="sql-alteroperator"><command>ALTER OPERATOR</command></link> to modify operators in a
+ database.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The following command defines a new operator, area-equality, for
+ the data type <type>box</type>:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE OPERATOR === (
+ LEFTARG = box,
+ RIGHTARG = box,
+ FUNCTION = area_equal_function,
+ COMMUTATOR = ===,
+ NEGATOR = !==,
+ RESTRICT = area_restriction_function,
+ JOIN = area_join_function,
+ HASHES, MERGES
+);
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE OPERATOR</command> is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension. There are no
+ provisions for user-defined operators in the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alteroperator"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createopclass"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropoperator"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_opfamily.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_opfamily.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ba612c2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_opfamily.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,118 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_opfamily.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createopfamily">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createopfamily">
+ <primary>CREATE OPERATOR FAMILY</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE OPERATOR FAMILY</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE OPERATOR FAMILY</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new operator family</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE OPERATOR FAMILY <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> USING <replaceable class="parameter">index_method</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE OPERATOR FAMILY</command> creates a new operator family.
+ An operator family defines a collection of related operator classes,
+ and perhaps some additional operators and support functions that are
+ compatible with these operator classes but not essential for the
+ functioning of any individual index. (Operators and functions that
+ are essential to indexes should be grouped within the relevant operator
+ class, rather than being <quote>loose</quote> in the operator family.
+ Typically, single-data-type operators are bound to operator classes,
+ while cross-data-type operators can be loose in an operator family
+ containing operator classes for both data types.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The new operator family is initially empty. It should be populated
+ by issuing subsequent <command>CREATE OPERATOR CLASS</command> commands
+ to add contained operator classes, and optionally
+ <command>ALTER OPERATOR FAMILY</command> commands to add <quote>loose</quote>
+ operators and their corresponding support functions.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a schema name is given then the operator family is created in the
+ specified schema. Otherwise it is created in the current schema.
+ Two operator families in the same schema can have the same name only if they
+ are for different index methods.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The user who defines an operator family becomes its owner. Presently,
+ the creating user must be a superuser. (This restriction is made because
+ an erroneous operator family definition could confuse or even crash the
+ server.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Refer to <xref linkend="xindex"/> for further information.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the operator family to be created. The name can be
+ schema-qualified.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">index_method</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the index method this operator family is for.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE OPERATOR FAMILY</command> is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension. There is no
+ <command>CREATE OPERATOR FAMILY</command> statement in the SQL
+ standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alteropfamily"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropopfamily"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createopclass"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alteropclass"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropopclass"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_policy.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_policy.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9f53206
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_policy.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,640 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_policy.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createpolicy">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createpolicy">
+ <primary>CREATE POLICY</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE POLICY</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE POLICY</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new row-level security policy for a table</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE POLICY <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> ON <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable>
+ [ AS { PERMISSIVE | RESTRICTIVE } ]
+ [ FOR { ALL | SELECT | INSERT | UPDATE | DELETE } ]
+ [ TO { <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> | PUBLIC | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER } [, ...] ]
+ [ USING ( <replaceable class="parameter">using_expression</replaceable> ) ]
+ [ WITH CHECK ( <replaceable class="parameter">check_expression</replaceable> ) ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>CREATE POLICY</command> command defines a new row-level
+ security policy for a table. Note that row-level security must be
+ enabled on the table (using <command>ALTER TABLE ... ENABLE ROW LEVEL
+ SECURITY</command>) in order for created policies to be applied.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A policy grants the permission to select, insert, update, or delete rows
+ that match the relevant policy expression. Existing table rows are
+ checked against the expression specified in <literal>USING</literal>,
+ while new rows that would be created via <literal>INSERT</literal>
+ or <literal>UPDATE</literal> are checked against the expression specified
+ in <literal>WITH CHECK</literal>. When a <literal>USING</literal>
+ expression returns true for a given row then that row is visible to the
+ user, while if false or null is returned then the row is not visible.
+ When a <literal>WITH CHECK</literal> expression returns true for a row
+ then that row is inserted or updated, while if false or null is returned
+ then an error occurs.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For <command>INSERT</command> and <command>UPDATE</command> statements,
+ <literal>WITH CHECK</literal> expressions are enforced after
+ <literal>BEFORE</literal> triggers are fired, and before any actual data
+ modifications are made. Thus a <literal>BEFORE ROW</literal> trigger may
+ modify the data to be inserted, affecting the result of the security
+ policy check. <literal>WITH CHECK</literal> expressions are enforced
+ before any other constraints.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Policy names are per-table. Therefore, one policy name can be used for many
+ different tables and have a definition for each table which is appropriate to
+ that table.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Policies can be applied for specific commands or for specific roles. The
+ default for newly created policies is that they apply for all commands and
+ roles, unless otherwise specified. Multiple policies may apply to a single
+ command; see below for more details.
+ <xref linkend="sql-createpolicy-summary"/> summarizes how the different types
+ of policy apply to specific commands.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For policies that can have both <literal>USING</literal>
+ and <literal>WITH CHECK</literal> expressions (<literal>ALL</literal>
+ and <literal>UPDATE</literal>), if no <literal>WITH CHECK</literal>
+ expression is defined, then the <literal>USING</literal> expression will be
+ used both to determine which rows are visible (normal
+ <literal>USING</literal> case) and which new rows will be allowed to be
+ added (<literal>WITH CHECK</literal> case).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If row-level security is enabled for a table, but no applicable policies
+ exist, a <quote>default deny</quote> policy is assumed, so that no rows will
+ be visible or updatable.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the policy to be created. This must be distinct from the
+ name of any other policy for the table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the table the
+ policy applies to.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>PERMISSIVE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specify that the policy is to be created as a permissive policy.
+ All permissive policies which are applicable to a given query will
+ be combined together using the Boolean <quote>OR</quote> operator. By creating
+ permissive policies, administrators can add to the set of records
+ which can be accessed. Policies are permissive by default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICTIVE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specify that the policy is to be created as a restrictive policy.
+ All restrictive policies which are applicable to a given query will
+ be combined together using the Boolean <quote>AND</quote> operator. By creating
+ restrictive policies, administrators can reduce the set of records
+ which can be accessed as all restrictive policies must be passed for
+ each record.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Note that there needs to be at least one permissive policy to grant
+ access to records before restrictive policies can be usefully used to
+ reduce that access. If only restrictive policies exist, then no records
+ will be accessible. When a mix of permissive and restrictive policies
+ are present, a record is only accessible if at least one of the
+ permissive policies passes, in addition to all the restrictive
+ policies.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">command</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The command to which the policy applies. Valid options are
+ <command>ALL</command>, <command>SELECT</command>,
+ <command>INSERT</command>, <command>UPDATE</command>,
+ and <command>DELETE</command>.
+ <command>ALL</command> is the default.
+ See below for specifics regarding how these are applied.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The role(s) to which the policy is to be applied. The default is
+ <literal>PUBLIC</literal>, which will apply the policy to all roles.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">using_expression</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Any <acronym>SQL</acronym> conditional expression (returning
+ <type>boolean</type>). The conditional expression cannot contain
+ any aggregate or window functions. This expression will be added
+ to queries that refer to the table if row-level security is enabled.
+ Rows for which the expression returns true will be visible. Any
+ rows for which the expression returns false or null will not be
+ visible to the user (in a <command>SELECT</command>), and will not be
+ available for modification (in an <command>UPDATE</command>
+ or <command>DELETE</command>). Such rows are silently suppressed; no error
+ is reported.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">check_expression</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Any <acronym>SQL</acronym> conditional expression (returning
+ <type>boolean</type>). The conditional expression cannot contain
+ any aggregate or window functions. This expression will be used in
+ <command>INSERT</command> and <command>UPDATE</command> queries against
+ the table if row-level security is enabled. Only rows for which the
+ expression evaluates to true will be allowed. An error will be thrown
+ if the expression evaluates to false or null for any of the records
+ inserted or any of the records that result from the update. Note that
+ the <replaceable class="parameter">check_expression</replaceable> is
+ evaluated against the proposed new contents of the row, not the
+ original contents.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Per-Command Policies</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry id="sql-createpolicy-all">
+ <term><literal>ALL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Using <literal>ALL</literal> for a policy means that it will apply
+ to all commands, regardless of the type of command. If an
+ <literal>ALL</literal> policy exists and more specific policies
+ exist, then both the <literal>ALL</literal> policy and the more
+ specific policy (or policies) will be applied.
+ Additionally, <literal>ALL</literal> policies will be applied to
+ both the selection side of a query and the modification side, using
+ the <literal>USING</literal> expression for both cases if only
+ a <literal>USING</literal> expression has been defined.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ As an example, if an <literal>UPDATE</literal> is issued, then the
+ <literal>ALL</literal> policy will be applicable both to what the
+ <literal>UPDATE</literal> will be able to select as rows to be
+ updated (applying the <literal>USING</literal> expression),
+ and to the resulting updated rows, to check if they are permitted
+ to be added to the table (applying the <literal>WITH CHECK</literal>
+ expression, if defined, and the <literal>USING</literal> expression
+ otherwise). If an <command>INSERT</command>
+ or <command>UPDATE</command> command attempts to add rows to the
+ table that do not pass the <literal>ALL</literal>
+ policy's <literal>WITH CHECK</literal> expression, the entire
+ command will be aborted.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="sql-createpolicy-select">
+ <term><literal>SELECT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Using <literal>SELECT</literal> for a policy means that it will apply
+ to <literal>SELECT</literal> queries and whenever
+ <literal>SELECT</literal> permissions are required on the relation the
+ policy is defined for. The result is that only those records from the
+ relation that pass the <literal>SELECT</literal> policy will be
+ returned during a <literal>SELECT</literal> query, and that queries
+ that require <literal>SELECT</literal> permissions, such as
+ <literal>UPDATE</literal>, will also only see those records
+ that are allowed by the <literal>SELECT</literal> policy.
+ A <literal>SELECT</literal> policy cannot have a <literal>WITH
+ CHECK</literal> expression, as it only applies in cases where
+ records are being retrieved from the relation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="sql-createpolicy-insert">
+ <term><literal>INSERT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Using <literal>INSERT</literal> for a policy means that it will apply
+ to <literal>INSERT</literal> commands. Rows being inserted that do
+ not pass this policy will result in a policy violation error, and the
+ entire <literal>INSERT</literal> command will be aborted.
+ An <literal>INSERT</literal> policy cannot have
+ a <literal>USING</literal> expression, as it only applies in cases
+ where records are being added to the relation.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Note that <literal>INSERT</literal> with <literal>ON CONFLICT DO
+ UPDATE</literal> checks <literal>INSERT</literal> policies'
+ <literal>WITH CHECK</literal> expressions only for rows appended
+ to the relation by the <literal>INSERT</literal> path.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="sql-createpolicy-update">
+ <term><literal>UPDATE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Using <literal>UPDATE</literal> for a policy means that it will apply
+ to <literal>UPDATE</literal>, <literal>SELECT FOR UPDATE</literal>
+ and <literal>SELECT FOR SHARE</literal> commands, as well as
+ auxiliary <literal>ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE</literal> clauses of
+ <literal>INSERT</literal> commands. Since <literal>UPDATE</literal>
+ involves pulling an existing record and replacing it with a new
+ modified record, <literal>UPDATE</literal>
+ policies accept both a <literal>USING</literal> expression and
+ a <literal>WITH CHECK</literal> expression.
+ The <literal>USING</literal> expression determines which records
+ the <literal>UPDATE</literal> command will see to operate against,
+ while the <literal>WITH CHECK</literal> expression defines which
+ modified rows are allowed to be stored back into the relation.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Any rows whose updated values do not pass the
+ <literal>WITH CHECK</literal> expression will cause an error, and the
+ entire command will be aborted. If only a <literal>USING</literal>
+ clause is specified, then that clause will be used for both
+ <literal>USING</literal> and <literal>WITH CHECK</literal> cases.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Typically an <literal>UPDATE</literal> command also needs to read
+ data from columns in the relation being updated (e.g., in a
+ <literal>WHERE</literal> clause or a <literal>RETURNING</literal>
+ clause, or in an expression on the right hand side of the
+ <literal>SET</literal> clause). In this case,
+ <literal>SELECT</literal> rights are also required on the relation
+ being updated, and the appropriate <literal>SELECT</literal> or
+ <literal>ALL</literal> policies will be applied in addition to
+ the <literal>UPDATE</literal> policies. Thus the user must have
+ access to the row(s) being updated through a <literal>SELECT</literal>
+ or <literal>ALL</literal> policy in addition to being granted
+ permission to update the row(s) via an <literal>UPDATE</literal>
+ or <literal>ALL</literal> policy.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When an <literal>INSERT</literal> command has an auxiliary
+ <literal>ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE</literal> clause, if the
+ <literal>UPDATE</literal> path is taken, the row to be updated is
+ first checked against the <literal>USING</literal> expressions of
+ any <literal>UPDATE</literal> policies, and then the new updated row
+ is checked against the <literal>WITH CHECK</literal> expressions.
+ Note, however, that unlike a standalone <literal>UPDATE</literal>
+ command, if the existing row does not pass the
+ <literal>USING</literal> expressions, an error will be thrown (the
+ <literal>UPDATE</literal> path will <emphasis>never</emphasis> be silently
+ avoided).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="sql-createpolicy-delete">
+ <term><literal>DELETE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Using <literal>DELETE</literal> for a policy means that it will apply
+ to <literal>DELETE</literal> commands. Only rows that pass this
+ policy will be seen by a <literal>DELETE</literal> command. There can
+ be rows that are visible through a <literal>SELECT</literal> that are
+ not available for deletion, if they do not pass the
+ <literal>USING</literal> expression for
+ the <literal>DELETE</literal> policy.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In most cases a <literal>DELETE</literal> command also needs to read
+ data from columns in the relation that it is deleting from (e.g.,
+ in a <literal>WHERE</literal> clause or a
+ <literal>RETURNING</literal> clause). In this case,
+ <literal>SELECT</literal> rights are also required on the relation,
+ and the appropriate <literal>SELECT</literal> or
+ <literal>ALL</literal> policies will be applied in addition to
+ the <literal>DELETE</literal> policies. Thus the user must have
+ access to the row(s) being deleted through a <literal>SELECT</literal>
+ or <literal>ALL</literal> policy in addition to being granted
+ permission to delete the row(s) via a <literal>DELETE</literal> or
+ <literal>ALL</literal> policy.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A <literal>DELETE</literal> policy cannot have a <literal>WITH
+ CHECK</literal> expression, as it only applies in cases where
+ records are being deleted from the relation, so that there is no
+ new row to check.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <table id="sql-createpolicy-summary">
+ <title>Policies Applied by Command Type</title>
+ <tgroup cols="6">
+ <colspec colnum="4" colname="update-using"/>
+ <colspec colnum="5" colname="update-check"/>
+ <spanspec namest="update-using" nameend="update-check" spanname="update"/>
+ <thead>
+ <row>
+ <entry morerows="1">Command</entry>
+ <entry><literal>SELECT/ALL policy</literal></entry>
+ <entry><literal>INSERT/ALL policy</literal></entry>
+ <entry spanname="update"><literal>UPDATE/ALL policy</literal></entry>
+ <entry><literal>DELETE/ALL policy</literal></entry>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <entry><literal>USING expression</literal></entry>
+ <entry><literal>WITH CHECK expression</literal></entry>
+ <entry><literal>USING expression</literal></entry>
+ <entry><literal>WITH CHECK expression</literal></entry>
+ <entry><literal>USING expression</literal></entry>
+ </row>
+ </thead>
+ <tbody>
+ <row>
+ <entry><command>SELECT</command></entry>
+ <entry>Existing row</entry>
+ <entry>&mdash;</entry>
+ <entry>&mdash;</entry>
+ <entry>&mdash;</entry>
+ <entry>&mdash;</entry>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <entry><command>SELECT FOR UPDATE/SHARE</command></entry>
+ <entry>Existing row</entry>
+ <entry>&mdash;</entry>
+ <entry>Existing row</entry>
+ <entry>&mdash;</entry>
+ <entry>&mdash;</entry>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <entry><command>INSERT</command></entry>
+ <entry>&mdash;</entry>
+ <entry>New row</entry>
+ <entry>&mdash;</entry>
+ <entry>&mdash;</entry>
+ <entry>&mdash;</entry>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <entry><command>INSERT ... RETURNING</command></entry>
+ <entry>
+ New row <footnote id="rls-select-priv">
+ <para>
+ If read access is required to the existing or new row (for example,
+ a <literal>WHERE</literal> or <literal>RETURNING</literal> clause
+ that refers to columns from the relation).
+ </para>
+ </footnote>
+ </entry>
+ <entry>New row</entry>
+ <entry>&mdash;</entry>
+ <entry>&mdash;</entry>
+ <entry>&mdash;</entry>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <entry><command>UPDATE</command></entry>
+ <entry>
+ Existing &amp; new rows <footnoteref linkend="rls-select-priv"/>
+ </entry>
+ <entry>&mdash;</entry>
+ <entry>Existing row</entry>
+ <entry>New row</entry>
+ <entry>&mdash;</entry>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <entry><command>DELETE</command></entry>
+ <entry>
+ Existing row <footnoteref linkend="rls-select-priv"/>
+ </entry>
+ <entry>&mdash;</entry>
+ <entry>&mdash;</entry>
+ <entry>&mdash;</entry>
+ <entry>Existing row</entry>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <entry><command>ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE</command></entry>
+ <entry>Existing &amp; new rows</entry>
+ <entry>&mdash;</entry>
+ <entry>Existing row</entry>
+ <entry>New row</entry>
+ <entry>&mdash;</entry>
+ </row>
+ </tbody>
+ </tgroup>
+ </table>
+
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Application of Multiple Policies</title>
+
+ <para>
+ When multiple policies of different command types apply to the same command
+ (for example, <literal>SELECT</literal> and <literal>UPDATE</literal>
+ policies applied to an <literal>UPDATE</literal> command), then the user
+ must have both types of permissions (for example, permission to select rows
+ from the relation as well as permission to update them). Thus the
+ expressions for one type of policy are combined with the expressions for
+ the other type of policy using the <literal>AND</literal> operator.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When multiple policies of the same command type apply to the same command,
+ then there must be at least one <literal>PERMISSIVE</literal> policy
+ granting access to the relation, and all of the
+ <literal>RESTRICTIVE</literal> policies must pass. Thus all the
+ <literal>PERMISSIVE</literal> policy expressions are combined using
+ <literal>OR</literal>, all the <literal>RESTRICTIVE</literal> policy
+ expressions are combined using <literal>AND</literal>, and the results are
+ combined using <literal>AND</literal>. If there are no
+ <literal>PERMISSIVE</literal> policies, then access is denied.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Note that, for the purposes of combining multiple policies,
+ <literal>ALL</literal> policies are treated as having the same type as
+ whichever other type of policy is being applied.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For example, in an <literal>UPDATE</literal> command requiring both
+ <literal>SELECT</literal> and <literal>UPDATE</literal> permissions, if
+ there are multiple applicable policies of each type, they will be combined
+ as follows:
+
+<programlisting>
+<replaceable>expression</replaceable> from RESTRICTIVE SELECT/ALL policy 1
+AND
+<replaceable>expression</replaceable> from RESTRICTIVE SELECT/ALL policy 2
+AND
+...
+AND
+(
+ <replaceable>expression</replaceable> from PERMISSIVE SELECT/ALL policy 1
+ OR
+ <replaceable>expression</replaceable> from PERMISSIVE SELECT/ALL policy 2
+ OR
+ ...
+)
+AND
+<replaceable>expression</replaceable> from RESTRICTIVE UPDATE/ALL policy 1
+AND
+<replaceable>expression</replaceable> from RESTRICTIVE UPDATE/ALL policy 2
+AND
+...
+AND
+(
+ <replaceable>expression</replaceable> from PERMISSIVE UPDATE/ALL policy 1
+ OR
+ <replaceable>expression</replaceable> from PERMISSIVE UPDATE/ALL policy 2
+ OR
+ ...
+)
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ You must be the owner of a table to create or change policies for it.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ While policies will be applied for explicit queries against tables
+ in the database, they are not applied when the system is performing internal
+ referential integrity checks or validating constraints. This means there are
+ indirect ways to determine that a given value exists. An example of this is
+ attempting to insert a duplicate value into a column that is a primary key
+ or has a unique constraint. If the insert fails then the user can infer that
+ the value already exists. (This example assumes that the user is permitted by
+ policy to insert records which they are not allowed to see.) Another example
+ is where a user is allowed to insert into a table which references another,
+ otherwise hidden table. Existence can be determined by the user inserting
+ values into the referencing table, where success would indicate that the
+ value exists in the referenced table. These issues can be addressed by
+ carefully crafting policies to prevent users from being able to insert,
+ delete, or update records at all which might possibly indicate a value they
+ are not otherwise able to see, or by using generated values (e.g., surrogate
+ keys) instead of keys with external meanings.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Generally, the system will enforce filter conditions imposed using
+ security policies prior to qualifications that appear in user queries,
+ in order to prevent inadvertent exposure of the protected data to
+ user-defined functions which might not be trustworthy. However,
+ functions and operators marked by the system (or the system
+ administrator) as <literal>LEAKPROOF</literal> may be evaluated before
+ policy expressions, as they are assumed to be trustworthy.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Since policy expressions
+ are added to the user's query directly, they will be run with the rights of
+ the user running the overall query. Therefore, users who are using a given
+ policy must be able to access any tables or functions referenced in the
+ expression or they will simply receive a permission denied error when
+ attempting to query the table that has row-level security enabled.
+ This does not change how views
+ work, however. As with normal queries and views, permission checks and
+ policies for the tables which are referenced by a view will use the view
+ owner's rights and any policies which apply to the view owner.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Additional discussion and practical examples can be found
+ in <xref linkend="ddl-rowsecurity"/>.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE POLICY</command> is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterpolicy"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droppolicy"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altertable"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_procedure.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_procedure.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..03a14c8
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_procedure.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,411 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_procedure.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createprocedure">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createprocedure">
+ <primary>CREATE PROCEDURE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE PROCEDURE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE PROCEDURE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new procedure</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE [ OR REPLACE ] PROCEDURE
+ <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable> [ { DEFAULT | = } <replaceable class="parameter">default_expr</replaceable> ] [, ...] ] )
+ { LANGUAGE <replaceable class="parameter">lang_name</replaceable>
+ | TRANSFORM { FOR TYPE <replaceable class="parameter">type_name</replaceable> } [, ... ]
+ | [ EXTERNAL ] SECURITY INVOKER | [ EXTERNAL ] SECURITY DEFINER
+ | SET <replaceable class="parameter">configuration_parameter</replaceable> { TO <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> | = <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> | FROM CURRENT }
+ | AS '<replaceable class="parameter">definition</replaceable>'
+ | AS '<replaceable class="parameter">obj_file</replaceable>', '<replaceable class="parameter">link_symbol</replaceable>'
+ | <replaceable class="parameter">sql_body</replaceable>
+ } ...
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createprocedure-description">
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE PROCEDURE</command> defines a new procedure.
+ <command>CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE</command> will either create a
+ new procedure, or replace an existing definition.
+ To be able to define a procedure, the user must have the
+ <literal>USAGE</literal> privilege on the language.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a schema name is included, then the procedure is created in the
+ specified schema. Otherwise it is created in the current schema.
+ The name of the new procedure must not match any existing procedure or function
+ with the same input argument types in the same schema. However,
+ procedures and functions of different argument types can share a name (this is
+ called <firstterm>overloading</firstterm>).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To replace the current definition of an existing procedure, use
+ <command>CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE</command>. It is not possible
+ to change the name or argument types of a procedure this way (if you
+ tried, you would actually be creating a new, distinct procedure).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When <command>CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE</command> is used to replace an
+ existing procedure, the ownership and permissions of the procedure
+ do not change. All other procedure properties are assigned the
+ values specified or implied in the command. You must own the procedure
+ to replace it (this includes being a member of the owning role).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The user that creates the procedure becomes the owner of the procedure.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To be able to create a procedure, you must have <literal>USAGE</literal>
+ privilege on the argument types.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Refer to <xref linkend="xproc"/> for further information on writing
+ procedures.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the procedure to create.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The mode of an argument: <literal>IN</literal>, <literal>OUT</literal>,
+ <literal>INOUT</literal>, or <literal>VARIADIC</literal>. If omitted,
+ the default is <literal>IN</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an argument.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The data type(s) of the procedure's arguments (optionally
+ schema-qualified), if any. The argument types can be base, composite,
+ or domain types, or can reference the type of a table column.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Depending on the implementation language it might also be allowed
+ to specify <quote>pseudo-types</quote> such as <type>cstring</type>.
+ Pseudo-types indicate that the actual argument type is either
+ incompletely specified, or outside the set of ordinary SQL data types.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The type of a column is referenced by writing
+ <literal><replaceable
+ class="parameter">table_name</replaceable>.<replaceable
+ class="parameter">column_name</replaceable>%TYPE</literal>.
+ Using this feature can sometimes help make a procedure independent of
+ changes to the definition of a table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">default_expr</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An expression to be used as default value if the parameter is
+ not specified. The expression has to be coercible to the
+ argument type of the parameter.
+ All input parameters following a
+ parameter with a default value must have default values as well.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">lang_name</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the language that the procedure is implemented in.
+ It can be <literal>sql</literal>, <literal>c</literal>,
+ <literal>internal</literal>, or the name of a user-defined
+ procedural language, e.g., <literal>plpgsql</literal>. The default is
+ <literal>sql</literal> if <replaceable
+ class="parameter">sql_body</replaceable> is specified. Enclosing the
+ name in single quotes is deprecated and requires matching case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>TRANSFORM { FOR TYPE <replaceable class="parameter">type_name</replaceable> } [, ... ] }</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists which transforms a call to the procedure should apply. Transforms
+ convert between SQL types and language-specific data types;
+ see <xref linkend="sql-createtransform"/>. Procedural language
+ implementations usually have hardcoded knowledge of the built-in types,
+ so those don't need to be listed here. If a procedural language
+ implementation does not know how to handle a type and no transform is
+ supplied, it will fall back to a default behavior for converting data
+ types, but this depends on the implementation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal><optional>EXTERNAL</optional> SECURITY INVOKER</literal></term>
+ <term><literal><optional>EXTERNAL</optional> SECURITY DEFINER</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para><literal>SECURITY INVOKER</literal> indicates that the procedure
+ is to be executed with the privileges of the user that calls it.
+ That is the default. <literal>SECURITY DEFINER</literal>
+ specifies that the procedure is to be executed with the
+ privileges of the user that owns it.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The key word <literal>EXTERNAL</literal> is allowed for SQL
+ conformance, but it is optional since, unlike in SQL, this feature
+ applies to all procedures not only external ones.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A <literal>SECURITY DEFINER</literal> procedure cannot execute
+ transaction control statements (for example, <command>COMMIT</command>
+ and <command>ROLLBACK</command>, depending on the language).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>configuration_parameter</replaceable></term>
+ <term><replaceable>value</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>SET</literal> clause causes the specified configuration
+ parameter to be set to the specified value when the procedure is
+ entered, and then restored to its prior value when the procedure exits.
+ <literal>SET FROM CURRENT</literal> saves the value of the parameter that
+ is current when <command>CREATE PROCEDURE</command> is executed as the value
+ to be applied when the procedure is entered.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a <literal>SET</literal> clause is attached to a procedure, then
+ the effects of a <command>SET LOCAL</command> command executed inside the
+ procedure for the same variable are restricted to the procedure: the
+ configuration parameter's prior value is still restored at procedure exit.
+ However, an ordinary
+ <command>SET</command> command (without <literal>LOCAL</literal>) overrides the
+ <literal>SET</literal> clause, much as it would do for a previous <command>SET
+ LOCAL</command> command: the effects of such a command will persist after
+ procedure exit, unless the current transaction is rolled back.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a <literal>SET</literal> clause is attached to a procedure, then
+ that procedure cannot execute transaction control statements (for
+ example, <command>COMMIT</command> and <command>ROLLBACK</command>,
+ depending on the language).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ See <xref linkend="sql-set"/> and
+ <xref linkend="runtime-config"/>
+ for more information about allowed parameter names and values.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">definition</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A string constant defining the procedure; the meaning depends on the
+ language. It can be an internal procedure name, the path to an
+ object file, an SQL command, or text in a procedural language.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ It is often helpful to use dollar quoting (see <xref
+ linkend="sql-syntax-dollar-quoting"/>) to write the procedure definition
+ string, rather than the normal single quote syntax. Without dollar
+ quoting, any single quotes or backslashes in the procedure definition must
+ be escaped by doubling them.
+ </para>
+
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal><replaceable class="parameter">obj_file</replaceable>, <replaceable class="parameter">link_symbol</replaceable></literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This form of the <literal>AS</literal> clause is used for
+ dynamically loadable C language procedures when the procedure name
+ in the C language source code is not the same as the name of
+ the SQL procedure. The string <replaceable
+ class="parameter">obj_file</replaceable> is the name of the shared
+ library file containing the compiled C procedure, and is interpreted
+ as for the <link linkend="sql-load"><command>LOAD</command></link> command. The string
+ <replaceable class="parameter">link_symbol</replaceable> is the
+ procedure's link symbol, that is, the name of the procedure in the C
+ language source code. If the link symbol is omitted, it is assumed
+ to be the same as the name of the SQL procedure being defined.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When repeated <command>CREATE PROCEDURE</command> calls refer to
+ the same object file, the file is only loaded once per session.
+ To unload and
+ reload the file (perhaps during development), start a new session.
+ </para>
+
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">sql_body</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The body of a <literal>LANGUAGE SQL</literal> procedure. This should
+ be a block
+<programlisting>
+BEGIN ATOMIC
+ <replaceable>statement</replaceable>;
+ <replaceable>statement</replaceable>;
+ ...
+ <replaceable>statement</replaceable>;
+END
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This is similar to writing the text of the procedure body as a string
+ constant (see <replaceable>definition</replaceable> above), but there
+ are some differences: This form only works for <literal>LANGUAGE
+ SQL</literal>, the string constant form works for all languages. This
+ form is parsed at procedure definition time, the string constant form is
+ parsed at execution time; therefore this form cannot support
+ polymorphic argument types and other constructs that are not resolvable
+ at procedure definition time. This form tracks dependencies between the
+ procedure and objects used in the procedure body, so <literal>DROP
+ ... CASCADE</literal> will work correctly, whereas the form using
+ string literals may leave dangling procedures. Finally, this form is
+ more compatible with the SQL standard and other SQL implementations.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createprocedure-notes">
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ See <xref linkend="sql-createfunction"/> for more details on function
+ creation that also apply to procedures.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Use <xref linkend="sql-call"/> to execute a procedure.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createprocedure-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+<programlisting>
+CREATE PROCEDURE insert_data(a integer, b integer)
+LANGUAGE SQL
+AS $$
+INSERT INTO tbl VALUES (a);
+INSERT INTO tbl VALUES (b);
+$$;
+</programlisting>
+ or
+<programlisting>
+CREATE PROCEDURE insert_data(a integer, b integer)
+LANGUAGE SQL
+BEGIN ATOMIC
+ INSERT INTO tbl VALUES (a);
+ INSERT INTO tbl VALUES (b);
+END;
+</programlisting>
+ and call like this:
+<programlisting>
+CALL insert_data(1, 2);
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createprocedure-compat">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ A <command>CREATE PROCEDURE</command> command is defined in the SQL
+ standard. The <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> implementation can be
+ used in a compatible way but has many extensions. For details see also
+ <xref linkend="sql-createfunction"/>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterprocedure"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropprocedure"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-call"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createfunction"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_publication.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_publication.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1205df5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_publication.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,254 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_publication.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createpublication">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createpublication">
+ <primary>CREATE PUBLICATION</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE PUBLICATION</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE PUBLICATION</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new publication</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE PUBLICATION <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ [ FOR TABLE [ ONLY ] <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [ * ] [, ...]
+ | FOR ALL TABLES ]
+ [ WITH ( <replaceable class="parameter">publication_parameter</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>] [, ... ] ) ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE PUBLICATION</command> adds a new publication
+ into the current database. The publication name must be distinct from
+ the name of any existing publication in the current database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A publication is essentially a group of tables whose data changes are
+ intended to be replicated through logical replication. See
+ <xref linkend="logical-replication-publication"/> for details about how
+ publications fit into the logical replication setup.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the new publication.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>FOR TABLE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies a list of tables to add to the publication. If
+ <literal>ONLY</literal> is specified before the table name, only
+ that table is added to the publication. If <literal>ONLY</literal> is not
+ specified, the table and all its descendant tables (if any) are added.
+ Optionally, <literal>*</literal> can be specified after the table name to
+ explicitly indicate that descendant tables are included.
+ This does not apply to a partitioned table, however. The partitions of
+ a partitioned table are always implicitly considered part of the
+ publication, so they are never explicitly added to the publication.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Only persistent base tables and partitioned tables can be part of a
+ publication. Temporary tables, unlogged tables, foreign tables,
+ materialized views, and regular views cannot be part of a publication.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When a partitioned table is added to a publication, all of its existing
+ and future partitions are implicitly considered to be part of the
+ publication. So, even operations that are performed directly on a
+ partition are also published via publications that its ancestors are
+ part of.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>FOR ALL TABLES</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Marks the publication as one that replicates changes for all tables in
+ the database, including tables created in the future.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>WITH ( <replaceable class="parameter">publication_parameter</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>] [, ... ] )</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This clause specifies optional parameters for a publication. The
+ following parameters are supported:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>publish</literal> (<type>string</type>)</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This parameter determines which DML operations will be published by
+ the new publication to the subscribers. The value is
+ comma-separated list of operations. The allowed operations are
+ <literal>insert</literal>, <literal>update</literal>,
+ <literal>delete</literal>, and <literal>truncate</literal>.
+ The default is to publish all actions,
+ and so the default value for this option is
+ <literal>'insert, update, delete, truncate'</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>publish_via_partition_root</literal> (<type>boolean</type>)</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This parameter determines whether changes in a partitioned table (or
+ on its partitions) contained in the publication will be published
+ using the identity and schema of the partitioned table rather than
+ that of the individual partitions that are actually changed; the
+ latter is the default. Enabling this allows the changes to be
+ replicated into a non-partitioned table or a partitioned table
+ consisting of a different set of partitions.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If this is enabled, <literal>TRUNCATE</literal> operations performed
+ directly on partitions are not replicated.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist></para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ If neither <literal>FOR TABLE</literal> nor <literal>FOR ALL
+ TABLES</literal> is specified, then the publication starts out with an
+ empty set of tables. That is useful if tables are to be added later.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The creation of a publication does not start replication. It only defines
+ a grouping and filtering logic for future subscribers.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To create a publication, the invoking user must have the
+ <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege for the current database.
+ (Of course, superusers bypass this check.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To add a table to a publication, the invoking user must have ownership
+ rights on the table. The <command>FOR ALL TABLES</command> clause requires
+ the invoking user to be a superuser.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The tables added to a publication that publishes <command>UPDATE</command>
+ and/or <command>DELETE</command> operations must have
+ <literal>REPLICA IDENTITY</literal> defined. Otherwise those operations will be
+ disallowed on those tables.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For an <command>INSERT ... ON CONFLICT</command> command, the publication will
+ publish the operation that actually results from the command. So depending
+ of the outcome, it may be published as either <command>INSERT</command> or
+ <command>UPDATE</command>, or it may not be published at all.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ATTACH</command>ing a table into a partition tree whose root is
+ published using a publication with <literal>publish_via_partition_root</literal>
+ set to <literal>true</literal> does not result in the table's existing contents
+ being replicated.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>COPY ... FROM</command> commands are published
+ as <command>INSERT</command> operations.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <acronym>DDL</acronym> operations are not published.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a publication that publishes all changes in two tables:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE PUBLICATION mypublication FOR TABLE users, departments;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a publication that publishes all changes in all tables:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE PUBLICATION alltables FOR ALL TABLES;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a publication that only publishes <command>INSERT</command>
+ operations in one table:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE PUBLICATION insert_only FOR TABLE mydata
+ WITH (publish = 'insert');
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE PUBLICATION</command> is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterpublication"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droppublication"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createsubscription"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altersubscription"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_role.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_role.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b6a4ea1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_role.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,504 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_role.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createrole">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createrole">
+ <primary>CREATE ROLE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE ROLE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE ROLE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new database role</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE ROLE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ [ WITH ] <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> [ ... ] ]
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> can be:</phrase>
+
+ SUPERUSER | NOSUPERUSER
+ | CREATEDB | NOCREATEDB
+ | CREATEROLE | NOCREATEROLE
+ | INHERIT | NOINHERIT
+ | LOGIN | NOLOGIN
+ | REPLICATION | NOREPLICATION
+ | BYPASSRLS | NOBYPASSRLS
+ | CONNECTION LIMIT <replaceable class="parameter">connlimit</replaceable>
+ | [ ENCRYPTED ] PASSWORD '<replaceable class="parameter">password</replaceable>' | PASSWORD NULL
+ | VALID UNTIL '<replaceable class="parameter">timestamp</replaceable>'
+ | IN ROLE <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ | IN GROUP <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ | ROLE <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ | ADMIN <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ | USER <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ | SYSID <replaceable class="parameter">uid</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+<!--
+CAUTION: remember to keep create_user.sgml and create_group.sgml
+in sync when changing the above synopsis!
+-->
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE ROLE</command> adds a new role to a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database cluster. A role is
+ an entity that can own database objects and have database privileges;
+ a role can be considered a <quote>user</quote>, a <quote>group</quote>, or both
+ depending on how it is used. Refer to
+ <xref linkend="user-manag"/> and <xref
+ linkend="client-authentication"/> for information about managing
+ users and authentication. You must have <literal>CREATEROLE</literal>
+ privilege or be a database superuser to use this command.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Note that roles are defined at the database cluster
+ level, and so are valid in all databases in the cluster.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the new role.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SUPERUSER</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>NOSUPERUSER</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These clauses determine whether the new role is a <quote>superuser</quote>,
+ who can override all access restrictions within the database.
+ Superuser status is dangerous and should be used only when really
+ needed. You must yourself be a superuser to create a new superuser.
+ If not specified,
+ <literal>NOSUPERUSER</literal> is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CREATEDB</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>NOCREATEDB</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These clauses define a role's ability to create databases. If
+ <literal>CREATEDB</literal> is specified, the role being
+ defined will be allowed to create new databases. Specifying
+ <literal>NOCREATEDB</literal> will deny a role the ability to
+ create databases. If not specified,
+ <literal>NOCREATEDB</literal> is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CREATEROLE</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>NOCREATEROLE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These clauses determine whether a role will be permitted to
+ create new roles (that is, execute <command>CREATE ROLE</command>).
+ A role with <literal>CREATEROLE</literal> privilege can also alter
+ and drop other roles.
+ If not specified,
+ <literal>NOCREATEROLE</literal> is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>INHERIT</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>NOINHERIT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These clauses determine whether a role <quote>inherits</quote> the
+ privileges of roles it is a member of.
+ A role with the <literal>INHERIT</literal> attribute can automatically
+ use whatever database privileges have been granted to all roles
+ it is directly or indirectly a member of.
+ Without <literal>INHERIT</literal>, membership in another role
+ only grants the ability to <command>SET ROLE</command> to that other role;
+ the privileges of the other role are only available after having
+ done so.
+ If not specified,
+ <literal>INHERIT</literal> is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>LOGIN</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>NOLOGIN</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These clauses determine whether a role is allowed to log in;
+ that is, whether the role can be given as the initial session
+ authorization name during client connection. A role having
+ the <literal>LOGIN</literal> attribute can be thought of as a user.
+ Roles without this attribute are useful for managing database
+ privileges, but are not users in the usual sense of the word.
+ If not specified,
+ <literal>NOLOGIN</literal> is the default, except when
+ <command>CREATE ROLE</command> is invoked through its alternative spelling
+ <link linkend="sql-createuser"><command>CREATE USER</command></link>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>REPLICATION</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>NOREPLICATION</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These clauses determine whether a role is a replication role. A role
+ must have this attribute (or be a superuser) in order to be able to
+ connect to the server in replication mode (physical or logical
+ replication) and in order to be able to create or drop replication
+ slots.
+ A role having the <literal>REPLICATION</literal> attribute is a very
+ highly privileged role, and should only be used on roles actually
+ used for replication. If not specified,
+ <literal>NOREPLICATION</literal> is the default.
+ You must be a superuser to create a new role having the
+ <literal>REPLICATION</literal> attribute.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>BYPASSRLS</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>NOBYPASSRLS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These clauses determine whether a role bypasses every row-level
+ security (RLS) policy. <literal>NOBYPASSRLS</literal> is the default.
+ You must be a superuser to create a new role having
+ the <literal>BYPASSRLS</literal> attribute.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Note that pg_dump will set <literal>row_security</literal> to
+ <literal>OFF</literal> by default, to ensure all contents of a table are
+ dumped out. If the user running pg_dump does not have appropriate
+ permissions, an error will be returned. However, superusers and the
+ owner of the table being dumped always bypass RLS.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CONNECTION LIMIT</literal> <replaceable class="parameter">connlimit</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If role can log in, this specifies how many concurrent connections
+ the role can make. -1 (the default) means no limit. Note that only
+ normal connections are counted towards this limit. Neither prepared
+ transactions nor background worker connections are counted towards
+ this limit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term>[ <literal>ENCRYPTED</literal> ] <literal>PASSWORD</literal> '<replaceable class="parameter">password</replaceable>'</term>
+ <term><literal>PASSWORD NULL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets the role's password. (A password is only of use for
+ roles having the <literal>LOGIN</literal> attribute, but you
+ can nonetheless define one for roles without it.) If you do
+ not plan to use password authentication you can omit this
+ option. If no password is specified, the password will be set
+ to null and password authentication will always fail for that
+ user. A null password can optionally be written explicitly as
+ <literal>PASSWORD NULL</literal>.
+ </para>
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ Specifying an empty string will also set the password to null,
+ but that was not the case before <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ version 10. In earlier versions, an empty string could be used,
+ or not, depending on the authentication method and the exact
+ version, and libpq would refuse to use it in any case.
+ To avoid the ambiguity, specifying an empty string should be
+ avoided.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ <para>
+ The password is always stored encrypted in the system catalogs. The
+ <literal>ENCRYPTED</literal> keyword has no effect, but is accepted for
+ backwards compatibility. The method of encryption is determined
+ by the configuration parameter <xref linkend="guc-password-encryption"/>.
+ If the presented password string is already in MD5-encrypted or
+ SCRAM-encrypted format, then it is stored as-is regardless of
+ <varname>password_encryption</varname> (since the system cannot decrypt
+ the specified encrypted password string, to encrypt it in a
+ different format). This allows reloading of encrypted passwords
+ during dump/restore.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>VALID UNTIL</literal> '<replaceable class="parameter">timestamp</replaceable>'</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>VALID UNTIL</literal> clause sets a date and
+ time after which the role's password is no longer valid. If
+ this clause is omitted the password will be valid for all time.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IN ROLE</literal> <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>IN ROLE</literal> clause lists one or more existing
+ roles to which the new role will be immediately added as a new
+ member. (Note that there is no option to add the new role as an
+ administrator; use a separate <command>GRANT</command> command to do that.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IN GROUP</literal> <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para><literal>IN GROUP</literal> is an obsolete spelling of
+ <literal>IN ROLE</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ROLE</literal> <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>ROLE</literal> clause lists one or more existing
+ roles which are automatically added as members of the new role.
+ (This in effect makes the new role a <quote>group</quote>.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ADMIN</literal> <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>ADMIN</literal> clause is like <literal>ROLE</literal>,
+ but the named roles are added to the new role <literal>WITH ADMIN
+ OPTION</literal>, giving them the right to grant membership in this role
+ to others.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>USER</literal> <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>USER</literal> clause is an obsolete spelling of
+ the <literal>ROLE</literal> clause.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SYSID</literal> <replaceable class="parameter">uid</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>SYSID</literal> clause is ignored, but is accepted
+ for backwards compatibility.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Use <link linkend="sql-alterrole"><command>ALTER ROLE</command></link> to
+ change the attributes of a role, and <link linkend="sql-droprole"><command>DROP ROLE</command></link>
+ to remove a role. All the attributes
+ specified by <command>CREATE ROLE</command> can be modified by later
+ <command>ALTER ROLE</command> commands.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The preferred way to add and remove members of roles that are being
+ used as groups is to use
+ <link linkend="sql-grant"><command>GRANT</command></link> and
+ <link linkend="sql-revoke"><command>REVOKE</command></link>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>VALID UNTIL</literal> clause defines an expiration time for a
+ password only, not for the role per se. In
+ particular, the expiration time is not enforced when logging in using
+ a non-password-based authentication method.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>INHERIT</literal> attribute governs inheritance of grantable
+ privileges (that is, access privileges for database objects and role
+ memberships). It does not apply to the special role attributes set by
+ <command>CREATE ROLE</command> and <command>ALTER ROLE</command>. For example, being
+ a member of a role with <literal>CREATEDB</literal> privilege does not immediately
+ grant the ability to create databases, even if <literal>INHERIT</literal> is set;
+ it would be necessary to become that role via
+ <link linkend="sql-set-role"><command>SET ROLE</command></link> before
+ creating a database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>INHERIT</literal> attribute is the default for reasons of backwards
+ compatibility: in prior releases of <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>,
+ users always had access to all privileges of groups they were members of.
+ However, <literal>NOINHERIT</literal> provides a closer match to the semantics
+ specified in the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Be careful with the <literal>CREATEROLE</literal> privilege. There is no concept of
+ inheritance for the privileges of a <literal>CREATEROLE</literal>-role. That
+ means that even if a role does not have a certain privilege but is allowed
+ to create other roles, it can easily create another role with different
+ privileges than its own (except for creating roles with superuser
+ privileges). For example, if the role <quote>user</quote> has the
+ <literal>CREATEROLE</literal> privilege but not the <literal>CREATEDB</literal> privilege,
+ nonetheless it can create a new role with the <literal>CREATEDB</literal>
+ privilege. Therefore, regard roles that have the <literal>CREATEROLE</literal>
+ privilege as almost-superuser-roles.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> includes a program <xref
+ linkend="app-createuser"/> that has
+ the same functionality as <command>CREATE ROLE</command> (in fact,
+ it calls this command) but can be run from the command shell.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>CONNECTION LIMIT</literal> option is only enforced approximately;
+ if two new sessions start at about the same time when just one
+ connection <quote>slot</quote> remains for the role, it is possible that
+ both will fail. Also, the limit is never enforced for superusers.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Caution must be exercised when specifying an unencrypted password
+ with this command. The password will be transmitted to the server
+ in cleartext, and it might also be logged in the client's command
+ history or the server log. The command <xref
+ linkend="app-createuser"/>, however, transmits
+ the password encrypted. Also, <xref linkend="app-psql"/>
+ contains a command
+ <command>\password</command> that can be used to safely change the
+ password later.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a role that can log in, but don't give it a password:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE ROLE jonathan LOGIN;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a role with a password:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE USER davide WITH PASSWORD 'jw8s0F4';
+</programlisting>
+ (<command>CREATE USER</command> is the same as <command>CREATE ROLE</command> except
+ that it implies <literal>LOGIN</literal>.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a role with a password that is valid until the end of 2004.
+ After one second has ticked in 2005, the password is no longer
+ valid.
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE ROLE miriam WITH LOGIN PASSWORD 'jw8s0F4' VALID UNTIL '2005-01-01';
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a role that can create databases and manage roles:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE ROLE admin WITH CREATEDB CREATEROLE;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>CREATE ROLE</command> statement is in the SQL standard,
+ but the standard only requires the syntax
+<synopsis>
+CREATE ROLE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ WITH ADMIN <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> ]
+</synopsis>
+ Multiple initial administrators, and all the other options of
+ <command>CREATE ROLE</command>, are
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extensions.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The SQL standard defines the concepts of users and roles, but it
+ regards them as distinct concepts and leaves all commands defining
+ users to be specified by each database implementation. In
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> we have chosen to unify
+ users and roles into a single kind of entity. Roles therefore
+ have many more optional attributes than they do in the standard.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The behavior specified by the SQL standard is most closely approximated
+ by giving users the <literal>NOINHERIT</literal> attribute, while roles are
+ given the <literal>INHERIT</literal> attribute.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-set-role"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterrole"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droprole"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-grant"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-revoke"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="app-createuser"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_rule.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_rule.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..dbf4c93
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_rule.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,305 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_rule.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createrule">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createrule">
+ <primary>CREATE RULE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE RULE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE RULE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new rewrite rule</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE [ OR REPLACE ] RULE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> AS ON <replaceable class="parameter">event</replaceable>
+ TO <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [ WHERE <replaceable class="parameter">condition</replaceable> ]
+ DO [ ALSO | INSTEAD ] { NOTHING | <replaceable class="parameter">command</replaceable> | ( <replaceable class="parameter">command</replaceable> ; <replaceable class="parameter">command</replaceable> ... ) }
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">event</replaceable> can be one of:</phrase>
+
+ SELECT | INSERT | UPDATE | DELETE
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE RULE</command> defines a new rule applying to a specified
+ table or view.
+ <command>CREATE OR REPLACE RULE</command> will either create a
+ new rule, or replace an existing rule of the same name for the same
+ table.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> rule system allows one to
+ define an alternative action to be performed on insertions, updates,
+ or deletions in database tables. Roughly speaking, a rule causes
+ additional commands to be executed when a given command on a given
+ table is executed. Alternatively, an <literal>INSTEAD</literal>
+ rule can replace a given command by another, or cause a command
+ not to be executed at all. Rules are used to implement SQL
+ views as well. It is important to realize that a rule is really
+ a command transformation mechanism, or command macro. The
+ transformation happens before the execution of the command starts.
+ If you actually want an operation that fires independently for each
+ physical row, you probably want to use a trigger, not a rule.
+ More information about the rules system is in <xref linkend="rules"/>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Presently, <literal>ON SELECT</literal> rules must be unconditional
+ <literal>INSTEAD</literal> rules and must have actions that consist
+ of a single <command>SELECT</command> command. Thus, an
+ <literal>ON SELECT</literal> rule effectively turns the table into
+ a view, whose visible contents are the rows returned by the rule's
+ <command>SELECT</command> command rather than whatever had been
+ stored in the table (if anything). It is considered better style
+ to write a <command>CREATE VIEW</command> command than to create a
+ real table and define an <literal>ON SELECT</literal> rule for it.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You can create the illusion of an updatable view by defining
+ <literal>ON INSERT</literal>, <literal>ON UPDATE</literal>, and
+ <literal>ON DELETE</literal> rules (or any subset of those that's
+ sufficient for your purposes) to replace update actions on the view
+ with appropriate updates on other tables. If you want to support
+ <command>INSERT RETURNING</command> and so on, then be sure to put a suitable
+ <literal>RETURNING</literal> clause into each of these rules.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ There is a catch if you try to use conditional rules for complex view
+ updates: there <emphasis>must</emphasis> be an unconditional
+ <literal>INSTEAD</literal> rule for each action you wish to allow
+ on the view. If the rule is conditional, or is not
+ <literal>INSTEAD</literal>, then the system will still reject
+ attempts to perform the update action, because it thinks it might
+ end up trying to perform the action on the dummy table of the view
+ in some cases. If you want to handle all the useful cases in
+ conditional rules, add an unconditional <literal>DO
+ INSTEAD NOTHING</literal> rule to ensure that the system
+ understands it will never be called on to update the dummy table.
+ Then make the conditional rules non-<literal>INSTEAD</literal>; in
+ the cases where they are applied, they add to the default
+ <literal>INSTEAD NOTHING</literal> action. (This method does not
+ currently work to support <literal>RETURNING</literal> queries, however.)
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ A view that is simple enough to be automatically updatable (see <xref
+ linkend="sql-createview"/>) does not require a user-created rule in
+ order to be updatable. While you can create an explicit rule anyway,
+ the automatic update transformation will generally outperform an
+ explicit rule.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Another alternative worth considering is to use <literal>INSTEAD OF</literal>
+ triggers (see <xref linkend="sql-createtrigger"/>) in place of rules.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a rule to create. This must be distinct from the
+ name of any other rule for the same table. Multiple rules on
+ the same table and same event type are applied in alphabetical
+ name order.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">event</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The event is one of <literal>SELECT</literal>,
+ <literal>INSERT</literal>, <literal>UPDATE</literal>, or
+ <literal>DELETE</literal>. Note that an
+ <command>INSERT</command> containing an <literal>ON
+ CONFLICT</literal> clause cannot be used on tables that have
+ either <literal>INSERT</literal> or <literal>UPDATE</literal>
+ rules. Consider using an updatable view instead.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the table or view the
+ rule applies to.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">condition</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Any <acronym>SQL</acronym> conditional expression (returning
+ <type>boolean</type>). The condition expression cannot refer
+ to any tables except <literal>NEW</literal> and <literal>OLD</literal>, and
+ cannot contain aggregate functions.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>INSTEAD</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para><literal>INSTEAD</literal> indicates that the commands should be
+ executed <emphasis>instead of</emphasis> the original command.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>ALSO</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para><literal>ALSO</literal> indicates that the commands should be
+ executed <emphasis>in addition to</emphasis> the original
+ command.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If neither <literal>ALSO</literal> nor
+ <literal>INSTEAD</literal> is specified, <literal>ALSO</literal>
+ is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">command</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The command or commands that make up the rule action. Valid
+ commands are <command>SELECT</command>,
+ <command>INSERT</command>, <command>UPDATE</command>,
+ <command>DELETE</command>, or <command>NOTIFY</command>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ Within <replaceable class="parameter">condition</replaceable> and
+ <replaceable class="parameter">command</replaceable>, the special
+ table names <literal>NEW</literal> and <literal>OLD</literal> can
+ be used to refer to values in the referenced table.
+ <literal>NEW</literal> is valid in <literal>ON INSERT</literal> and
+ <literal>ON UPDATE</literal> rules to refer to the new row being
+ inserted or updated. <literal>OLD</literal> is valid in
+ <literal>ON UPDATE</literal> and <literal>ON DELETE</literal> rules
+ to refer to the existing row being updated or deleted.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ You must be the owner of a table to create or change rules for it.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In a rule for <literal>INSERT</literal>, <literal>UPDATE</literal>, or
+ <literal>DELETE</literal> on a view, you can add a <literal>RETURNING</literal>
+ clause that emits the view's columns. This clause will be used to compute
+ the outputs if the rule is triggered by an <command>INSERT RETURNING</command>,
+ <command>UPDATE RETURNING</command>, or <command>DELETE RETURNING</command> command
+ respectively. When the rule is triggered by a command without
+ <literal>RETURNING</literal>, the rule's <literal>RETURNING</literal> clause will be
+ ignored. The current implementation allows only unconditional
+ <literal>INSTEAD</literal> rules to contain <literal>RETURNING</literal>; furthermore
+ there can be at most one <literal>RETURNING</literal> clause among all the rules
+ for the same event. (This ensures that there is only one candidate
+ <literal>RETURNING</literal> clause to be used to compute the results.)
+ <literal>RETURNING</literal> queries on the view will be rejected if
+ there is no <literal>RETURNING</literal> clause in any available rule.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ It is very important to take care to avoid circular rules. For
+ example, though each of the following two rule definitions are
+ accepted by <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>, the
+ <command>SELECT</command> command would cause
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> to report an error because
+ of recursive expansion of a rule:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE RULE "_RETURN" AS
+ ON SELECT TO t1
+ DO INSTEAD
+ SELECT * FROM t2;
+
+CREATE RULE "_RETURN" AS
+ ON SELECT TO t2
+ DO INSTEAD
+ SELECT * FROM t1;
+
+SELECT * FROM t1;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Presently, if a rule action contains a <command>NOTIFY</command>
+ command, the <command>NOTIFY</command> command will be executed
+ unconditionally, that is, the <command>NOTIFY</command> will be
+ issued even if there are not any rows that the rule should apply
+ to. For example, in:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE RULE notify_me AS ON UPDATE TO mytable DO ALSO NOTIFY mytable;
+
+UPDATE mytable SET name = 'foo' WHERE id = 42;
+</programlisting>
+ one <command>NOTIFY</command> event will be sent during the
+ <command>UPDATE</command>, whether or not there are any rows that
+ match the condition <literal>id = 42</literal>. This is an
+ implementation restriction that might be fixed in future releases.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE RULE</command> is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> language extension, as is the
+ entire query rewrite system.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterrule"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droprule"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_schema.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_schema.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3c2dddb
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_schema.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,228 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_schema.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createschema">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createschema">
+ <primary>CREATE SCHEMA</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE SCHEMA</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE SCHEMA</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new schema</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE SCHEMA <replaceable class="parameter">schema_name</replaceable> [ AUTHORIZATION <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">schema_element</replaceable> [ ... ] ]
+CREATE SCHEMA AUTHORIZATION <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [ <replaceable class="parameter">schema_element</replaceable> [ ... ] ]
+CREATE SCHEMA IF NOT EXISTS <replaceable class="parameter">schema_name</replaceable> [ AUTHORIZATION <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ]
+CREATE SCHEMA IF NOT EXISTS AUTHORIZATION <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable>
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> can be:</phrase>
+
+ <replaceable class="parameter">user_name</replaceable>
+ | CURRENT_ROLE
+ | CURRENT_USER
+ | SESSION_USER
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE SCHEMA</command> enters a new schema
+ into the current database.
+ The schema name must be distinct from the name of any existing schema
+ in the current database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A schema is essentially a namespace:
+ it contains named objects (tables, data types, functions, and operators)
+ whose names can duplicate those of other objects existing in other
+ schemas. Named objects are accessed either by <quote>qualifying</quote>
+ their names with the schema name as a prefix, or by setting a search
+ path that includes the desired schema(s). A <literal>CREATE</literal> command
+ specifying an unqualified object name creates the object
+ in the current schema (the one at the front of the search path,
+ which can be determined with the function <function>current_schema</function>).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Optionally, <command>CREATE SCHEMA</command> can include subcommands
+ to create objects within the new schema. The subcommands are treated
+ essentially the same as separate commands issued after creating the
+ schema, except that if the <literal>AUTHORIZATION</literal> clause is used,
+ all the created objects will be owned by that user.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">schema_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a schema to be created. If this is omitted, the
+ <replaceable class="parameter">user_name</replaceable>
+ is used as the schema name. The name cannot
+ begin with <literal>pg_</literal>, as such names
+ are reserved for system schemas.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">user_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The role name of the user who will own the new schema. If omitted,
+ defaults to the user executing the command. To create a schema
+ owned by another role, you must be a direct or indirect member of
+ that role, or be a superuser.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">schema_element</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An SQL statement defining an object to be created within the
+ schema. Currently, only <command>CREATE
+ TABLE</command>, <command>CREATE VIEW</command>, <command>CREATE
+ INDEX</command>, <command>CREATE SEQUENCE</command>, <command>CREATE
+ TRIGGER</command> and <command>GRANT</command> are accepted as clauses
+ within <command>CREATE SCHEMA</command>. Other kinds of objects may
+ be created in separate commands after the schema is created.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF NOT EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do nothing (except issuing a notice) if a schema with the same name
+ already exists. <replaceable class="parameter">schema_element</replaceable>
+ subcommands cannot be included when this option is used.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To create a schema, the invoking user must have the
+ <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege for the current database.
+ (Of course, superusers bypass this check.)
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a schema:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE SCHEMA myschema;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a schema for user <literal>joe</literal>; the schema will also be
+ named <literal>joe</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE SCHEMA AUTHORIZATION joe;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a schema named <literal>test</literal> that will be owned by user
+ <literal>joe</literal>, unless there already is a schema named <literal>test</literal>.
+ (It does not matter whether <literal>joe</literal> owns the pre-existing schema.)
+<programlisting>
+CREATE SCHEMA IF NOT EXISTS test AUTHORIZATION joe;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a schema and create a table and view within it:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE SCHEMA hollywood
+ CREATE TABLE films (title text, release date, awards text[])
+ CREATE VIEW winners AS
+ SELECT title, release FROM films WHERE awards IS NOT NULL;
+</programlisting>
+ Notice that the individual subcommands do not end with semicolons.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The following is an equivalent way of accomplishing the same result:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE SCHEMA hollywood;
+CREATE TABLE hollywood.films (title text, release date, awards text[]);
+CREATE VIEW hollywood.winners AS
+ SELECT title, release FROM hollywood.films WHERE awards IS NOT NULL;
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The SQL standard allows a <literal>DEFAULT CHARACTER SET</literal> clause
+ in <command>CREATE SCHEMA</command>, as well as more subcommand
+ types than are presently accepted by
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The SQL standard specifies that the subcommands in <command>CREATE
+ SCHEMA</command> can appear in any order. The present
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> implementation does not
+ handle all cases of forward references in subcommands; it might
+ sometimes be necessary to reorder the subcommands in order to avoid
+ forward references.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ According to the SQL standard, the owner of a schema always owns
+ all objects within it. <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ allows schemas to contain objects owned by users other than the
+ schema owner. This can happen only if the schema owner grants the
+ <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on their schema to someone else, or a
+ superuser chooses to create objects in it.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>IF NOT EXISTS</literal> option is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterschema"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropschema"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_sequence.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_sequence.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e408580
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_sequence.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,391 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_sequence.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createsequence">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createsequence">
+ <primary>CREATE SEQUENCE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE SEQUENCE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE SEQUENCE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new sequence generator</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE [ TEMPORARY | TEMP ] SEQUENCE [ IF NOT EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ [ AS <replaceable class="parameter">data_type</replaceable> ]
+ [ INCREMENT [ BY ] <replaceable class="parameter">increment</replaceable> ]
+ [ MINVALUE <replaceable class="parameter">minvalue</replaceable> | NO MINVALUE ] [ MAXVALUE <replaceable class="parameter">maxvalue</replaceable> | NO MAXVALUE ]
+ [ START [ WITH ] <replaceable class="parameter">start</replaceable> ] [ CACHE <replaceable class="parameter">cache</replaceable> ] [ [ NO ] CYCLE ]
+ [ OWNED BY { <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable>.<replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> | NONE } ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE SEQUENCE</command> creates a new sequence number
+ generator. This involves creating and initializing a new special
+ single-row table with the name <replaceable
+ class="parameter">name</replaceable>. The generator will be
+ owned by the user issuing the command.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a schema name is given then the sequence is created in the
+ specified schema. Otherwise it is created in the current schema.
+ Temporary sequences exist in a special schema, so a schema name cannot be
+ given when creating a temporary sequence.
+ The sequence name must be distinct from the name of any other sequence,
+ table, index, view, or foreign table in the same schema.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ After a sequence is created, you use the functions
+ <function>nextval</function>,
+ <function>currval</function>, and
+ <function>setval</function>
+ to operate on the sequence. These functions are documented in
+ <xref linkend="functions-sequence"/>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Although you cannot update a sequence directly, you can use a query like:
+
+<programlisting>
+SELECT * FROM <replaceable>name</replaceable>;
+</programlisting>
+
+ to examine the parameters and current state of a sequence. In particular,
+ the <literal>last_value</literal> field of the sequence shows the last value
+ allocated by any session. (Of course, this value might be obsolete
+ by the time it's printed, if other sessions are actively doing
+ <function>nextval</function> calls.)
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>TEMPORARY</literal> or <literal>TEMP</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If specified, the sequence object is created only for this
+ session, and is automatically dropped on session exit. Existing
+ permanent sequences with the same name are not visible (in this
+ session) while the temporary sequence exists, unless they are
+ referenced with schema-qualified names.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF NOT EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if a relation with the same name already exists.
+ A notice is issued in this case. Note that there is no guarantee that
+ the existing relation is anything like the sequence that would have
+ been created &mdash; it might not even be a sequence.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the sequence to be created.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">data_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The optional
+ clause <literal>AS <replaceable class="parameter">data_type</replaceable></literal>
+ specifies the data type of the sequence. Valid types are
+ <literal>smallint</literal>, <literal>integer</literal>,
+ and <literal>bigint</literal>. <literal>bigint</literal> is the
+ default. The data type determines the default minimum and maximum
+ values of the sequence.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">increment</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The optional clause <literal>INCREMENT BY <replaceable
+ class="parameter">increment</replaceable></literal> specifies
+ which value is added to the current sequence value to create a
+ new value. A positive value will make an ascending sequence, a
+ negative one a descending sequence. The default value is 1.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">minvalue</replaceable></term>
+ <term><literal>NO MINVALUE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The optional clause <literal>MINVALUE <replaceable
+ class="parameter">minvalue</replaceable></literal> determines
+ the minimum value a sequence can generate. If this clause is not
+ supplied or <option>NO MINVALUE</option> is specified, then
+ defaults will be used. The default for an ascending sequence is 1. The
+ default for a descending sequence is the minimum value of the data type.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">maxvalue</replaceable></term>
+ <term><literal>NO MAXVALUE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The optional clause <literal>MAXVALUE <replaceable
+ class="parameter">maxvalue</replaceable></literal> determines
+ the maximum value for the sequence. If this clause is not
+ supplied or <option>NO MAXVALUE</option> is specified, then
+ default values will be used. The default for an ascending sequence is
+ the maximum value of the data type. The default for a descending
+ sequence is -1.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">start</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The optional clause <literal>START WITH <replaceable
+ class="parameter">start</replaceable> </literal> allows the
+ sequence to begin anywhere. The default starting value is
+ <replaceable class="parameter">minvalue</replaceable> for
+ ascending sequences and <replaceable
+ class="parameter">maxvalue</replaceable> for descending ones.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">cache</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The optional clause <literal>CACHE <replaceable
+ class="parameter">cache</replaceable></literal> specifies how
+ many sequence numbers are to be preallocated and stored in
+ memory for faster access. The minimum value is 1 (only one value
+ can be generated at a time, i.e., no cache), and this is also the
+ default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CYCLE</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>NO CYCLE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>CYCLE</literal> option allows the sequence to wrap
+ around when the <replaceable
+ class="parameter">maxvalue</replaceable> or <replaceable
+ class="parameter">minvalue</replaceable> has been reached by an
+ ascending or descending sequence respectively. If the limit is
+ reached, the next number generated will be the <replaceable
+ class="parameter">minvalue</replaceable> or <replaceable
+ class="parameter">maxvalue</replaceable>, respectively.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If <literal>NO CYCLE</literal> is specified, any calls to
+ <function>nextval</function> after the sequence has reached its
+ maximum value will return an error. If neither
+ <literal>CYCLE</literal> or <literal>NO CYCLE</literal> are
+ specified, <literal>NO CYCLE</literal> is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>OWNED BY</literal> <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable>.<replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable></term>
+ <term><literal>OWNED BY NONE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>OWNED BY</literal> option causes the sequence to be
+ associated with a specific table column, such that if that column
+ (or its whole table) is dropped, the sequence will be automatically
+ dropped as well. The specified table must have the same owner and be in
+ the same schema as the sequence.
+ <literal>OWNED BY NONE</literal>, the default, specifies that there
+ is no such association.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Use <command>DROP SEQUENCE</command> to remove a sequence.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Sequences are based on <type>bigint</type> arithmetic, so the range
+ cannot exceed the range of an eight-byte integer
+ (-9223372036854775808 to 9223372036854775807).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Because <function>nextval</function> and <function>setval</function> calls are never
+ rolled back, sequence objects cannot be used if <quote>gapless</quote>
+ assignment of sequence numbers is needed. It is possible to build
+ gapless assignment by using exclusive locking of a table containing a
+ counter; but this solution is much more expensive than sequence
+ objects, especially if many transactions need sequence numbers
+ concurrently.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Unexpected results might be obtained if a <replaceable
+ class="parameter">cache</replaceable> setting greater than one is
+ used for a sequence object that will be used concurrently by
+ multiple sessions. Each session will allocate and cache successive
+ sequence values during one access to the sequence object and
+ increase the sequence object's <literal>last_value</literal> accordingly.
+ Then, the next <replaceable class="parameter">cache</replaceable>-1
+ uses of <function>nextval</function> within that session simply return the
+ preallocated values without touching the sequence object. So, any
+ numbers allocated but not used within a session will be lost when
+ that session ends, resulting in <quote>holes</quote> in the
+ sequence.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Furthermore, although multiple sessions are guaranteed to allocate
+ distinct sequence values, the values might be generated out of
+ sequence when all the sessions are considered. For example, with
+ a <replaceable class="parameter">cache</replaceable> setting of 10,
+ session A might reserve values 1..10 and return
+ <function>nextval</function>=1, then session B might reserve values
+ 11..20 and return <function>nextval</function>=11 before session A
+ has generated <literal>nextval</literal>=2. Thus, with a
+ <replaceable class="parameter">cache</replaceable> setting of one
+ it is safe to assume that <function>nextval</function> values are generated
+ sequentially; with a <replaceable
+ class="parameter">cache</replaceable> setting greater than one you
+ should only assume that the <function>nextval</function> values are all
+ distinct, not that they are generated purely sequentially. Also,
+ <literal>last_value</literal> will reflect the latest value reserved by
+ any session, whether or not it has yet been returned by
+ <function>nextval</function>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Another consideration is that a <function>setval</function> executed on
+ such a sequence will not be noticed by other sessions until they
+ have used up any preallocated values they have cached.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Create an ascending sequence called <literal>serial</literal>, starting at 101:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE SEQUENCE serial START 101;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Select the next number from this sequence:
+<programlisting>
+SELECT nextval('serial');
+
+ nextval
+---------
+ 101
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Select the next number from this sequence:
+<programlisting>
+SELECT nextval('serial');
+
+ nextval
+---------
+ 102
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Use this sequence in an <command>INSERT</command> command:
+<programlisting>
+INSERT INTO distributors VALUES (nextval('serial'), 'nothing');
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Update the sequence value after a <command>COPY FROM</command>:
+<programlisting>
+BEGIN;
+COPY distributors FROM 'input_file';
+SELECT setval('serial', max(id)) FROM distributors;
+END;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE SEQUENCE</command> conforms to the <acronym>SQL</acronym>
+ standard, with the following exceptions:
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Obtaining the next value is done using the <function>nextval()</function>
+ function instead of the standard's <command>NEXT VALUE FOR</command>
+ expression.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>OWNED BY</literal> clause is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altersequence"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropsequence"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_server.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_server.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..af0a7a0
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_server.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,167 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_server.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createserver">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createserver">
+ <primary>CREATE SERVER</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE SERVER</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE SERVER</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new foreign server</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE SERVER [ IF NOT EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">server_name</replaceable> [ TYPE '<replaceable class="parameter">server_type</replaceable>' ] [ VERSION '<replaceable class="parameter">server_version</replaceable>' ]
+ FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER <replaceable class="parameter">fdw_name</replaceable>
+ [ OPTIONS ( <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> '<replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>' [, ... ] ) ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE SERVER</command> defines a new foreign server. The
+ user who defines the server becomes its owner.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A foreign server typically encapsulates connection information that
+ a foreign-data wrapper uses to access an external data resource.
+ Additional user-specific connection information may be specified by
+ means of user mappings.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The server name must be unique within the database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Creating a server requires <literal>USAGE</literal> privilege on the
+ foreign-data wrapper being used.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF NOT EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if a server with the same name already exists.
+ A notice is issued in this case. Note that there is no guarantee that
+ the existing server is anything like the one that would have been
+ created.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">server_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the foreign server to be created.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">server_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Optional server type, potentially useful to foreign-data wrappers.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">server_version</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Optional server version, potentially useful to foreign-data wrappers.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">fdw_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the foreign-data wrapper that manages the server.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>OPTIONS ( <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> '<replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>' [, ... ] )</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This clause specifies the options for the server. The options
+ typically define the connection details of the server, but the
+ actual names and values are dependent on the server's
+ foreign-data wrapper.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ When using the <xref linkend="dblink"/> module,
+ a foreign server's name can be used
+ as an argument of the <xref linkend="contrib-dblink-connect"/>
+ function to indicate the connection parameters. It is necessary to have
+ the <literal>USAGE</literal> privilege on the foreign server to be
+ able to use it in this way.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a server <literal>myserver</literal> that uses the
+ foreign-data wrapper <literal>postgres_fdw</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE SERVER myserver FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER postgres_fdw OPTIONS (host 'foo', dbname 'foodb', port '5432');
+</programlisting>
+ See <xref linkend="postgres-fdw"/> for more details.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE SERVER</command> conforms to ISO/IEC 9075-9 (SQL/MED).
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterserver"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropserver"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createforeigndatawrapper"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createforeigntable"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createusermapping"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_statistics.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_statistics.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9a8c904
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_statistics.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,323 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_statistics.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createstatistics">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createstatistics">
+ <primary>CREATE STATISTICS</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE STATISTICS</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE STATISTICS</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define extended statistics</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE STATISTICS [ IF NOT EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">statistics_name</replaceable>
+ ON ( <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> )
+ FROM <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable>
+
+CREATE STATISTICS [ IF NOT EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">statistics_name</replaceable>
+ [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">statistics_kind</replaceable> [, ... ] ) ]
+ ON { <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> | ( <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> ) }, { <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> | ( <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> ) } [, ...]
+ FROM <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createstatistics-description">
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE STATISTICS</command> will create a new extended statistics
+ object tracking data about the specified table, foreign table or
+ materialized view. The statistics object will be created in the current
+ database and will be owned by the user issuing the command.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>CREATE STATISTICS</command> command has two basic forms. The
+ first form allows univariate statistics for a single expression to be
+ collected, providing benefits similar to an expression index without the
+ overhead of index maintenance. This form does not allow the statistics
+ kind to be specified, since the various statistics kinds refer only to
+ multivariate statistics. The second form of the command allows
+ multivariate statistics on multiple columns and/or expressions to be
+ collected, optionally specifying which statistics kinds to include. This
+ form will also automatically cause univariate statistics to be collected on
+ any expressions included in the list.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a schema name is given (for example, <literal>CREATE STATISTICS
+ myschema.mystat ...</literal>) then the statistics object is created in the
+ specified schema. Otherwise it is created in the current schema.
+ The name of the statistics object must be distinct from the name of any
+ other statistics object in the same schema.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF NOT EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if a statistics object with the same name already
+ exists. A notice is issued in this case. Note that only the name of
+ the statistics object is considered here, not the details of its
+ definition.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">statistics_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the statistics object to be
+ created.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">statistics_kind</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A multivariate statistics kind to be computed in this statistics object.
+ Currently supported kinds are
+ <literal>ndistinct</literal>, which enables n-distinct statistics,
+ <literal>dependencies</literal>, which enables functional
+ dependency statistics, and <literal>mcv</literal> which enables
+ most-common values lists.
+ If this clause is omitted, all supported statistics kinds are
+ included in the statistics object. Univariate expression statistics are
+ built automatically if the statistics definition includes any complex
+ expressions rather than just simple column references.
+ For more information, see <xref linkend="planner-stats-extended"/>
+ and <xref linkend="multivariate-statistics-examples"/>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a table column to be covered by the computed statistics.
+ This is only allowed when building multivariate statistics. At least
+ two column names or expressions must be specified, and their order is
+ not significant.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An expression to be covered by the computed statistics. This may be
+ used to build univariate statistics on a single expression, or as part
+ of a list of multiple column names and/or expressions to build
+ multivariate statistics. In the latter case, separate univariate
+ statistics are built automatically for each expression in the list.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the table containing the
+ column(s) the statistics are computed on.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ You must be the owner of a table to create a statistics object
+ reading it. Once created, however, the ownership of the statistics
+ object is independent of the underlying table(s).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Expression statistics are per-expression and are similar to creating an
+ index on the expression, except that they avoid the overhead of index
+ maintenance. Expression statistics are built automatically for each
+ expression in the statistics object definition.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createstatistics-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Create table <structname>t1</structname> with two functionally dependent columns, i.e.,
+ knowledge of a value in the first column is sufficient for determining the
+ value in the other column. Then functional dependency statistics are built
+ on those columns:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE t1 (
+ a int,
+ b int
+);
+
+INSERT INTO t1 SELECT i/100, i/500
+ FROM generate_series(1,1000000) s(i);
+
+ANALYZE t1;
+
+-- the number of matching rows will be drastically underestimated:
+EXPLAIN ANALYZE SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE (a = 1) AND (b = 0);
+
+CREATE STATISTICS s1 (dependencies) ON a, b FROM t1;
+
+ANALYZE t1;
+
+-- now the row count estimate is more accurate:
+EXPLAIN ANALYZE SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE (a = 1) AND (b = 0);
+</programlisting>
+
+ Without functional-dependency statistics, the planner would assume
+ that the two <literal>WHERE</literal> conditions are independent, and would
+ multiply their selectivities together to arrive at a much-too-small
+ row count estimate.
+ With such statistics, the planner recognizes that the <literal>WHERE</literal>
+ conditions are redundant and does not underestimate the row count.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create table <structname>t2</structname> with two perfectly correlated columns
+ (containing identical data), and an MCV list on those columns:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE t2 (
+ a int,
+ b int
+);
+
+INSERT INTO t2 SELECT mod(i,100), mod(i,100)
+ FROM generate_series(1,1000000) s(i);
+
+CREATE STATISTICS s2 (mcv) ON a, b FROM t2;
+
+ANALYZE t2;
+
+-- valid combination (found in MCV)
+EXPLAIN ANALYZE SELECT * FROM t2 WHERE (a = 1) AND (b = 1);
+
+-- invalid combination (not found in MCV)
+EXPLAIN ANALYZE SELECT * FROM t2 WHERE (a = 1) AND (b = 2);
+</programlisting>
+
+ The MCV list gives the planner more detailed information about the
+ specific values that commonly appear in the table, as well as an upper
+ bound on the selectivities of combinations of values that do not appear
+ in the table, allowing it to generate better estimates in both cases.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create table <structname>t3</structname> with a single timestamp column,
+ and run queries using expressions on that column. Without extended
+ statistics, the planner has no information about the data distribution for
+ the expressions, and uses default estimates. The planner also does not
+ realize that the value of the date truncated to the month is fully
+ determined by the value of the date truncated to the day. Then expression
+ and ndistinct statistics are built on those two expressions:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE t3 (
+ a timestamp
+);
+
+INSERT INTO t3 SELECT i FROM generate_series('2020-01-01'::timestamp,
+ '2020-12-31'::timestamp,
+ '1 minute'::interval) s(i);
+
+ANALYZE t3;
+
+-- the number of matching rows will be drastically underestimated:
+EXPLAIN ANALYZE SELECT * FROM t3
+ WHERE date_trunc('month', a) = '2020-01-01'::timestamp;
+
+EXPLAIN ANALYZE SELECT * FROM t3
+ WHERE date_trunc('day', a) BETWEEN '2020-01-01'::timestamp
+ AND '2020-06-30'::timestamp;
+
+EXPLAIN ANALYZE SELECT date_trunc('month', a), date_trunc('day', a)
+ FROM t3 GROUP BY 1, 2;
+
+-- build ndistinct statistics on the pair of expressions (per-expression
+-- statistics are built automatically)
+CREATE STATISTICS s3 (ndistinct) ON date_trunc('month', a), date_trunc('day', a) FROM t3;
+
+ANALYZE t3;
+
+-- now the row count estimates are more accurate:
+EXPLAIN ANALYZE SELECT * FROM t3
+ WHERE date_trunc('month', a) = '2020-01-01'::timestamp;
+
+EXPLAIN ANALYZE SELECT * FROM t3
+ WHERE date_trunc('day', a) BETWEEN '2020-01-01'::timestamp
+ AND '2020-06-30'::timestamp;
+
+EXPLAIN ANALYZE SELECT date_trunc('month', a), date_trunc('day', a)
+ FROM t3 GROUP BY 1, 2;
+</programlisting>
+
+ Without expression and ndistinct statistics, the planner has no information
+ about the number of distinct values for the expressions, and has to rely
+ on default estimates. The equality and range conditions are assumed to have
+ 0.5% selectivity, and the number of distinct values in the expression is
+ assumed to be the same as for the column (i.e. unique). This results in a
+ significant underestimate of the row count in the first two queries. Moreover,
+ the planner has no information about the relationship between the expressions,
+ so it assumes the two <literal>WHERE</literal> and <literal>GROUP BY</literal>
+ conditions are independent, and multiplies their selectivities together to
+ arrive at a severe overestimate of the group count in the aggregate query.
+ This is further exacerbated by the lack of accurate statistics for the
+ expressions, forcing the planner to use a default ndistinct estimate for the
+ expression derived from ndistinct for the column. With such statistics, the
+ planner recognizes that the conditions are correlated, and arrives at much
+ more accurate estimates.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>CREATE STATISTICS</command> command in the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterstatistics"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropstatistics"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_subscription.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_subscription.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e812bee
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_subscription.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,322 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_subscription.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createsubscription">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createsubscription">
+ <primary>CREATE SUBSCRIPTION</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE SUBSCRIPTION</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE SUBSCRIPTION</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new subscription</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE SUBSCRIPTION <replaceable class="parameter">subscription_name</replaceable>
+ CONNECTION '<replaceable class="parameter">conninfo</replaceable>'
+ PUBLICATION <replaceable class="parameter">publication_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ [ WITH ( <replaceable class="parameter">subscription_parameter</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>] [, ... ] ) ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE SUBSCRIPTION</command> adds a new subscription for the
+ current database. The subscription name must be distinct from the name of
+ any existing subscription in the database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The subscription represents a replication connection to the publisher. As
+ such this command does not only add definitions in the local catalogs but
+ also creates a replication slot on the publisher.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A logical replication worker will be started to replicate data for the new
+ subscription at the commit of the transaction where this command is run.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Additional information about subscriptions and logical replication as a
+ whole is available at <xref linkend="logical-replication-subscription"/> and
+ <xref linkend="logical-replication"/>.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">subscription_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the new subscription.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CONNECTION '<replaceable class="parameter">conninfo</replaceable>'</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The connection string to the publisher. For details
+ see <xref linkend="libpq-connstring"/>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>PUBLICATION <replaceable class="parameter">publication_name</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Names of the publications on the publisher to subscribe to.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>WITH ( <replaceable class="parameter">subscription_parameter</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>] [, ... ] )</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This clause specifies optional parameters for a subscription. The
+ following parameters are supported:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>copy_data</literal> (<type>boolean</type>)</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether the existing data in the publications that are
+ being subscribed to should be copied once the replication starts.
+ The default is <literal>true</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>create_slot</literal> (<type>boolean</type>)</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether the command should create the replication slot on
+ the publisher. The default is <literal>true</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>enabled</literal> (<type>boolean</type>)</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether the subscription should be actively replicating,
+ or whether it should be just setup but not started yet. The default
+ is <literal>true</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>slot_name</literal> (<type>string</type>)</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Name of the replication slot to use. The default behavior is to
+ use the name of the subscription for the slot name.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When <literal>slot_name</literal> is set to
+ <literal>NONE</literal>, there will be no replication slot
+ associated with the subscription. This can be used if the
+ replication slot will be created later manually. Such
+ subscriptions must also have both <literal>enabled</literal> and
+ <literal>create_slot</literal> set to <literal>false</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>synchronous_commit</literal> (<type>enum</type>)</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The value of this parameter overrides the
+ <xref linkend="guc-synchronous-commit"/> setting within this
+ subscription's apply worker processes. The default value
+ is <literal>off</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ It is safe to use <literal>off</literal> for logical replication:
+ If the subscriber loses transactions because of missing
+ synchronization, the data will be sent again from the publisher.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A different setting might be appropriate when doing synchronous
+ logical replication. The logical replication workers report the
+ positions of writes and flushes to the publisher, and when using
+ synchronous replication, the publisher will wait for the actual
+ flush. This means that setting
+ <literal>synchronous_commit</literal> for the subscriber to
+ <literal>off</literal> when the subscription is used for
+ synchronous replication might increase the latency for
+ <command>COMMIT</command> on the publisher. In this scenario, it
+ can be advantageous to set <literal>synchronous_commit</literal>
+ to <literal>local</literal> or higher.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>binary</literal> (<type>boolean</type>)</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether the subscription will request the publisher to
+ send the data in binary format (as opposed to text).
+ The default is <literal>false</literal>.
+ Even when this option is enabled, only data types that have
+ binary send and receive functions will be transferred in binary.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When doing cross-version replication, it could happen that the
+ publisher has a binary send function for some data type, but the
+ subscriber lacks a binary receive function for the type. In
+ such a case, data transfer will fail, and
+ the <literal>binary</literal> option cannot be used.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>connect</literal> (<type>boolean</type>)</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether the <command>CREATE SUBSCRIPTION</command>
+ should connect to the publisher at all. Setting this to
+ <literal>false</literal> will change default values of
+ <literal>enabled</literal>, <literal>create_slot</literal> and
+ <literal>copy_data</literal> to <literal>false</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ It is not allowed to combine <literal>connect</literal> set to
+ <literal>false</literal> and <literal>enabled</literal>,
+ <literal>create_slot</literal>, or <literal>copy_data</literal>
+ set to <literal>true</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Since no connection is made when this option is set
+ to <literal>false</literal>, the tables are not subscribed, and so
+ after you enable the subscription nothing will be replicated.
+ It is required to run
+ <literal>ALTER SUBSCRIPTION ... REFRESH PUBLICATION</literal> in order
+ for tables to be subscribed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>streaming</literal> (<type>boolean</type>)</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether streaming of in-progress transactions should
+ be enabled for this subscription. By default, all transactions
+ are fully decoded on the publisher, and only then sent to the
+ subscriber as a whole.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist></para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ See <xref linkend="logical-replication-security"/> for details on
+ how to configure access control between the subscription and the
+ publication instance.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When creating a replication slot (the default behavior), <command>CREATE
+ SUBSCRIPTION</command> cannot be executed inside a transaction block.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Creating a subscription that connects to the same database cluster (for
+ example, to replicate between databases in the same cluster or to replicate
+ within the same database) will only succeed if the replication slot is not
+ created as part of the same command. Otherwise, the <command>CREATE
+ SUBSCRIPTION</command> call will hang. To make this work, create the
+ replication slot separately (using the
+ function <function>pg_create_logical_replication_slot</function> with the
+ plugin name <literal>pgoutput</literal>) and create the subscription using
+ the parameter <literal>create_slot = false</literal>. This is an
+ implementation restriction that might be lifted in a future release.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a subscription to a remote server that replicates tables in
+ the publications <literal>mypublication</literal> and
+ <literal>insert_only</literal> and starts replicating immediately on
+ commit:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE SUBSCRIPTION mysub
+ CONNECTION 'host=192.168.1.50 port=5432 user=foo dbname=foodb'
+ PUBLICATION mypublication, insert_only;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a subscription to a remote server that replicates tables in
+ the <literal>insert_only</literal> publication and does not start replicating
+ until enabled at a later time.
+<programlisting>
+CREATE SUBSCRIPTION mysub
+ CONNECTION 'host=192.168.1.50 port=5432 user=foo dbname=foodb'
+ PUBLICATION insert_only
+ WITH (enabled = false);
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE SUBSCRIPTION</command> is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altersubscription"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropsubscription"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createpublication"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterpublication"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_table.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_table.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..473a0a4
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_table.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,2384 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_table.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createtable">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createtable">
+ <primary>CREATE TABLE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE TABLE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE TABLE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new table</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE [ [ GLOBAL | LOCAL ] { TEMPORARY | TEMP } | UNLOGGED ] TABLE [ IF NOT EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> ( [
+ { <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> <replaceable class="parameter">data_type</replaceable> [ COMPRESSION <replaceable>compression_method</replaceable> ] [ COLLATE <replaceable>collation</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">column_constraint</replaceable> [ ... ] ]
+ | <replaceable>table_constraint</replaceable>
+ | LIKE <replaceable>source_table</replaceable> [ <replaceable>like_option</replaceable> ... ] }
+ [, ... ]
+] )
+[ INHERITS ( <replaceable>parent_table</replaceable> [, ... ] ) ]
+[ PARTITION BY { RANGE | LIST | HASH } ( { <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> | ( <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> ) } [ COLLATE <replaceable class="parameter">collation</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">opclass</replaceable> ] [, ... ] ) ]
+[ USING <replaceable class="parameter">method</replaceable> ]
+[ WITH ( <replaceable class="parameter">storage_parameter</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>] [, ... ] ) | WITHOUT OIDS ]
+[ ON COMMIT { PRESERVE ROWS | DELETE ROWS | DROP } ]
+[ TABLESPACE <replaceable class="parameter">tablespace_name</replaceable> ]
+
+CREATE [ [ GLOBAL | LOCAL ] { TEMPORARY | TEMP } | UNLOGGED ] TABLE [ IF NOT EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable>
+ OF <replaceable class="parameter">type_name</replaceable> [ (
+ { <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [ WITH OPTIONS ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">column_constraint</replaceable> [ ... ] ]
+ | <replaceable>table_constraint</replaceable> }
+ [, ... ]
+) ]
+[ PARTITION BY { RANGE | LIST | HASH } ( { <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> | ( <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> ) } [ COLLATE <replaceable class="parameter">collation</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">opclass</replaceable> ] [, ... ] ) ]
+[ USING <replaceable class="parameter">method</replaceable> ]
+[ WITH ( <replaceable class="parameter">storage_parameter</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>] [, ... ] ) | WITHOUT OIDS ]
+[ ON COMMIT { PRESERVE ROWS | DELETE ROWS | DROP } ]
+[ TABLESPACE <replaceable class="parameter">tablespace_name</replaceable> ]
+
+CREATE [ [ GLOBAL | LOCAL ] { TEMPORARY | TEMP } | UNLOGGED ] TABLE [ IF NOT EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable>
+ PARTITION OF <replaceable class="parameter">parent_table</replaceable> [ (
+ { <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [ WITH OPTIONS ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">column_constraint</replaceable> [ ... ] ]
+ | <replaceable>table_constraint</replaceable> }
+ [, ... ]
+) ] { FOR VALUES <replaceable class="parameter">partition_bound_spec</replaceable> | DEFAULT }
+[ PARTITION BY { RANGE | LIST | HASH } ( { <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> | ( <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> ) } [ COLLATE <replaceable class="parameter">collation</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">opclass</replaceable> ] [, ... ] ) ]
+[ USING <replaceable class="parameter">method</replaceable> ]
+[ WITH ( <replaceable class="parameter">storage_parameter</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>] [, ... ] ) | WITHOUT OIDS ]
+[ ON COMMIT { PRESERVE ROWS | DELETE ROWS | DROP } ]
+[ TABLESPACE <replaceable class="parameter">tablespace_name</replaceable> ]
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">column_constraint</replaceable> is:</phrase>
+
+[ CONSTRAINT <replaceable class="parameter">constraint_name</replaceable> ]
+{ NOT NULL |
+ NULL |
+ CHECK ( <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> ) [ NO INHERIT ] |
+ DEFAULT <replaceable>default_expr</replaceable> |
+ GENERATED ALWAYS AS ( <replaceable>generation_expr</replaceable> ) STORED |
+ GENERATED { ALWAYS | BY DEFAULT } AS IDENTITY [ ( <replaceable>sequence_options</replaceable> ) ] |
+ UNIQUE <replaceable class="parameter">index_parameters</replaceable> |
+ PRIMARY KEY <replaceable class="parameter">index_parameters</replaceable> |
+ REFERENCES <replaceable class="parameter">reftable</replaceable> [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">refcolumn</replaceable> ) ] [ MATCH FULL | MATCH PARTIAL | MATCH SIMPLE ]
+ [ ON DELETE <replaceable class="parameter">referential_action</replaceable> ] [ ON UPDATE <replaceable class="parameter">referential_action</replaceable> ] }
+[ DEFERRABLE | NOT DEFERRABLE ] [ INITIALLY DEFERRED | INITIALLY IMMEDIATE ]
+
+<phrase>and <replaceable class="parameter">table_constraint</replaceable> is:</phrase>
+
+[ CONSTRAINT <replaceable class="parameter">constraint_name</replaceable> ]
+{ CHECK ( <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> ) [ NO INHERIT ] |
+ UNIQUE ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ... ] ) <replaceable class="parameter">index_parameters</replaceable> |
+ PRIMARY KEY ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ... ] ) <replaceable class="parameter">index_parameters</replaceable> |
+ EXCLUDE [ USING <replaceable class="parameter">index_method</replaceable> ] ( <replaceable class="parameter">exclude_element</replaceable> WITH <replaceable class="parameter">operator</replaceable> [, ... ] ) <replaceable class="parameter">index_parameters</replaceable> [ WHERE ( <replaceable class="parameter">predicate</replaceable> ) ] |
+ FOREIGN KEY ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ... ] ) REFERENCES <replaceable class="parameter">reftable</replaceable> [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">refcolumn</replaceable> [, ... ] ) ]
+ [ MATCH FULL | MATCH PARTIAL | MATCH SIMPLE ] [ ON DELETE <replaceable
+class="parameter">referential_action</replaceable> ] [ ON UPDATE <replaceable class="parameter">referential_action</replaceable> ] }
+[ DEFERRABLE | NOT DEFERRABLE ] [ INITIALLY DEFERRED | INITIALLY IMMEDIATE ]
+
+<phrase>and <replaceable class="parameter">like_option</replaceable> is:</phrase>
+
+{ INCLUDING | EXCLUDING } { COMMENTS | COMPRESSION | CONSTRAINTS | DEFAULTS | GENERATED | IDENTITY | INDEXES | STATISTICS | STORAGE | ALL }
+
+<phrase>and <replaceable class="parameter">partition_bound_spec</replaceable> is:</phrase>
+
+IN ( <replaceable class="parameter">partition_bound_expr</replaceable> [, ...] ) |
+FROM ( { <replaceable class="parameter">partition_bound_expr</replaceable> | MINVALUE | MAXVALUE } [, ...] )
+ TO ( { <replaceable class="parameter">partition_bound_expr</replaceable> | MINVALUE | MAXVALUE } [, ...] ) |
+WITH ( MODULUS <replaceable class="parameter">numeric_literal</replaceable>, REMAINDER <replaceable class="parameter">numeric_literal</replaceable> )
+
+<phrase><replaceable class="parameter">index_parameters</replaceable> in <literal>UNIQUE</literal>, <literal>PRIMARY KEY</literal>, and <literal>EXCLUDE</literal> constraints are:</phrase>
+
+[ INCLUDE ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ... ] ) ]
+[ WITH ( <replaceable class="parameter">storage_parameter</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>] [, ... ] ) ]
+[ USING INDEX TABLESPACE <replaceable class="parameter">tablespace_name</replaceable> ]
+
+<phrase><replaceable class="parameter">exclude_element</replaceable> in an <literal>EXCLUDE</literal> constraint is:</phrase>
+
+{ <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> | ( <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> ) } [ <replaceable class="parameter">opclass</replaceable> ] [ ASC | DESC ] [ NULLS { FIRST | LAST } ]
+</synopsis>
+
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createtable-description">
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE TABLE</command> will create a new, initially empty table
+ in the current database. The table will be owned by the user issuing the
+ command.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a schema name is given (for example, <literal>CREATE TABLE
+ myschema.mytable ...</literal>) then the table is created in the specified
+ schema. Otherwise it is created in the current schema. Temporary
+ tables exist in a special schema, so a schema name cannot be given
+ when creating a temporary table. The name of the table must be
+ distinct from the name of any other table, sequence, index, view,
+ or foreign table in the same schema.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE TABLE</command> also automatically creates a data
+ type that represents the composite type corresponding
+ to one row of the table. Therefore, tables cannot have the same
+ name as any existing data type in the same schema.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The optional constraint clauses specify constraints (tests) that
+ new or updated rows must satisfy for an insert or update operation
+ to succeed. A constraint is an SQL object that helps define the
+ set of valid values in the table in various ways.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ There are two ways to define constraints: table constraints and
+ column constraints. A column constraint is defined as part of a
+ column definition. A table constraint definition is not tied to a
+ particular column, and it can encompass more than one column.
+ Every column constraint can also be written as a table constraint;
+ a column constraint is only a notational convenience for use when the
+ constraint only affects one column.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To be able to create a table, you must have <literal>USAGE</literal>
+ privilege on all column types or the type in the <literal>OF</literal>
+ clause, respectively.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry id="sql-createtable-temporary">
+ <term><literal>TEMPORARY</literal> or <literal>TEMP</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If specified, the table is created as a temporary table.
+ Temporary tables are automatically dropped at the end of a
+ session, or optionally at the end of the current transaction
+ (see <literal>ON COMMIT</literal> below). The default
+ search_path includes the temporary schema first and so identically
+ named existing permanent tables are not chosen for new plans
+ while the temporary table exists, unless they are referenced
+ with schema-qualified names. Any indexes created on a temporary
+ table are automatically temporary as well.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <link linkend="autovacuum">autovacuum daemon</link> cannot
+ access and therefore cannot vacuum or analyze temporary tables.
+ For this reason, appropriate vacuum and analyze operations should be
+ performed via session SQL commands. For example, if a temporary
+ table is going to be used in complex queries, it is wise to run
+ <command>ANALYZE</command> on the temporary table after it is populated.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Optionally, <literal>GLOBAL</literal> or <literal>LOCAL</literal>
+ can be written before <literal>TEMPORARY</literal> or <literal>TEMP</literal>.
+ This presently makes no difference in <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ and is deprecated; see
+ <xref linkend="sql-createtable-compatibility"/> below.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="sql-createtable-unlogged">
+ <term><literal>UNLOGGED</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If specified, the table is created as an unlogged table. Data written
+ to unlogged tables is not written to the write-ahead log (see <xref
+ linkend="wal"/>), which makes them considerably faster than ordinary
+ tables. However, they are not crash-safe: an unlogged table is
+ automatically truncated after a crash or unclean shutdown. The contents
+ of an unlogged table are also not replicated to standby servers.
+ Any indexes created on an unlogged table are automatically unlogged as
+ well.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF NOT EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if a relation with the same name already exists.
+ A notice is issued in this case. Note that there is no guarantee that
+ the existing relation is anything like the one that would have been
+ created.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the table to be created.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>OF <replaceable class="parameter">type_name</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Creates a <firstterm>typed table</firstterm>, which takes its
+ structure from the specified composite type (name optionally
+ schema-qualified). A typed table is tied to its type; for
+ example the table will be dropped if the type is dropped
+ (with <literal>DROP TYPE ... CASCADE</literal>).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When a typed table is created, then the data types of the
+ columns are determined by the underlying composite type and are
+ not specified by the <literal>CREATE TABLE</literal> command.
+ But the <literal>CREATE TABLE</literal> command can add defaults
+ and constraints to the table and can specify storage parameters.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a column to be created in the new table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">data_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The data type of the column. This can include array
+ specifiers. For more information on the data types supported by
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>, refer to <xref
+ linkend="datatype"/>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>COLLATE <replaceable>collation</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>COLLATE</literal> clause assigns a collation to
+ the column (which must be of a collatable data type).
+ If not specified, the column data type's default collation is used.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>COMPRESSION <replaceable class="parameter">compression_method</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>COMPRESSION</literal> clause sets the compression method
+ for the column. Compression is supported only for variable-width data
+ types, and is used only when the column's storage mode
+ is <literal>main</literal> or <literal>extended</literal>.
+ (See <xref linkend="sql-altertable"/> for information on
+ column storage modes.) Setting this property for a partitioned table
+ has no direct effect, because such tables have no storage of their own,
+ but the configured value will be inherited by newly-created partitions.
+ The supported compression methods are <literal>pglz</literal> and
+ <literal>lz4</literal>. (<literal>lz4</literal> is available only if
+ <option>--with-lz4</option> was used when building
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>.) In addition,
+ <replaceable class="parameter">compression_method</replaceable>
+ can be <literal>default</literal> to explicitly specify the default
+ behavior, which is to consult the
+ <xref linkend="guc-default-toast-compression"/> setting at the time of
+ data insertion to determine the method to use.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>INHERITS ( <replaceable>parent_table</replaceable> [, ... ] )</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The optional <literal>INHERITS</literal> clause specifies a list of
+ tables from which the new table automatically inherits all
+ columns. Parent tables can be plain tables or foreign tables.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Use of <literal>INHERITS</literal> creates a persistent relationship
+ between the new child table and its parent table(s). Schema
+ modifications to the parent(s) normally propagate to children
+ as well, and by default the data of the child table is included in
+ scans of the parent(s).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the same column name exists in more than one parent
+ table, an error is reported unless the data types of the columns
+ match in each of the parent tables. If there is no conflict,
+ then the duplicate columns are merged to form a single column in
+ the new table. If the column name list of the new table
+ contains a column name that is also inherited, the data type must
+ likewise match the inherited column(s), and the column
+ definitions are merged into one. If the
+ new table explicitly specifies a default value for the column,
+ this default overrides any defaults from inherited declarations
+ of the column. Otherwise, any parents that specify default
+ values for the column must all specify the same default, or an
+ error will be reported.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <literal>CHECK</literal> constraints are merged in essentially the same way as
+ columns: if multiple parent tables and/or the new table definition
+ contain identically-named <literal>CHECK</literal> constraints, these
+ constraints must all have the same check expression, or an error will be
+ reported. Constraints having the same name and expression will
+ be merged into one copy. A constraint marked <literal>NO INHERIT</literal> in a
+ parent will not be considered. Notice that an unnamed <literal>CHECK</literal>
+ constraint in the new table will never be merged, since a unique name
+ will always be chosen for it.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Column <literal>STORAGE</literal> settings are also copied from parent tables.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a column in the parent table is an identity column, that property is
+ not inherited. A column in the child table can be declared identity
+ column if desired.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>PARTITION BY { RANGE | LIST | HASH } ( { <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> | ( <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> ) } [ <replaceable class="parameter">opclass</replaceable> ] [, ...] ) </literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The optional <literal>PARTITION BY</literal> clause specifies a strategy
+ of partitioning the table. The table thus created is called a
+ <firstterm>partitioned</firstterm> table. The parenthesized list of
+ columns or expressions forms the <firstterm>partition key</firstterm>
+ for the table. When using range or hash partitioning, the partition key
+ can include multiple columns or expressions (up to 32, but this limit can
+ be altered when building <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>), but for
+ list partitioning, the partition key must consist of a single column or
+ expression.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Range and list partitioning require a btree operator class, while hash
+ partitioning requires a hash operator class. If no operator class is
+ specified explicitly, the default operator class of the appropriate
+ type will be used; if no default operator class exists, an error will
+ be raised. When hash partitioning is used, the operator class used
+ must implement support function 2 (see <xref linkend="xindex-support"/>
+ for details).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A partitioned table is divided into sub-tables (called partitions),
+ which are created using separate <literal>CREATE TABLE</literal> commands.
+ The partitioned table is itself empty. A data row inserted into the
+ table is routed to a partition based on the value of columns or
+ expressions in the partition key. If no existing partition matches
+ the values in the new row, an error will be reported.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Partitioned tables do not support <literal>EXCLUDE</literal> constraints;
+ however, you can define these constraints on individual partitions.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ See <xref linkend="ddl-partitioning"/> for more discussion on table
+ partitioning.
+ </para>
+
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="sql-createtable-partition">
+ <term><literal>PARTITION OF <replaceable class="parameter">parent_table</replaceable> { FOR VALUES <replaceable class="parameter">partition_bound_spec</replaceable> | DEFAULT }</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Creates the table as a <firstterm>partition</firstterm> of the specified
+ parent table. The table can be created either as a partition for specific
+ values using <literal>FOR VALUES</literal> or as a default partition
+ using <literal>DEFAULT</literal>. Any indexes, constraints and
+ user-defined row-level triggers that exist in the parent table are cloned
+ on the new partition.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <replaceable class="parameter">partition_bound_spec</replaceable>
+ must correspond to the partitioning method and partition key of the
+ parent table, and must not overlap with any existing partition of that
+ parent. The form with <literal>IN</literal> is used for list partitioning,
+ the form with <literal>FROM</literal> and <literal>TO</literal> is used
+ for range partitioning, and the form with <literal>WITH</literal> is used
+ for hash partitioning.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <replaceable class="parameter">partition_bound_expr</replaceable> is
+ any variable-free expression (subqueries, window functions, aggregate
+ functions, and set-returning functions are not allowed). Its data type
+ must match the data type of the corresponding partition key column.
+ The expression is evaluated once at table creation time, so it can
+ even contain volatile expressions such as
+ <literal><function>CURRENT_TIMESTAMP</function></literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When creating a list partition, <literal>NULL</literal> can be
+ specified to signify that the partition allows the partition key
+ column to be null. However, there cannot be more than one such
+ list partition for a given parent table. <literal>NULL</literal>
+ cannot be specified for range partitions.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When creating a range partition, the lower bound specified with
+ <literal>FROM</literal> is an inclusive bound, whereas the upper
+ bound specified with <literal>TO</literal> is an exclusive bound.
+ That is, the values specified in the <literal>FROM</literal> list
+ are valid values of the corresponding partition key columns for this
+ partition, whereas those in the <literal>TO</literal> list are
+ not. Note that this statement must be understood according to the
+ rules of row-wise comparison (<xref linkend="row-wise-comparison"/>).
+ For example, given <literal>PARTITION BY RANGE (x,y)</literal>, a partition
+ bound <literal>FROM (1, 2) TO (3, 4)</literal>
+ allows <literal>x=1</literal> with any <literal>y&gt;=2</literal>,
+ <literal>x=2</literal> with any non-null <literal>y</literal>,
+ and <literal>x=3</literal> with any <literal>y&lt;4</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The special values <literal>MINVALUE</literal> and <literal>MAXVALUE</literal>
+ may be used when creating a range partition to indicate that there
+ is no lower or upper bound on the column's value. For example, a
+ partition defined using <literal>FROM (MINVALUE) TO (10)</literal> allows
+ any values less than 10, and a partition defined using
+ <literal>FROM (10) TO (MAXVALUE)</literal> allows any values greater than
+ or equal to 10.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When creating a range partition involving more than one column, it
+ can also make sense to use <literal>MAXVALUE</literal> as part of the lower
+ bound, and <literal>MINVALUE</literal> as part of the upper bound. For
+ example, a partition defined using
+ <literal>FROM (0, MAXVALUE) TO (10, MAXVALUE)</literal> allows any rows
+ where the first partition key column is greater than 0 and less than
+ or equal to 10. Similarly, a partition defined using
+ <literal>FROM ('a', MINVALUE) TO ('b', MINVALUE)</literal> allows any rows
+ where the first partition key column starts with "a".
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Note that if <literal>MINVALUE</literal> or <literal>MAXVALUE</literal> is used for
+ one column of a partitioning bound, the same value must be used for all
+ subsequent columns. For example, <literal>(10, MINVALUE, 0)</literal> is not
+ a valid bound; you should write <literal>(10, MINVALUE, MINVALUE)</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Also note that some element types, such as <literal>timestamp</literal>,
+ have a notion of "infinity", which is just another value that can
+ be stored. This is different from <literal>MINVALUE</literal> and
+ <literal>MAXVALUE</literal>, which are not real values that can be stored,
+ but rather they are ways of saying that the value is unbounded.
+ <literal>MAXVALUE</literal> can be thought of as being greater than any
+ other value, including "infinity" and <literal>MINVALUE</literal> as being
+ less than any other value, including "minus infinity". Thus the range
+ <literal>FROM ('infinity') TO (MAXVALUE)</literal> is not an empty range; it
+ allows precisely one value to be stored &mdash; "infinity".
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If <literal>DEFAULT</literal> is specified, the table will be
+ created as the default partition of the parent table. This option
+ is not available for hash-partitioned tables. A partition key value
+ not fitting into any other partition of the given parent will be
+ routed to the default partition.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When a table has an existing <literal>DEFAULT</literal> partition and
+ a new partition is added to it, the default partition must
+ be scanned to verify that it does not contain any rows which properly
+ belong in the new partition. If the default partition contains a
+ large number of rows, this may be slow. The scan will be skipped if
+ the default partition is a foreign table or if it has a constraint which
+ proves that it cannot contain rows which should be placed in the new
+ partition.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When creating a hash partition, a modulus and remainder must be specified.
+ The modulus must be a positive integer, and the remainder must be a
+ non-negative integer less than the modulus. Typically, when initially
+ setting up a hash-partitioned table, you should choose a modulus equal to
+ the number of partitions and assign every table the same modulus and a
+ different remainder (see examples, below). However, it is not required
+ that every partition have the same modulus, only that every modulus which
+ occurs among the partitions of a hash-partitioned table is a factor of the
+ next larger modulus. This allows the number of partitions to be increased
+ incrementally without needing to move all the data at once. For example,
+ suppose you have a hash-partitioned table with 8 partitions, each of which
+ has modulus 8, but find it necessary to increase the number of partitions
+ to 16. You can detach one of the modulus-8 partitions, create two new
+ modulus-16 partitions covering the same portion of the key space (one with
+ a remainder equal to the remainder of the detached partition, and the
+ other with a remainder equal to that value plus 8), and repopulate them
+ with data. You can then repeat this -- perhaps at a later time -- for
+ each modulus-8 partition until none remain. While this may still involve
+ a large amount of data movement at each step, it is still better than
+ having to create a whole new table and move all the data at once.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A partition must have the same column names and types as the partitioned
+ table to which it belongs. Modifications to the column names or types of
+ a partitioned table will automatically propagate to all partitions.
+ <literal>CHECK</literal> constraints will be inherited automatically by
+ every partition, but an individual partition may specify additional
+ <literal>CHECK</literal> constraints; additional constraints with the
+ same name and condition as in the parent will be merged with the parent
+ constraint. Defaults may be specified separately for each partition.
+ But note that a partition's default value is not applied when inserting
+ a tuple through a partitioned table.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Rows inserted into a partitioned table will be automatically routed to
+ the correct partition. If no suitable partition exists, an error will
+ occur.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Operations such as TRUNCATE which normally affect a table and all of its
+ inheritance children will cascade to all partitions, but may also be
+ performed on an individual partition. Note that dropping a partition
+ with <literal>DROP TABLE</literal> requires taking an <literal>ACCESS
+ EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock on the parent table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>LIKE <replaceable>source_table</replaceable> [ <replaceable>like_option</replaceable> ... ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>LIKE</literal> clause specifies a table from which
+ the new table automatically copies all column names, their data types,
+ and their not-null constraints.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Unlike <literal>INHERITS</literal>, the new table and original table
+ are completely decoupled after creation is complete. Changes to the
+ original table will not be applied to the new table, and it is not
+ possible to include data of the new table in scans of the original
+ table.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Also unlike <literal>INHERITS</literal>, columns and
+ constraints copied by <literal>LIKE</literal> are not merged with similarly
+ named columns and constraints.
+ If the same name is specified explicitly or in another
+ <literal>LIKE</literal> clause, an error is signaled.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The optional <replaceable>like_option</replaceable> clauses specify
+ which additional properties of the original table to copy. Specifying
+ <literal>INCLUDING</literal> copies the property, specifying
+ <literal>EXCLUDING</literal> omits the property.
+ <literal>EXCLUDING</literal> is the default. If multiple specifications
+ are made for the same kind of object, the last one is used. The
+ available options are:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>INCLUDING COMMENTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Comments for the copied columns, constraints, and indexes will be
+ copied. The default behavior is to exclude comments, resulting in
+ the copied columns and constraints in the new table having no
+ comments.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>INCLUDING COMPRESSION</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Compression method of the columns will be copied. The default
+ behavior is to exclude compression methods, resulting in columns
+ having the default compression method.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>INCLUDING CONSTRAINTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ <literal>CHECK</literal> constraints will be copied. No distinction
+ is made between column constraints and table constraints. Not-null
+ constraints are always copied to the new table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>INCLUDING DEFAULTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Default expressions for the copied column definitions will be
+ copied. Otherwise, default expressions are not copied, resulting in
+ the copied columns in the new table having null defaults. Note that
+ copying defaults that call database-modification functions, such as
+ <function>nextval</function>, may create a functional linkage
+ between the original and new tables.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>INCLUDING GENERATED</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Any generation expressions of copied column definitions will be
+ copied. By default, new columns will be regular base columns.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>INCLUDING IDENTITY</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Any identity specifications of copied column definitions will be
+ copied. A new sequence is created for each identity column of the
+ new table, separate from the sequences associated with the old
+ table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>INCLUDING INDEXES</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Indexes, <literal>PRIMARY KEY</literal>, <literal>UNIQUE</literal>,
+ and <literal>EXCLUDE</literal> constraints on the original table
+ will be created on the new table. Names for the new indexes and
+ constraints are chosen according to the default rules, regardless of
+ how the originals were named. (This behavior avoids possible
+ duplicate-name failures for the new indexes.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>INCLUDING STATISTICS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Extended statistics are copied to the new table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>INCLUDING STORAGE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ <literal>STORAGE</literal> settings for the copied column
+ definitions will be copied. The default behavior is to exclude
+ <literal>STORAGE</literal> settings, resulting in the copied columns
+ in the new table having type-specific default settings. For more on
+ <literal>STORAGE</literal> settings, see <xref
+ linkend="storage-toast"/>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>INCLUDING ALL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ <literal>INCLUDING ALL</literal> is an abbreviated form selecting
+ all the available individual options. (It could be useful to write
+ individual <literal>EXCLUDING</literal> clauses after
+ <literal>INCLUDING ALL</literal> to select all but some specific
+ options.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>LIKE</literal> clause can also be used to copy column
+ definitions from views, foreign tables, or composite types.
+ Inapplicable options (e.g., <literal>INCLUDING INDEXES</literal> from
+ a view) are ignored.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CONSTRAINT <replaceable class="parameter">constraint_name</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An optional name for a column or table constraint. If the
+ constraint is violated, the constraint name is present in error messages,
+ so constraint names like <literal>col must be positive</literal> can be used
+ to communicate helpful constraint information to client applications.
+ (Double-quotes are needed to specify constraint names that contain spaces.)
+ If a constraint name is not specified, the system generates a name.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>NOT NULL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The column is not allowed to contain null values.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>NULL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The column is allowed to contain null values. This is the default.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This clause is only provided for compatibility with
+ non-standard SQL databases. Its use is discouraged in new
+ applications.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CHECK ( <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> ) [ NO INHERIT ] </literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>CHECK</literal> clause specifies an expression producing a
+ Boolean result which new or updated rows must satisfy for an
+ insert or update operation to succeed. Expressions evaluating
+ to TRUE or UNKNOWN succeed. Should any row of an insert or
+ update operation produce a FALSE result, an error exception is
+ raised and the insert or update does not alter the database. A
+ check constraint specified as a column constraint should
+ reference that column's value only, while an expression
+ appearing in a table constraint can reference multiple columns.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Currently, <literal>CHECK</literal> expressions cannot contain
+ subqueries nor refer to variables other than columns of the
+ current row (see <xref linkend="ddl-constraints-check-constraints"/>).
+ The system column <literal>tableoid</literal>
+ may be referenced, but not any other system column.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A constraint marked with <literal>NO INHERIT</literal> will not propagate to
+ child tables.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When a table has multiple <literal>CHECK</literal> constraints,
+ they will be tested for each row in alphabetical order by name,
+ after checking <literal>NOT NULL</literal> constraints.
+ (<productname>PostgreSQL</productname> versions before 9.5 did not honor any
+ particular firing order for <literal>CHECK</literal> constraints.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DEFAULT
+ <replaceable>default_expr</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>DEFAULT</literal> clause assigns a default data value for
+ the column whose column definition it appears within. The value
+ is any variable-free expression (in particular, cross-references
+ to other columns in the current table are not allowed). Subqueries
+ are not allowed either. The data type of the default expression must
+ match the data type of the column.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The default expression will be used in any insert operation that
+ does not specify a value for the column. If there is no default
+ for a column, then the default is null.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>GENERATED ALWAYS AS ( <replaceable>generation_expr</replaceable> ) STORED</literal><indexterm><primary>generated column</primary></indexterm></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This clause creates the column as a <firstterm>generated
+ column</firstterm>. The column cannot be written to, and when read the
+ result of the specified expression will be returned.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The keyword <literal>STORED</literal> is required to signify that the
+ column will be computed on write and will be stored on disk.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The generation expression can refer to other columns in the table, but
+ not other generated columns. Any functions and operators used must be
+ immutable. References to other tables are not allowed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>GENERATED { ALWAYS | BY DEFAULT } AS IDENTITY [ ( <replaceable>sequence_options</replaceable> ) ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This clause creates the column as an <firstterm>identity
+ column</firstterm>. It will have an implicit sequence attached to it
+ and the column in new rows will automatically have values from the
+ sequence assigned to it.
+ Such a column is implicitly <literal>NOT NULL</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The clauses <literal>ALWAYS</literal> and <literal>BY DEFAULT</literal>
+ determine how explicitly user-specified values are handled in
+ <command>INSERT</command> and <command>UPDATE</command> commands.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In an <command>INSERT</command> command, if <literal>ALWAYS</literal> is
+ selected, a user-specified value is only accepted if the
+ <command>INSERT</command> statement specifies <literal>OVERRIDING SYSTEM
+ VALUE</literal>. If <literal>BY DEFAULT</literal> is selected, then the
+ user-specified value takes precedence. See <xref linkend="sql-insert"/>
+ for details. (In the <command>COPY</command> command, user-specified
+ values are always used regardless of this setting.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In an <command>UPDATE</command> command, if <literal>ALWAYS</literal> is
+ selected, any update of the column to any value other than
+ <literal>DEFAULT</literal> will be rejected. If <literal>BY
+ DEFAULT</literal> is selected, the column can be updated normally.
+ (There is no <literal>OVERRIDING</literal> clause for the
+ <command>UPDATE</command> command.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The optional <replaceable>sequence_options</replaceable> clause can be
+ used to override the options of the sequence.
+ See <xref linkend="sql-createsequence"/> for details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>UNIQUE</literal> (column constraint)</term>
+ <term><literal>UNIQUE ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ... ] )</literal>
+ <optional> <literal>INCLUDE ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ...])</literal> </optional> (table constraint)</term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>UNIQUE</literal> constraint specifies that a
+ group of one or more columns of a table can contain
+ only unique values. The behavior of a unique table constraint
+ is the same as that of a unique column constraint, with the
+ additional capability to span multiple columns. The constraint
+ therefore enforces that any two rows must differ in at least one
+ of these columns.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For the purpose of a unique constraint, null values are not
+ considered equal.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Each unique constraint should name a set of columns that is
+ different from the set of columns named by any other unique or
+ primary key constraint defined for the table. (Otherwise, redundant
+ unique constraints will be discarded.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When establishing a unique constraint for a multi-level partition
+ hierarchy, all the columns in the partition key of the target
+ partitioned table, as well as those of all its descendant partitioned
+ tables, must be included in the constraint definition.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Adding a unique constraint will automatically create a unique btree
+ index on the column or group of columns used in the constraint.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The optional <literal>INCLUDE</literal> clause adds to that index
+ one or more columns that are simply <quote>payload</quote>: uniqueness
+ is not enforced on them, and the index cannot be searched on the basis
+ of those columns. However they can be retrieved by an index-only scan.
+ Note that although the constraint is not enforced on included columns,
+ it still depends on them. Consequently, some operations on such columns
+ (e.g., <literal>DROP COLUMN</literal>) can cause cascaded constraint and
+ index deletion.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>PRIMARY KEY</literal> (column constraint)</term>
+ <term><literal>PRIMARY KEY ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ... ] )</literal>
+ <optional> <literal>INCLUDE ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ...])</literal> </optional> (table constraint)</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>PRIMARY KEY</literal> constraint specifies that a column or
+ columns of a table can contain only unique (non-duplicate), nonnull
+ values. Only one primary key can be specified for a table, whether as a
+ column constraint or a table constraint.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The primary key constraint should name a set of columns that is
+ different from the set of columns named by any unique
+ constraint defined for the same table. (Otherwise, the unique
+ constraint is redundant and will be discarded.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <literal>PRIMARY KEY</literal> enforces the same data constraints as
+ a combination of <literal>UNIQUE</literal> and <literal>NOT
+ NULL</literal>. However,
+ identifying a set of columns as the primary key also provides metadata
+ about the design of the schema, since a primary key implies that other
+ tables can rely on this set of columns as a unique identifier for rows.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When placed on a partitioned table, <literal>PRIMARY KEY</literal>
+ constraints share the restrictions previously described
+ for <literal>UNIQUE</literal> constraints.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Adding a <literal>PRIMARY KEY</literal> constraint will automatically
+ create a unique btree index on the column or group of columns used in the
+ constraint.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The optional <literal>INCLUDE</literal> clause adds to that index
+ one or more columns that are simply <quote>payload</quote>: uniqueness
+ is not enforced on them, and the index cannot be searched on the basis
+ of those columns. However they can be retrieved by an index-only scan.
+ Note that although the constraint is not enforced on included columns,
+ it still depends on them. Consequently, some operations on such columns
+ (e.g., <literal>DROP COLUMN</literal>) can cause cascaded constraint and
+ index deletion.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="sql-createtable-exclude">
+ <term><literal>EXCLUDE [ USING <replaceable class="parameter">index_method</replaceable> ] ( <replaceable class="parameter">exclude_element</replaceable> WITH <replaceable class="parameter">operator</replaceable> [, ... ] ) <replaceable class="parameter">index_parameters</replaceable> [ WHERE ( <replaceable class="parameter">predicate</replaceable> ) ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>EXCLUDE</literal> clause defines an exclusion
+ constraint, which guarantees that if
+ any two rows are compared on the specified column(s) or
+ expression(s) using the specified operator(s), not all of these
+ comparisons will return <literal>TRUE</literal>. If all of the
+ specified operators test for equality, this is equivalent to a
+ <literal>UNIQUE</literal> constraint, although an ordinary unique constraint
+ will be faster. However, exclusion constraints can specify
+ constraints that are more general than simple equality.
+ For example, you can specify a constraint that
+ no two rows in the table contain overlapping circles
+ (see <xref linkend="datatype-geometric"/>) by using the
+ <literal>&amp;&amp;</literal> operator.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Exclusion constraints are implemented using
+ an index, so each specified operator must be associated with an
+ appropriate operator class
+ (see <xref linkend="indexes-opclass"/>) for the index access
+ method <replaceable>index_method</replaceable>.
+ The operators are required to be commutative.
+ Each <replaceable class="parameter">exclude_element</replaceable>
+ can optionally specify an operator class and/or ordering options;
+ these are described fully under
+ <xref linkend="sql-createindex"/>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The access method must support <literal>amgettuple</literal> (see <xref
+ linkend="indexam"/>); at present this means <acronym>GIN</acronym>
+ cannot be used. Although it's allowed, there is little point in using
+ B-tree or hash indexes with an exclusion constraint, because this
+ does nothing that an ordinary unique constraint doesn't do better.
+ So in practice the access method will always be <acronym>GiST</acronym> or
+ <acronym>SP-GiST</acronym>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <replaceable class="parameter">predicate</replaceable> allows you to specify an
+ exclusion constraint on a subset of the table; internally this creates a
+ partial index. Note that parentheses are required around the predicate.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>REFERENCES <replaceable class="parameter">reftable</replaceable> [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">refcolumn</replaceable> ) ] [ MATCH <replaceable class="parameter">matchtype</replaceable> ] [ ON DELETE <replaceable class="parameter">referential_action</replaceable> ] [ ON UPDATE <replaceable class="parameter">referential_action</replaceable> ]</literal> (column constraint)</term>
+
+ <term><literal>FOREIGN KEY ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ... ] )
+ REFERENCES <replaceable class="parameter">reftable</replaceable> [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">refcolumn</replaceable> [, ... ] ) ]
+ [ MATCH <replaceable class="parameter">matchtype</replaceable> ]
+ [ ON DELETE <replaceable class="parameter">referential_action</replaceable> ]
+ [ ON UPDATE <replaceable class="parameter">referential_action</replaceable> ]</literal>
+ (table constraint)</term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These clauses specify a foreign key constraint, which requires
+ that a group of one or more columns of the new table must only
+ contain values that match values in the referenced
+ column(s) of some row of the referenced table. If the <replaceable
+ class="parameter">refcolumn</replaceable> list is omitted, the
+ primary key of the <replaceable class="parameter">reftable</replaceable>
+ is used. The referenced columns must be the columns of a non-deferrable
+ unique or primary key constraint in the referenced table. The user
+ must have <literal>REFERENCES</literal> permission on the referenced table
+ (either the whole table, or the specific referenced columns). The
+ addition of a foreign key constraint requires a
+ <literal>SHARE ROW EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock on the referenced table.
+ Note that foreign key constraints cannot be defined between temporary
+ tables and permanent tables.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A value inserted into the referencing column(s) is matched against the
+ values of the referenced table and referenced columns using the
+ given match type. There are three match types: <literal>MATCH
+ FULL</literal>, <literal>MATCH PARTIAL</literal>, and <literal>MATCH
+ SIMPLE</literal> (which is the default). <literal>MATCH
+ FULL</literal> will not allow one column of a multicolumn foreign key
+ to be null unless all foreign key columns are null; if they are all
+ null, the row is not required to have a match in the referenced table.
+ <literal>MATCH SIMPLE</literal> allows any of the foreign key columns
+ to be null; if any of them are null, the row is not required to have a
+ match in the referenced table.
+ <literal>MATCH PARTIAL</literal> is not yet implemented.
+ (Of course, <literal>NOT NULL</literal> constraints can be applied to the
+ referencing column(s) to prevent these cases from arising.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In addition, when the data in the referenced columns is changed,
+ certain actions are performed on the data in this table's
+ columns. The <literal>ON DELETE</literal> clause specifies the
+ action to perform when a referenced row in the referenced table is
+ being deleted. Likewise, the <literal>ON UPDATE</literal>
+ clause specifies the action to perform when a referenced column
+ in the referenced table is being updated to a new value. If the
+ row is updated, but the referenced column is not actually
+ changed, no action is done. Referential actions other than the
+ <literal>NO ACTION</literal> check cannot be deferred, even if
+ the constraint is declared deferrable. There are the following possible
+ actions for each clause:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>NO ACTION</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Produce an error indicating that the deletion or update
+ would create a foreign key constraint violation.
+ If the constraint is deferred, this
+ error will be produced at constraint check time if there still
+ exist any referencing rows. This is the default action.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Produce an error indicating that the deletion or update
+ would create a foreign key constraint violation.
+ This is the same as <literal>NO ACTION</literal> except that
+ the check is not deferrable.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Delete any rows referencing the deleted row, or update the
+ values of the referencing column(s) to the new values of the
+ referenced columns, respectively.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET NULL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Set the referencing column(s) to null.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SET DEFAULT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Set the referencing column(s) to their default values.
+ (There must be a row in the referenced table matching the default
+ values, if they are not null, or the operation will fail.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the referenced column(s) are changed frequently, it might be wise to
+ add an index to the referencing column(s) so that referential actions
+ associated with the foreign key constraint can be performed more
+ efficiently.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DEFERRABLE</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>NOT DEFERRABLE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This controls whether the constraint can be deferred. A
+ constraint that is not deferrable will be checked immediately
+ after every command. Checking of constraints that are
+ deferrable can be postponed until the end of the transaction
+ (using the <link linkend="sql-set-constraints"><command>SET CONSTRAINTS</command></link> command).
+ <literal>NOT DEFERRABLE</literal> is the default.
+ Currently, only <literal>UNIQUE</literal>, <literal>PRIMARY KEY</literal>,
+ <literal>EXCLUDE</literal>, and
+ <literal>REFERENCES</literal> (foreign key) constraints accept this
+ clause. <literal>NOT NULL</literal> and <literal>CHECK</literal> constraints are not
+ deferrable. Note that deferrable constraints cannot be used as
+ conflict arbitrators in an <command>INSERT</command> statement that
+ includes an <literal>ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE</literal> clause.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>INITIALLY IMMEDIATE</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>INITIALLY DEFERRED</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If a constraint is deferrable, this clause specifies the default
+ time to check the constraint. If the constraint is
+ <literal>INITIALLY IMMEDIATE</literal>, it is checked after each
+ statement. This is the default. If the constraint is
+ <literal>INITIALLY DEFERRED</literal>, it is checked only at the
+ end of the transaction. The constraint check time can be
+ altered with the <link linkend="sql-set-constraints"><command>SET CONSTRAINTS</command></link> command.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="sql-createtable-method">
+ <term><literal>USING <replaceable class="parameter">method</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This optional clause specifies the table access method to use to store
+ the contents for the new table; the method needs be an access method of
+ type <literal>TABLE</literal>. See <xref linkend="tableam"/> for more
+ information. If this option is not specified, the default table access
+ method is chosen for the new table. See <xref
+ linkend="guc-default-table-access-method"/> for more information.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>WITH ( <replaceable class="parameter">storage_parameter</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>] [, ... ] )</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This clause specifies optional storage parameters for a table or index;
+ see <xref linkend="sql-createtable-storage-parameters"/> below for more
+ information. For backward-compatibility the <literal>WITH</literal>
+ clause for a table can also include <literal>OIDS=FALSE</literal> to
+ specify that rows of the new table should not contain OIDs (object
+ identifiers), <literal>OIDS=TRUE</literal> is not supported anymore.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>WITHOUT OIDS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This is backward-compatible syntax for declaring a table
+ <literal>WITHOUT OIDS</literal>, creating a table <literal>WITH
+ OIDS</literal> is not supported anymore.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ON COMMIT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The behavior of temporary tables at the end of a transaction
+ block can be controlled using <literal>ON COMMIT</literal>.
+ The three options are:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>PRESERVE ROWS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ No special action is taken at the ends of transactions.
+ This is the default behavior.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DELETE ROWS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ All rows in the temporary table will be deleted at the end
+ of each transaction block. Essentially, an automatic <link
+ linkend="sql-truncate"><command>TRUNCATE</command></link> is done
+ at each commit. When used on a partitioned table, this
+ is not cascaded to its partitions.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DROP</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The temporary table will be dropped at the end of the current
+ transaction block. When used on a partitioned table, this action
+ drops its partitions and when used on tables with inheritance
+ children, it drops the dependent children.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist></para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="sql-createtable-tablespace">
+ <term><literal>TABLESPACE <replaceable class="parameter">tablespace_name</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <replaceable class="parameter">tablespace_name</replaceable> is the name
+ of the tablespace in which the new table is to be created.
+ If not specified,
+ <xref linkend="guc-default-tablespace"/> is consulted, or
+ <xref linkend="guc-temp-tablespaces"/> if the table is temporary. For
+ partitioned tables, since no storage is required for the table itself,
+ the tablespace specified overrides <literal>default_tablespace</literal>
+ as the default tablespace to use for any newly created partitions when no
+ other tablespace is explicitly specified.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>USING INDEX TABLESPACE <replaceable class="parameter">tablespace_name</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This clause allows selection of the tablespace in which the index
+ associated with a <literal>UNIQUE</literal>, <literal>PRIMARY
+ KEY</literal>, or <literal>EXCLUDE</literal> constraint will be created.
+ If not specified,
+ <xref linkend="guc-default-tablespace"/> is consulted, or
+ <xref linkend="guc-temp-tablespaces"/> if the table is temporary.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <refsect2 id="sql-createtable-storage-parameters" xreflabel="Storage Parameters">
+ <title>Storage Parameters</title>
+
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createtable-storage-parameters">
+ <primary>storage parameters</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>WITH</literal> clause can specify <firstterm>storage parameters</firstterm>
+ for tables, and for indexes associated with a <literal>UNIQUE</literal>,
+ <literal>PRIMARY KEY</literal>, or <literal>EXCLUDE</literal> constraint.
+ Storage parameters for
+ indexes are documented in <xref linkend="sql-createindex"/>.
+ The storage parameters currently
+ available for tables are listed below. For many of these parameters, as
+ shown, there is an additional parameter with the same name prefixed with
+ <literal>toast.</literal>, which controls the behavior of the
+ table's secondary <acronym>TOAST</acronym> table, if any
+ (see <xref linkend="storage-toast"/> for more information about TOAST).
+ If a table parameter value is set and the
+ equivalent <literal>toast.</literal> parameter is not, the TOAST table
+ will use the table's parameter value.
+ Specifying these parameters for partitioned tables is not supported,
+ but you may specify them for individual leaf partitions.
+ </para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry id="reloption-fillfactor" xreflabel="fillfactor">
+ <term><varname>fillfactor</varname> (<type>integer</type>)
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>fillfactor</varname> storage parameter</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The fillfactor for a table is a percentage between 10 and 100.
+ 100 (complete packing) is the default. When a smaller fillfactor
+ is specified, <command>INSERT</command> operations pack table pages only
+ to the indicated percentage; the remaining space on each page is
+ reserved for updating rows on that page. This gives <command>UPDATE</command>
+ a chance to place the updated copy of a row on the same page as the
+ original, which is more efficient than placing it on a different page.
+ For a table whose entries are never updated, complete packing is the
+ best choice, but in heavily updated tables smaller fillfactors are
+ appropriate. This parameter cannot be set for TOAST tables.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="reloption-toast-tuple-target" xreflabel="toast_tuple_target">
+ <term><literal>toast_tuple_target</literal> (<type>integer</type>)
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>toast_tuple_target</varname> storage parameter</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The toast_tuple_target specifies the minimum tuple length required before
+ we try to compress and/or move long column values into TOAST tables, and
+ is also the target length we try to reduce the length below once toasting
+ begins. This affects columns marked as External (for move),
+ Main (for compression), or Extended (for both) and applies only to new
+ tuples. There is no effect on existing rows.
+ By default this parameter is set to allow at least 4 tuples per block,
+ which with the default block size will be 2040 bytes. Valid values are
+ between 128 bytes and the (block size - header), by default 8160 bytes.
+ Changing this value may not be useful for very short or very long rows.
+ Note that the default setting is often close to optimal, and
+ it is possible that setting this parameter could have negative
+ effects in some cases.
+ This parameter cannot be set for TOAST tables.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="reloption-parallel-workers" xreflabel="parallel_workers">
+ <term><literal>parallel_workers</literal> (<type>integer</type>)
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>parallel_workers</varname> storage parameter</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This sets the number of workers that should be used to assist a parallel
+ scan of this table. If not set, the system will determine a value based
+ on the relation size. The actual number of workers chosen by the planner
+ or by utility statements that use parallel scans may be less, for example
+ due to the setting of <xref linkend="guc-max-worker-processes"/>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="reloption-autovacuum-enabled" xreflabel="autovacuum_enabled">
+ <term><literal>autovacuum_enabled</literal>, <literal>toast.autovacuum_enabled</literal> (<type>boolean</type>)
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>autovacuum_enabled</varname> storage parameter</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Enables or disables the autovacuum daemon for a particular table.
+ If true, the autovacuum daemon will perform automatic <command>VACUUM</command>
+ and/or <command>ANALYZE</command> operations on this table following the rules
+ discussed in <xref linkend="autovacuum"/>.
+ If false, this table will not be autovacuumed, except to prevent
+ transaction ID wraparound. See <xref linkend="vacuum-for-wraparound"/> for
+ more about wraparound prevention.
+ Note that the autovacuum daemon does not run at all (except to prevent
+ transaction ID wraparound) if the <xref linkend="guc-autovacuum"/>
+ parameter is false; setting individual tables' storage parameters does
+ not override that. Therefore there is seldom much point in explicitly
+ setting this storage parameter to <literal>true</literal>, only
+ to <literal>false</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="reloption-vacuum-index-cleanup" xreflabel="vacuum_index_cleanup">
+ <term><literal>vacuum_index_cleanup</literal>, <literal>toast.vacuum_index_cleanup</literal> (<type>enum</type>)
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>vacuum_index_cleanup</varname> storage parameter</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Forces or disables index cleanup when <command>VACUUM</command>
+ is run on this table. The default value is
+ <literal>AUTO</literal>. With <literal>OFF</literal>, index
+ cleanup is disabled, with <literal>ON</literal> it is enabled,
+ and with <literal>AUTO</literal> a decision is made dynamically,
+ each time <command>VACUUM</command> runs. The dynamic behavior
+ allows <command>VACUUM</command> to avoid needlessly scanning
+ indexes to remove very few dead tuples. Forcibly disabling all
+ index cleanup can speed up <command>VACUUM</command> very
+ significantly, but may also lead to severely bloated indexes if
+ table modifications are frequent. The
+ <literal>INDEX_CLEANUP</literal> parameter of <link
+ linkend="sql-vacuum"><command>VACUUM</command></link>, if
+ specified, overrides the value of this option.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="reloption-vacuum-truncate" xreflabel="vacuum_truncate">
+ <term><literal>vacuum_truncate</literal>, <literal>toast.vacuum_truncate</literal> (<type>boolean</type>)
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>vacuum_truncate</varname> storage parameter</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Enables or disables vacuum to try to truncate off any empty pages
+ at the end of this table. The default value is <literal>true</literal>.
+ If <literal>true</literal>, <command>VACUUM</command> and
+ autovacuum do the truncation and the disk space for
+ the truncated pages is returned to the operating system.
+ Note that the truncation requires <literal>ACCESS EXCLUSIVE</literal>
+ lock on the table. The <literal>TRUNCATE</literal> parameter
+ of <link linkend="sql-vacuum"><command>VACUUM</command></link>, if specified, overrides the value
+ of this option.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="reloption-autovacuum-vacuum-threshold" xreflabel="autovacuum_vacuum_threshold">
+ <term><literal>autovacuum_vacuum_threshold</literal>, <literal>toast.autovacuum_vacuum_threshold</literal> (<type>integer</type>)
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>autovacuum_vacuum_threshold</varname></primary>
+ <secondary>storage parameter</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Per-table value for <xref linkend="guc-autovacuum-vacuum-threshold"/>
+ parameter.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="reloption-autovacuum-vacuum-scale-factor" xreflabel="autovacuum_vacuum_scale_factor">
+ <term><literal>autovacuum_vacuum_scale_factor</literal>, <literal>toast.autovacuum_vacuum_scale_factor</literal> (<type>floating point</type>)
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>autovacuum_vacuum_scale_factor</varname> </primary>
+ <secondary>storage parameter</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Per-table value for <xref linkend="guc-autovacuum-vacuum-scale-factor"/>
+ parameter.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="reloption-autovacuum-vacuum-insert-threshold" xreflabel="autovacuum_vacuum_insert_threshold">
+ <term><literal>autovacuum_vacuum_insert_threshold</literal>, <literal>toast.autovacuum_vacuum_insert_threshold</literal> (<type>integer</type>)
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>autovacuum_vacuum_insert_threshold</varname></primary>
+ <secondary>storage parameter</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Per-table value for <xref linkend="guc-autovacuum-vacuum-insert-threshold"/>
+ parameter. The special value of -1 may be used to disable insert vacuums on the table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="reloption-autovacuum-vacuum-insert-scale-factor" xreflabel="autovacuum_vacuum_insert_scale_factor">
+ <term><literal>autovacuum_vacuum_insert_scale_factor</literal>, <literal>toast.autovacuum_vacuum_insert_scale_factor</literal> (<type>floating point</type>)
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>autovacuum_vacuum_insert_scale_factor</varname> </primary>
+ <secondary>storage parameter</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Per-table value for <xref linkend="guc-autovacuum-vacuum-insert-scale-factor"/>
+ parameter.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="reloption-autovacuum-analyze-threshold" xreflabel="autovacuum_analyze_threshold">
+ <term><literal>autovacuum_analyze_threshold</literal> (<type>integer</type>)
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>autovacuum_analyze_threshold</varname></primary>
+ <secondary>storage parameter</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Per-table value for <xref linkend="guc-autovacuum-analyze-threshold"/>
+ parameter.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="reloption-autovacuum-analyze-scale-factor" xreflabel="autovacuum_analyze_scale_factor">
+ <term><literal>autovacuum_analyze_scale_factor</literal> (<type>floating point</type>)
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>autovacuum_analyze_scale_factor</varname></primary>
+ <secondary>storage parameter</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Per-table value for <xref linkend="guc-autovacuum-analyze-scale-factor"/>
+ parameter.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="reloption-autovacuum-vacuum-cost-delay" xreflabel="autovacuum_vacuum_cost_delay">
+ <term><literal>autovacuum_vacuum_cost_delay</literal>, <literal>toast.autovacuum_vacuum_cost_delay</literal> (<type>floating point</type>)
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>autovacuum_vacuum_cost_delay</varname></primary>
+ <secondary>storage parameter</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Per-table value for <xref linkend="guc-autovacuum-vacuum-cost-delay"/>
+ parameter.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="reloption-autovacuum-vacuum-cost-limit" xreflabel="autovacuum_vacuum_cost_limit">
+ <term><literal>autovacuum_vacuum_cost_limit</literal>, <literal>toast.autovacuum_vacuum_cost_limit</literal> (<type>integer</type>)
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>autovacuum_vacuum_cost_limit</varname></primary>
+ <secondary>storage parameter</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Per-table value for <xref linkend="guc-autovacuum-vacuum-cost-limit"/>
+ parameter.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="reloption-autovacuum-freeze-min-age" xreflabel="autovacuum_freeze_min_age">
+ <term><literal>autovacuum_freeze_min_age</literal>, <literal>toast.autovacuum_freeze_min_age</literal> (<type>integer</type>)
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>autovacuum_freeze_min_age</varname> storage parameter</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Per-table value for <xref linkend="guc-vacuum-freeze-min-age"/>
+ parameter. Note that autovacuum will ignore
+ per-table <literal>autovacuum_freeze_min_age</literal> parameters that are
+ larger than half the
+ system-wide <xref linkend="guc-autovacuum-freeze-max-age"/> setting.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="reloption-autovacuum-freeze-max-age" xreflabel="autovacuum_freeze_max_age">
+ <term><literal>autovacuum_freeze_max_age</literal>, <literal>toast.autovacuum_freeze_max_age</literal> (<type>integer</type>)
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>autovacuum_freeze_max_age</varname></primary>
+ <secondary>storage parameter</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Per-table value for <xref linkend="guc-autovacuum-freeze-max-age"/>
+ parameter. Note that autovacuum will ignore
+ per-table <literal>autovacuum_freeze_max_age</literal> parameters that are
+ larger than the system-wide setting (it can only be set smaller).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="reloption-autovacuum-freeze-table-age" xreflabel="autovacuum_freeze_table_age">
+ <term><literal>autovacuum_freeze_table_age</literal>, <literal>toast.autovacuum_freeze_table_age</literal> (<type>integer</type>)
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>autovacuum_freeze_table_age</varname> storage parameter</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Per-table value for <xref linkend="guc-vacuum-freeze-table-age"/>
+ parameter.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="reloption-autovacuum-multixact-freeze-min-age" xreflabel="autovacuum_multixact_freeze_min_age">
+ <term><literal>autovacuum_multixact_freeze_min_age</literal>, <literal>toast.autovacuum_multixact_freeze_min_age</literal> (<type>integer</type>)
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>autovacuum_multixact_freeze_min_age</varname> storage parameter</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Per-table value for <xref linkend="guc-vacuum-multixact-freeze-min-age"/>
+ parameter. Note that autovacuum will ignore
+ per-table <literal>autovacuum_multixact_freeze_min_age</literal> parameters
+ that are larger than half the
+ system-wide <xref linkend="guc-autovacuum-multixact-freeze-max-age"/>
+ setting.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="reloption-autovacuum-multixact-freeze-max-age" xreflabel="autovacuum_multixact_freeze_max_age">
+ <term><literal>autovacuum_multixact_freeze_max_age</literal>, <literal>toast.autovacuum_multixact_freeze_max_age</literal> (<type>integer</type>)
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>autovacuum_multixact_freeze_max_age</varname></primary>
+ <secondary>storage parameter</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Per-table value
+ for <xref linkend="guc-autovacuum-multixact-freeze-max-age"/> parameter.
+ Note that autovacuum will ignore
+ per-table <literal>autovacuum_multixact_freeze_max_age</literal> parameters
+ that are larger than the system-wide setting (it can only be set
+ smaller).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="reloption-autovacuum-multixact-freeze-table-age" xreflabel="autovacuum_multixact_freeze_table_age">
+ <term><literal>autovacuum_multixact_freeze_table_age</literal>, <literal>toast.autovacuum_multixact_freeze_table_age</literal> (<type>integer</type>)
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>autovacuum_multixact_freeze_table_age</varname> storage parameter</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Per-table value
+ for <xref linkend="guc-vacuum-multixact-freeze-table-age"/> parameter.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="reloption-log-autovacuum-min-duration" xreflabel="log_autovacuum_min_duration">
+ <term><literal>log_autovacuum_min_duration</literal>, <literal>toast.log_autovacuum_min_duration</literal> (<type>integer</type>)
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>log_autovacuum_min_duration</varname></primary>
+ <secondary>storage parameter</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Per-table value for <xref linkend="guc-log-autovacuum-min-duration"/>
+ parameter.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="reloption-user-catalog-table" xreflabel="user_catalog_table">
+ <term><literal>user_catalog_table</literal> (<type>boolean</type>)
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><varname>user_catalog_table</varname> storage parameter</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Declare the table as an additional catalog table for purposes of
+ logical replication. See
+ <xref linkend="logicaldecoding-capabilities"/> for details.
+ This parameter cannot be set for TOAST tables.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createtable-notes">
+ <title>Notes</title>
+ <para>
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> automatically creates an
+ index for each unique constraint and primary key constraint to
+ enforce uniqueness. Thus, it is not necessary to create an
+ index explicitly for primary key columns. (See <xref
+ linkend="sql-createindex"/> for more information.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Unique constraints and primary keys are not inherited in the
+ current implementation. This makes the combination of
+ inheritance and unique constraints rather dysfunctional.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A table cannot have more than 1600 columns. (In practice, the
+ effective limit is usually lower because of tuple-length constraints.)
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createtable-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Create table <structname>films</structname> and table
+ <structname>distributors</structname>:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE films (
+ code char(5) CONSTRAINT firstkey PRIMARY KEY,
+ title varchar(40) NOT NULL,
+ did integer NOT NULL,
+ date_prod date,
+ kind varchar(10),
+ len interval hour to minute
+);
+
+CREATE TABLE distributors (
+ did integer PRIMARY KEY GENERATED BY DEFAULT AS IDENTITY,
+ name varchar(40) NOT NULL CHECK (name &lt;&gt; '')
+);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a table with a 2-dimensional array:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE array_int (
+ vector int[][]
+);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Define a unique table constraint for the table
+ <literal>films</literal>. Unique table constraints can be defined
+ on one or more columns of the table:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE films (
+ code char(5),
+ title varchar(40),
+ did integer,
+ date_prod date,
+ kind varchar(10),
+ len interval hour to minute,
+ CONSTRAINT production UNIQUE(date_prod)
+);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Define a check column constraint:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE distributors (
+ did integer CHECK (did &gt; 100),
+ name varchar(40)
+);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Define a check table constraint:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE distributors (
+ did integer,
+ name varchar(40),
+ CONSTRAINT con1 CHECK (did &gt; 100 AND name &lt;&gt; '')
+);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Define a primary key table constraint for the table
+ <structname>films</structname>:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE films (
+ code char(5),
+ title varchar(40),
+ did integer,
+ date_prod date,
+ kind varchar(10),
+ len interval hour to minute,
+ CONSTRAINT code_title PRIMARY KEY(code,title)
+);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Define a primary key constraint for table
+ <structname>distributors</structname>. The following two examples are
+ equivalent, the first using the table constraint syntax, the second
+ the column constraint syntax:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE distributors (
+ did integer,
+ name varchar(40),
+ PRIMARY KEY(did)
+);
+
+CREATE TABLE distributors (
+ did integer PRIMARY KEY,
+ name varchar(40)
+);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Assign a literal constant default value for the column
+ <literal>name</literal>, arrange for the default value of column
+ <literal>did</literal> to be generated by selecting the next value
+ of a sequence object, and make the default value of
+ <literal>modtime</literal> be the time at which the row is
+ inserted:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE distributors (
+ name varchar(40) DEFAULT 'Luso Films',
+ did integer DEFAULT nextval('distributors_serial'),
+ modtime timestamp DEFAULT current_timestamp
+);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Define two <literal>NOT NULL</literal> column constraints on the table
+ <classname>distributors</classname>, one of which is explicitly
+ given a name:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE distributors (
+ did integer CONSTRAINT no_null NOT NULL,
+ name varchar(40) NOT NULL
+);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Define a unique constraint for the <literal>name</literal> column:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE distributors (
+ did integer,
+ name varchar(40) UNIQUE
+);
+</programlisting>
+
+ The same, specified as a table constraint:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE distributors (
+ did integer,
+ name varchar(40),
+ UNIQUE(name)
+);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create the same table, specifying 70% fill factor for both the table
+ and its unique index:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE distributors (
+ did integer,
+ name varchar(40),
+ UNIQUE(name) WITH (fillfactor=70)
+)
+WITH (fillfactor=70);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create table <structname>circles</structname> with an exclusion
+ constraint that prevents any two circles from overlapping:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE circles (
+ c circle,
+ EXCLUDE USING gist (c WITH &amp;&amp;)
+);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create table <structname>cinemas</structname> in tablespace <structname>diskvol1</structname>:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE cinemas (
+ id serial,
+ name text,
+ location text
+) TABLESPACE diskvol1;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a composite type and a typed table:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TYPE employee_type AS (name text, salary numeric);
+
+CREATE TABLE employees OF employee_type (
+ PRIMARY KEY (name),
+ salary WITH OPTIONS DEFAULT 1000
+);
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a range partitioned table:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE measurement (
+ logdate date not null,
+ peaktemp int,
+ unitsales int
+) PARTITION BY RANGE (logdate);
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a range partitioned table with multiple columns in the partition key:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE measurement_year_month (
+ logdate date not null,
+ peaktemp int,
+ unitsales int
+) PARTITION BY RANGE (EXTRACT(YEAR FROM logdate), EXTRACT(MONTH FROM logdate));
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a list partitioned table:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE cities (
+ city_id bigserial not null,
+ name text not null,
+ population bigint
+) PARTITION BY LIST (left(lower(name), 1));
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a hash partitioned table:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE orders (
+ order_id bigint not null,
+ cust_id bigint not null,
+ status text
+) PARTITION BY HASH (order_id);
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create partition of a range partitioned table:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE measurement_y2016m07
+ PARTITION OF measurement (
+ unitsales DEFAULT 0
+) FOR VALUES FROM ('2016-07-01') TO ('2016-08-01');
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a few partitions of a range partitioned table with multiple
+ columns in the partition key:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE measurement_ym_older
+ PARTITION OF measurement_year_month
+ FOR VALUES FROM (MINVALUE, MINVALUE) TO (2016, 11);
+
+CREATE TABLE measurement_ym_y2016m11
+ PARTITION OF measurement_year_month
+ FOR VALUES FROM (2016, 11) TO (2016, 12);
+
+CREATE TABLE measurement_ym_y2016m12
+ PARTITION OF measurement_year_month
+ FOR VALUES FROM (2016, 12) TO (2017, 01);
+
+CREATE TABLE measurement_ym_y2017m01
+ PARTITION OF measurement_year_month
+ FOR VALUES FROM (2017, 01) TO (2017, 02);
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create partition of a list partitioned table:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE cities_ab
+ PARTITION OF cities (
+ CONSTRAINT city_id_nonzero CHECK (city_id != 0)
+) FOR VALUES IN ('a', 'b');
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create partition of a list partitioned table that is itself further
+ partitioned and then add a partition to it:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE cities_ab
+ PARTITION OF cities (
+ CONSTRAINT city_id_nonzero CHECK (city_id != 0)
+) FOR VALUES IN ('a', 'b') PARTITION BY RANGE (population);
+
+CREATE TABLE cities_ab_10000_to_100000
+ PARTITION OF cities_ab FOR VALUES FROM (10000) TO (100000);
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create partitions of a hash partitioned table:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE orders_p1 PARTITION OF orders
+ FOR VALUES WITH (MODULUS 4, REMAINDER 0);
+CREATE TABLE orders_p2 PARTITION OF orders
+ FOR VALUES WITH (MODULUS 4, REMAINDER 1);
+CREATE TABLE orders_p3 PARTITION OF orders
+ FOR VALUES WITH (MODULUS 4, REMAINDER 2);
+CREATE TABLE orders_p4 PARTITION OF orders
+ FOR VALUES WITH (MODULUS 4, REMAINDER 3);
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a default partition:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE cities_partdef
+ PARTITION OF cities DEFAULT;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createtable-compatibility" xreflabel="Compatibility">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>CREATE TABLE</command> command conforms to the
+ <acronym>SQL</acronym> standard, with exceptions listed below.
+ </para>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Temporary Tables</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Although the syntax of <literal>CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE</literal>
+ resembles that of the SQL standard, the effect is not the same. In the
+ standard,
+ temporary tables are defined just once and automatically exist (starting
+ with empty contents) in every session that needs them.
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> instead
+ requires each session to issue its own <literal>CREATE TEMPORARY
+ TABLE</literal> command for each temporary table to be used. This allows
+ different sessions to use the same temporary table name for different
+ purposes, whereas the standard's approach constrains all instances of a
+ given temporary table name to have the same table structure.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The standard's definition of the behavior of temporary tables is
+ widely ignored. <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s behavior
+ on this point is similar to that of several other SQL databases.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The SQL standard also distinguishes between global and local temporary
+ tables, where a local temporary table has a separate set of contents for
+ each SQL module within each session, though its definition is still shared
+ across sessions. Since <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> does not
+ support SQL modules, this distinction is not relevant in
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For compatibility's sake, <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> will
+ accept the <literal>GLOBAL</literal> and <literal>LOCAL</literal> keywords
+ in a temporary table declaration, but they currently have no effect.
+ Use of these keywords is discouraged, since future versions of
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> might adopt a more
+ standard-compliant interpretation of their meaning.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>ON COMMIT</literal> clause for temporary tables
+ also resembles the SQL standard, but has some differences.
+ If the <literal>ON COMMIT</literal> clause is omitted, SQL specifies that the
+ default behavior is <literal>ON COMMIT DELETE ROWS</literal>. However, the
+ default behavior in <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> is
+ <literal>ON COMMIT PRESERVE ROWS</literal>. The <literal>ON COMMIT
+ DROP</literal> option does not exist in SQL.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Non-Deferred Uniqueness Constraints</title>
+
+ <para>
+ When a <literal>UNIQUE</literal> or <literal>PRIMARY KEY</literal> constraint is
+ not deferrable, <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> checks for
+ uniqueness immediately whenever a row is inserted or modified.
+ The SQL standard says that uniqueness should be enforced only at
+ the end of the statement; this makes a difference when, for example,
+ a single command updates multiple key values. To obtain
+ standard-compliant behavior, declare the constraint as
+ <literal>DEFERRABLE</literal> but not deferred (i.e., <literal>INITIALLY
+ IMMEDIATE</literal>). Be aware that this can be significantly slower than
+ immediate uniqueness checking.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Column Check Constraints</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The SQL standard says that <literal>CHECK</literal> column constraints
+ can only refer to the column they apply to; only <literal>CHECK</literal>
+ table constraints can refer to multiple columns.
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> does not enforce this
+ restriction; it treats column and table check constraints alike.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title><literal>EXCLUDE</literal> Constraint</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>EXCLUDE</literal> constraint type is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title><literal>NULL</literal> <quote>Constraint</quote></title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>NULL</literal> <quote>constraint</quote> (actually a
+ non-constraint) is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension to the SQL standard that is included for compatibility with some
+ other database systems (and for symmetry with the <literal>NOT
+ NULL</literal> constraint). Since it is the default for any
+ column, its presence is simply noise.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Constraint Naming</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The SQL standard says that table and domain constraints must have names
+ that are unique across the schema containing the table or domain.
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> is laxer: it only requires
+ constraint names to be unique across the constraints attached to a
+ particular table or domain. However, this extra freedom does not exist
+ for index-based constraints (<literal>UNIQUE</literal>,
+ <literal>PRIMARY KEY</literal>, and <literal>EXCLUDE</literal>
+ constraints), because the associated index is named the same as the
+ constraint, and index names must be unique across all relations within
+ the same schema.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Currently, <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> does not record names
+ for <literal>NOT NULL</literal> constraints at all, so they are not
+ subject to the uniqueness restriction. This might change in a future
+ release.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Inheritance</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Multiple inheritance via the <literal>INHERITS</literal> clause is
+ a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> language extension.
+ SQL:1999 and later define single inheritance using a
+ different syntax and different semantics. SQL:1999-style
+ inheritance is not yet supported by
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Zero-Column Tables</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> allows a table of no columns
+ to be created (for example, <literal>CREATE TABLE foo();</literal>). This
+ is an extension from the SQL standard, which does not allow zero-column
+ tables. Zero-column tables are not in themselves very useful, but
+ disallowing them creates odd special cases for <command>ALTER TABLE
+ DROP COLUMN</command>, so it seems cleaner to ignore this spec restriction.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Multiple Identity Columns</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> allows a table to have more than one
+ identity column. The standard specifies that a table can have at most one
+ identity column. This is relaxed mainly to give more flexibility for
+ doing schema changes or migrations. Note that
+ the <command>INSERT</command> command supports only one override clause
+ that applies to the entire statement, so having multiple identity columns
+ with different behaviors is not well supported.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Generated Columns</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The option <literal>STORED</literal> is not standard but is also used by
+ other SQL implementations. The SQL standard does not specify the storage
+ of generated columns.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title><literal>LIKE</literal> Clause</title>
+
+ <para>
+ While a <literal>LIKE</literal> clause exists in the SQL standard, many of the
+ options that <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> accepts for it are not
+ in the standard, and some of the standard's options are not implemented
+ by <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title><literal>WITH</literal> Clause</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>WITH</literal> clause is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension; storage parameters are not in the standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Tablespaces</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> concept of tablespaces is not
+ part of the standard. Hence, the clauses <literal>TABLESPACE</literal>
+ and <literal>USING INDEX TABLESPACE</literal> are extensions.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Typed Tables</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Typed tables implement a subset of the SQL standard. According to
+ the standard, a typed table has columns corresponding to the
+ underlying composite type as well as one other column that is
+ the <quote>self-referencing column</quote>.
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> does not support self-referencing
+ columns explicitly.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title><literal>PARTITION BY</literal> Clause</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>PARTITION BY</literal> clause is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title><literal>PARTITION OF</literal> Clause</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>PARTITION OF</literal> clause is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altertable"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droptable"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createtableas"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createtablespace"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createtype"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_table_as.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_table_as.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..07558ab
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_table_as.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,363 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_table_as.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createtableas">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createtableas">
+ <primary>CREATE TABLE AS</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE TABLE AS</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE TABLE AS</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new table from the results of a query</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE [ [ GLOBAL | LOCAL ] { TEMPORARY | TEMP } | UNLOGGED ] TABLE [ IF NOT EXISTS ] <replaceable>table_name</replaceable>
+ [ (<replaceable>column_name</replaceable> [, ...] ) ]
+ [ USING <replaceable class="parameter">method</replaceable> ]
+ [ WITH ( <replaceable class="parameter">storage_parameter</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>] [, ... ] ) | WITHOUT OIDS ]
+ [ ON COMMIT { PRESERVE ROWS | DELETE ROWS | DROP } ]
+ [ TABLESPACE <replaceable class="parameter">tablespace_name</replaceable> ]
+ AS <replaceable>query</replaceable>
+ [ WITH [ NO ] DATA ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE TABLE AS</command> creates a table and fills it
+ with data computed by a <command>SELECT</command> command.
+ The table columns have the
+ names and data types associated with the output columns of the
+ <command>SELECT</command> (except that you can override the column
+ names by giving an explicit list of new column names).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE TABLE AS</command> bears some resemblance to
+ creating a view, but it is really quite different: it creates a new
+ table and evaluates the query just once to fill the new table
+ initially. The new table will not track subsequent changes to the
+ source tables of the query. In contrast, a view re-evaluates its
+ defining <command>SELECT</command> statement whenever it is
+ queried.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE TABLE AS</command> requires <literal>CREATE</literal>
+ privilege on the schema used for the table.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>GLOBAL</literal> or <literal>LOCAL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Ignored for compatibility. Use of these keywords is deprecated;
+ refer to <xref linkend="sql-createtable"/> for details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>TEMPORARY</literal> or <literal>TEMP</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If specified, the table is created as a temporary table.
+ Refer to <xref linkend="sql-createtable"/> for details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>UNLOGGED</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If specified, the table is created as an unlogged table.
+ Refer to <xref linkend="sql-createtable"/> for details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF NOT EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if a relation with the same name already exists.
+ A notice is issued in this case. Refer to <xref linkend="sql-createtable"/>
+ for details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>table_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the table to be created.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>column_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a column in the new table. If column names are not
+ provided, they are taken from the output column names of the query.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>USING <replaceable class="parameter">method</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This optional clause specifies the table access method to use to store
+ the contents for the new table; the method needs be an access method of
+ type <literal>TABLE</literal>. See <xref linkend="tableam"/> for more
+ information. If this option is not specified, the default table access
+ method is chosen for the new table. See <xref
+ linkend="guc-default-table-access-method"/> for more information.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>WITH ( <replaceable class="parameter">storage_parameter</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>] [, ... ] )</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This clause specifies optional storage parameters for the new table;
+ see <xref linkend="sql-createtable-storage-parameters"/> in the
+ <xref linkend="sql-createtable"/> documentation for more
+ information. For backward-compatibility the <literal>WITH</literal>
+ clause for a table can also include <literal>OIDS=FALSE</literal> to
+ specify that rows of the new table should contain no OIDs (object
+ identifiers), <literal>OIDS=TRUE</literal> is not supported anymore.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>WITHOUT OIDS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This is backward-compatible syntax for declaring a table
+ <literal>WITHOUT OIDS</literal>, creating a table <literal>WITH
+ OIDS</literal> is not supported anymore.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ON COMMIT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The behavior of temporary tables at the end of a transaction
+ block can be controlled using <literal>ON COMMIT</literal>.
+ The three options are:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>PRESERVE ROWS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ No special action is taken at the ends of transactions.
+ This is the default behavior.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DELETE ROWS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ All rows in the temporary table will be deleted at the end
+ of each transaction block. Essentially, an automatic <link
+ linkend="sql-truncate"><command>TRUNCATE</command></link> is done
+ at each commit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DROP</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The temporary table will be dropped at the end of the current
+ transaction block.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist></para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>TABLESPACE <replaceable class="parameter">tablespace_name</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <replaceable class="parameter">tablespace_name</replaceable> is the name
+ of the tablespace in which the new table is to be created.
+ If not specified,
+ <xref linkend="guc-default-tablespace"/> is consulted, or
+ <xref linkend="guc-temp-tablespaces"/> if the table is temporary.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>query</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A <link linkend="sql-select"><command>SELECT</command></link>, <link
+ linkend="sql-table"><command>TABLE</command></link>, or <link linkend="sql-values"><command>VALUES</command></link>
+ command, or an <link linkend="sql-execute"><command>EXECUTE</command></link> command that runs a
+ prepared <command>SELECT</command>, <command>TABLE</command>, or
+ <command>VALUES</command> query.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>WITH [ NO ] DATA</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This clause specifies whether or not the data produced by the query
+ should be copied into the new table. If not, only the table structure
+ is copied. The default is to copy the data.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This command is functionally similar to <xref
+ linkend="sql-selectinto"/>, but it is
+ preferred since it is less likely to be confused with other uses of
+ the <command>SELECT INTO</command> syntax. Furthermore, <command>CREATE
+ TABLE AS</command> offers a superset of the functionality offered
+ by <command>SELECT INTO</command>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a new table <literal>films_recent</literal> consisting of only
+ recent entries from the table <literal>films</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE films_recent AS
+ SELECT * FROM films WHERE date_prod &gt;= '2002-01-01';
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To copy a table completely, the short form using
+ the <literal>TABLE</literal> command can also be used:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLE films2 AS
+ TABLE films;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a new temporary table <literal>films_recent</literal>, consisting of
+ only recent entries from the table <literal>films</literal>, using a
+ prepared statement. The new table will be dropped at commit:
+
+<programlisting>
+PREPARE recentfilms(date) AS
+ SELECT * FROM films WHERE date_prod &gt; $1;
+CREATE TEMP TABLE films_recent ON COMMIT DROP AS
+ EXECUTE recentfilms('2002-01-01');
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE TABLE AS</command> conforms to the <acronym>SQL</acronym>
+ standard. The following are nonstandard extensions:
+
+ <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The standard requires parentheses around the subquery clause; in
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>, these parentheses are
+ optional.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ In the standard, the <literal>WITH [ NO ] DATA</literal> clause
+ is required; in PostgreSQL it is optional.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para><productname>PostgreSQL</productname> handles temporary tables in a way
+ rather different from the standard; see
+ <xref linkend="sql-createtable"/>
+ for details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>WITH</literal> clause is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension; storage parameters are not in the standard.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> concept of tablespaces is not
+ part of the standard. Hence, the clause <literal>TABLESPACE</literal>
+ is an extension.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-creatematerializedview"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createtable"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-execute"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-select"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-selectinto"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-values"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_tablespace.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_tablespace.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..84fa7ee
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_tablespace.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,187 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_tablespace.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createtablespace">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createtablespace">
+ <primary>CREATE TABLESPACE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE TABLESPACE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE TABLESPACE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new tablespace</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE TABLESPACE <replaceable class="parameter">tablespace_name</replaceable>
+ [ OWNER { <replaceable>new_owner</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER } ]
+ LOCATION '<replaceable class="parameter">directory</replaceable>'
+ [ WITH ( <replaceable class="parameter">tablespace_option</replaceable> = <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> [, ... ] ) ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE TABLESPACE</command> registers a new cluster-wide
+ tablespace. The tablespace name must be distinct from the name of any
+ existing tablespace in the database cluster.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A tablespace allows superusers to define an alternative location on
+ the file system where the data files containing database objects
+ (such as tables and indexes) can reside.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A user with appropriate privileges can pass
+ <replaceable class="parameter">tablespace_name</replaceable> to
+ <command>CREATE DATABASE</command>, <command>CREATE TABLE</command>,
+ <command>CREATE INDEX</command> or <command>ADD CONSTRAINT</command> to have the data
+ files for these objects stored within the specified tablespace.
+ </para>
+
+ <warning>
+ <para>
+ A tablespace cannot be used independently of the cluster in which it
+ is defined; see <xref linkend="manage-ag-tablespaces"/>.
+ </para>
+ </warning>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">tablespace_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a tablespace to be created. The name cannot
+ begin with <literal>pg_</literal>, as such names
+ are reserved for system tablespaces.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">user_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the user who will own the tablespace. If omitted,
+ defaults to the user executing the command. Only superusers
+ can create tablespaces, but they can assign ownership of tablespaces
+ to non-superusers.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">directory</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The directory that will be used for the tablespace. The directory
+ must exist (<command>CREATE TABLESPACE</command> will not create it),
+ should be empty, and must be owned by the
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> system user. The directory must be
+ specified by an absolute path name.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">tablespace_option</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A tablespace parameter to be set or reset. Currently, the only
+ available parameters are <varname>seq_page_cost</varname>,
+ <varname>random_page_cost</varname>, <varname>effective_io_concurrency</varname>
+ and <varname>maintenance_io_concurrency</varname>.
+ Setting these values for a particular tablespace will override the
+ planner's usual estimate of the cost of reading pages from tables in
+ that tablespace, and the executor's prefetching behavior, as established
+ by the configuration parameters of the
+ same name (see <xref linkend="guc-seq-page-cost"/>,
+ <xref linkend="guc-random-page-cost"/>,
+ <xref linkend="guc-effective-io-concurrency"/>,
+ <xref linkend="guc-maintenance-io-concurrency"/>). This may be useful if
+ one tablespace is located on a disk which is faster or slower than the
+ remainder of the I/O subsystem.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Tablespaces are only supported on systems that support symbolic links.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE TABLESPACE</command> cannot be executed inside a transaction
+ block.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To create a tablespace <literal>dbspace</literal> at file system location
+ <literal>/data/dbs</literal>, first create the directory using operating
+ system facilities and set the correct ownership:
+<programlisting>
+mkdir /data/dbs
+chown postgres:postgres /data/dbs
+</programlisting>
+ Then issue the tablespace creation command inside
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLESPACE dbspace LOCATION '/data/dbs';
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To create a tablespace owned by a different database user, use a command
+ like this:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TABLESPACE indexspace OWNER genevieve LOCATION '/data/indexes';
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE TABLESPACE</command> is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createdatabase"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createtable"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createindex"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droptablespace"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altertablespace"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_transform.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_transform.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3f81dc6
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_transform.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,214 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_transform.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createtransform">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createtransform">
+ <primary>CREATE TRANSFORM</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE TRANSFORM</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE TRANSFORM</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new transform</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE [ OR REPLACE ] TRANSFORM FOR <replaceable>type_name</replaceable> LANGUAGE <replaceable>lang_name</replaceable> (
+ FROM SQL WITH FUNCTION <replaceable>from_sql_function_name</replaceable> [ (<replaceable>argument_type</replaceable> [, ...]) ],
+ TO SQL WITH FUNCTION <replaceable>to_sql_function_name</replaceable> [ (<replaceable>argument_type</replaceable> [, ...]) ]
+);
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createtransform-description">
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE TRANSFORM</command> defines a new transform.
+ <command>CREATE OR REPLACE TRANSFORM</command> will either create a new
+ transform, or replace an existing definition.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A transform specifies how to adapt a data type to a procedural language.
+ For example, when writing a function in PL/Python using
+ the <type>hstore</type> type, PL/Python has no prior knowledge how to
+ present <type>hstore</type> values in the Python environment. Language
+ implementations usually default to using the text representation, but that
+ is inconvenient when, for example, an associative array or a list would be
+ more appropriate.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A transform specifies two functions:
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A <quote>from SQL</quote> function that converts the type from the SQL
+ environment to the language. This function will be invoked on the
+ arguments of a function written in the language.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A <quote>to SQL</quote> function that converts the type from the
+ language to the SQL environment. This function will be invoked on the
+ return value of a function written in the language.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+ It is not necessary to provide both of these functions. If one is not
+ specified, the language-specific default behavior will be used if
+ necessary. (To prevent a transformation in a certain direction from
+ happening at all, you could also write a transform function that always
+ errors out.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To be able to create a transform, you must own and
+ have <literal>USAGE</literal> privilege on the type, have
+ <literal>USAGE</literal> privilege on the language, and own and
+ have <literal>EXECUTE</literal> privilege on the from-SQL and to-SQL
+ functions, if specified.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>type_name</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the data type of the transform.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>lang_name</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the language of the transform.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal><replaceable>from_sql_function_name</replaceable>[(<replaceable>argument_type</replaceable> [, ...])]</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the function for converting the type from the SQL
+ environment to the language. It must take one argument of
+ type <type>internal</type> and return type <type>internal</type>. The
+ actual argument will be of the type for the transform, and the function
+ should be coded as if it were. (But it is not allowed to declare an
+ SQL-level function returning <type>internal</type> without at
+ least one argument of type <type>internal</type>.) The actual return
+ value will be something specific to the language implementation.
+ If no argument list is specified, the function name must be unique in
+ its schema.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal><replaceable>to_sql_function_name</replaceable>[(<replaceable>argument_type</replaceable> [, ...])]</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the function for converting the type from the language to
+ the SQL environment. It must take one argument of type
+ <type>internal</type> and return the type that is the type for the
+ transform. The actual argument value will be something specific to the
+ language implementation.
+ If no argument list is specified, the function name must be unique in
+ its schema.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createtransform-notes">
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Use <link linkend="sql-droptransform"><command>DROP TRANSFORM</command></link> to remove transforms.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createtransform-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To create a transform for type <type>hstore</type> and language
+ <literal>plpythonu</literal>, first set up the type and the language:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TYPE hstore ...;
+
+CREATE EXTENSION plpythonu;
+</programlisting>
+ Then create the necessary functions:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE FUNCTION hstore_to_plpython(val internal) RETURNS internal
+LANGUAGE C STRICT IMMUTABLE
+AS ...;
+
+CREATE FUNCTION plpython_to_hstore(val internal) RETURNS hstore
+LANGUAGE C STRICT IMMUTABLE
+AS ...;
+</programlisting>
+ And finally create the transform to connect them all together:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TRANSFORM FOR hstore LANGUAGE plpythonu (
+ FROM SQL WITH FUNCTION hstore_to_plpython(internal),
+ TO SQL WITH FUNCTION plpython_to_hstore(internal)
+);
+</programlisting>
+ In practice, these commands would be wrapped up in an extension.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <filename>contrib</filename> section contains a number of extensions
+ that provide transforms, which can serve as real-world examples.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createtransform-compat">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This form of <command>CREATE TRANSFORM</command> is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension. There is a <command>CREATE
+ TRANSFORM</command> command in the <acronym>SQL</acronym> standard, but it
+ is for adapting data types to client languages. That usage is not supported
+ by <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createtransform-seealso">
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <xref linkend="sql-createfunction"/>,
+ <xref linkend="sql-createlanguage"/>,
+ <xref linkend="sql-createtype"/>,
+ <xref linkend="sql-droptransform"/>
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_trigger.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_trigger.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e4afa1c
--- /dev/null
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+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_trigger.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createtrigger">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createtrigger">
+ <primary>CREATE TRIGGER</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary>transition tables</primary>
+ <seealso>ephemeral named relation</seealso>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE TRIGGER</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE TRIGGER</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new trigger</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE [ OR REPLACE ] [ CONSTRAINT ] TRIGGER <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> { BEFORE | AFTER | INSTEAD OF } { <replaceable class="parameter">event</replaceable> [ OR ... ] }
+ ON <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable>
+ [ FROM <replaceable class="parameter">referenced_table_name</replaceable> ]
+ [ NOT DEFERRABLE | [ DEFERRABLE ] [ INITIALLY IMMEDIATE | INITIALLY DEFERRED ] ]
+ [ REFERENCING { { OLD | NEW } TABLE [ AS ] <replaceable class="parameter">transition_relation_name</replaceable> } [ ... ] ]
+ [ FOR [ EACH ] { ROW | STATEMENT } ]
+ [ WHEN ( <replaceable class="parameter">condition</replaceable> ) ]
+ EXECUTE { FUNCTION | PROCEDURE } <replaceable class="parameter">function_name</replaceable> ( <replaceable class="parameter">arguments</replaceable> )
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">event</replaceable> can be one of:</phrase>
+
+ INSERT
+ UPDATE [ OF <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ... ] ]
+ DELETE
+ TRUNCATE
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE TRIGGER</command> creates a new trigger.
+ <command>CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER</command> will either create a
+ new trigger, or replace an existing trigger. The
+ trigger will be associated with the specified table, view, or foreign table
+ and will execute the specified
+ function <replaceable class="parameter">function_name</replaceable> when
+ certain operations are performed on that table.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To replace the current definition of an existing trigger, use
+ <command>CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER</command>, specifying the existing
+ trigger's name and parent table. All other properties are replaced.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The trigger can be specified to fire before the
+ operation is attempted on a row (before constraints are checked and
+ the <command>INSERT</command>, <command>UPDATE</command>, or
+ <command>DELETE</command> is attempted); or after the operation has
+ completed (after constraints are checked and the
+ <command>INSERT</command>, <command>UPDATE</command>, or
+ <command>DELETE</command> has completed); or instead of the operation
+ (in the case of inserts, updates or deletes on a view).
+ If the trigger fires before or instead of the event, the trigger can skip
+ the operation for the current row, or change the row being inserted (for
+ <command>INSERT</command> and <command>UPDATE</command> operations
+ only). If the trigger fires after the event, all changes, including
+ the effects of other triggers, are <quote>visible</quote>
+ to the trigger.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A trigger that is marked <literal>FOR EACH ROW</literal> is called
+ once for every row that the operation modifies. For example, a
+ <command>DELETE</command> that affects 10 rows will cause any
+ <literal>ON DELETE</literal> triggers on the target relation to be
+ called 10 separate times, once for each deleted row. In contrast, a
+ trigger that is marked <literal>FOR EACH STATEMENT</literal> only
+ executes once for any given operation, regardless of how many rows
+ it modifies (in particular, an operation that modifies zero rows
+ will still result in the execution of any applicable <literal>FOR
+ EACH STATEMENT</literal> triggers).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Triggers that are specified to fire <literal>INSTEAD OF</literal> the trigger
+ event must be marked <literal>FOR EACH ROW</literal>, and can only be defined
+ on views. <literal>BEFORE</literal> and <literal>AFTER</literal> triggers on a view
+ must be marked as <literal>FOR EACH STATEMENT</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In addition, triggers may be defined to fire for
+ <command>TRUNCATE</command>, though only
+ <literal>FOR EACH STATEMENT</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The following table summarizes which types of triggers may be used on
+ tables, views, and foreign tables:
+ </para>
+
+ <informaltable id="supported-trigger-types">
+ <tgroup cols="4">
+ <thead>
+ <row>
+ <entry>When</entry>
+ <entry>Event</entry>
+ <entry>Row-level</entry>
+ <entry>Statement-level</entry>
+ </row>
+ </thead>
+ <tbody>
+ <row>
+ <entry align="center" morerows="1"><literal>BEFORE</literal></entry>
+ <entry align="center"><command>INSERT</command>/<command>UPDATE</command>/<command>DELETE</command></entry>
+ <entry align="center">Tables and foreign tables</entry>
+ <entry align="center">Tables, views, and foreign tables</entry>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <entry align="center"><command>TRUNCATE</command></entry>
+ <entry align="center">&mdash;</entry>
+ <entry align="center">Tables</entry>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <entry align="center" morerows="1"><literal>AFTER</literal></entry>
+ <entry align="center"><command>INSERT</command>/<command>UPDATE</command>/<command>DELETE</command></entry>
+ <entry align="center">Tables and foreign tables</entry>
+ <entry align="center">Tables, views, and foreign tables</entry>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <entry align="center"><command>TRUNCATE</command></entry>
+ <entry align="center">&mdash;</entry>
+ <entry align="center">Tables</entry>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <entry align="center" morerows="1"><literal>INSTEAD OF</literal></entry>
+ <entry align="center"><command>INSERT</command>/<command>UPDATE</command>/<command>DELETE</command></entry>
+ <entry align="center">Views</entry>
+ <entry align="center">&mdash;</entry>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <entry align="center"><command>TRUNCATE</command></entry>
+ <entry align="center">&mdash;</entry>
+ <entry align="center">&mdash;</entry>
+ </row>
+ </tbody>
+ </tgroup>
+ </informaltable>
+
+ <para>
+ Also, a trigger definition can specify a Boolean <literal>WHEN</literal>
+ condition, which will be tested to see whether the trigger should
+ be fired. In row-level triggers the <literal>WHEN</literal> condition can
+ examine the old and/or new values of columns of the row. Statement-level
+ triggers can also have <literal>WHEN</literal> conditions, although the feature
+ is not so useful for them since the condition cannot refer to any values
+ in the table.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If multiple triggers of the same kind are defined for the same event,
+ they will be fired in alphabetical order by name.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary>trigger</primary>
+ <secondary>constraint trigger</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+ When the <literal>CONSTRAINT</literal> option is specified, this command creates a
+ <firstterm>constraint trigger</firstterm>. This is the same as a regular trigger
+ except that the timing of the trigger firing can be adjusted using
+ <link linkend="sql-set-constraints"><command>SET CONSTRAINTS</command></link>.
+ Constraint triggers must be <literal>AFTER ROW</literal> triggers on plain
+ tables (not foreign tables). They
+ can be fired either at the end of the statement causing the triggering
+ event, or at the end of the containing transaction; in the latter case they
+ are said to be <firstterm>deferred</firstterm>. A pending deferred-trigger firing
+ can also be forced to happen immediately by using <command>SET
+ CONSTRAINTS</command>. Constraint triggers are expected to raise an exception
+ when the constraints they implement are violated.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>REFERENCING</literal> option enables collection
+ of <firstterm>transition relations</firstterm>, which are row sets that include all
+ of the rows inserted, deleted, or modified by the current SQL statement.
+ This feature lets the trigger see a global view of what the statement did,
+ not just one row at a time. This option is only allowed for
+ an <literal>AFTER</literal> trigger that is not a constraint trigger; also, if
+ the trigger is an <literal>UPDATE</literal> trigger, it must not specify
+ a <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> list.
+ <literal>OLD TABLE</literal> may only be specified once, and only for a trigger
+ that can fire on <literal>UPDATE</literal> or <literal>DELETE</literal>; it creates a
+ transition relation containing the <firstterm>before-images</firstterm> of all rows
+ updated or deleted by the statement.
+ Similarly, <literal>NEW TABLE</literal> may only be specified once, and only for
+ a trigger that can fire on <literal>UPDATE</literal> or <literal>INSERT</literal>;
+ it creates a transition relation containing the <firstterm>after-images</firstterm>
+ of all rows updated or inserted by the statement.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>SELECT</command> does not modify any rows so you cannot
+ create <command>SELECT</command> triggers. Rules and views may provide
+ workable solutions to problems that seem to need <command>SELECT</command>
+ triggers.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Refer to <xref linkend="triggers"/> for more information about triggers.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name to give the new trigger. This must be distinct from
+ the name of any other trigger for the same table.
+ The name cannot be schema-qualified &mdash; the trigger inherits the
+ schema of its table. For a constraint trigger, this is also the name to
+ use when modifying the trigger's behavior using
+ <command>SET CONSTRAINTS</command>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>BEFORE</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>AFTER</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>INSTEAD OF</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Determines whether the function is called before, after, or instead of
+ the event. A constraint trigger can only be specified as
+ <literal>AFTER</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">event</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ One of <literal>INSERT</literal>, <literal>UPDATE</literal>,
+ <literal>DELETE</literal>, or <literal>TRUNCATE</literal>;
+ this specifies the event that will fire the trigger. Multiple
+ events can be specified using <literal>OR</literal>, except when
+ transition relations are requested.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For <literal>UPDATE</literal> events, it is possible to
+ specify a list of columns using this syntax:
+<synopsis>
+UPDATE OF <replaceable>column_name1</replaceable> [, <replaceable>column_name2</replaceable> ... ]
+</synopsis>
+ The trigger will only fire if at least one of the listed columns
+ is mentioned as a target of the <command>UPDATE</command> command
+ or if one of the listed columns is a generated column that depends on a
+ column that is the target of the <command>UPDATE</command>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <literal>INSTEAD OF UPDATE</literal> events do not allow a list of columns.
+ A column list cannot be specified when requesting transition relations,
+ either.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the table, view, or foreign
+ table the trigger is for.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">referenced_table_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The (possibly schema-qualified) name of another table referenced by the
+ constraint. This option is used for foreign-key constraints and is not
+ recommended for general use. This can only be specified for
+ constraint triggers.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DEFERRABLE</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>NOT DEFERRABLE</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>INITIALLY IMMEDIATE</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>INITIALLY DEFERRED</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The default timing of the trigger.
+ See the <xref linkend="sql-createtable"/> documentation for details of
+ these constraint options. This can only be specified for constraint
+ triggers.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>REFERENCING</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This keyword immediately precedes the declaration of one or two
+ relation names that provide access to the transition relations of the
+ triggering statement.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>OLD TABLE</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>NEW TABLE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This clause indicates whether the following relation name is for the
+ before-image transition relation or the after-image transition
+ relation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">transition_relation_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The (unqualified) name to be used within the trigger for this
+ transition relation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>FOR EACH ROW</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>FOR EACH STATEMENT</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This specifies whether the trigger function should be fired
+ once for every row affected by the trigger event, or just once
+ per SQL statement. If neither is specified, <literal>FOR EACH
+ STATEMENT</literal> is the default. Constraint triggers can only
+ be specified <literal>FOR EACH ROW</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">condition</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A Boolean expression that determines whether the trigger function
+ will actually be executed. If <literal>WHEN</literal> is specified, the
+ function will only be called if the <replaceable
+ class="parameter">condition</replaceable> returns <literal>true</literal>.
+ In <literal>FOR EACH ROW</literal> triggers, the <literal>WHEN</literal>
+ condition can refer to columns of the old and/or new row values
+ by writing <literal>OLD.<replaceable
+ class="parameter">column_name</replaceable></literal> or
+ <literal>NEW.<replaceable
+ class="parameter">column_name</replaceable></literal> respectively.
+ Of course, <literal>INSERT</literal> triggers cannot refer to <literal>OLD</literal>
+ and <literal>DELETE</literal> triggers cannot refer to <literal>NEW</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para><literal>INSTEAD OF</literal> triggers do not support <literal>WHEN</literal>
+ conditions.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Currently, <literal>WHEN</literal> expressions cannot contain
+ subqueries.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Note that for constraint triggers, evaluation of the <literal>WHEN</literal>
+ condition is not deferred, but occurs immediately after the row update
+ operation is performed. If the condition does not evaluate to true then
+ the trigger is not queued for deferred execution.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">function_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A user-supplied function that is declared as taking no arguments
+ and returning type <literal>trigger</literal>, which is executed when
+ the trigger fires.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In the syntax of <literal>CREATE TRIGGER</literal>, the keywords
+ <literal>FUNCTION</literal> and <literal>PROCEDURE</literal> are
+ equivalent, but the referenced function must in any case be a function,
+ not a procedure. The use of the keyword <literal>PROCEDURE</literal>
+ here is historical and deprecated.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">arguments</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An optional comma-separated list of arguments to be provided to
+ the function when the trigger is executed. The arguments are
+ literal string constants. Simple names and numeric constants
+ can be written here, too, but they will all be converted to
+ strings. Please check the description of the implementation
+ language of the trigger function to find out how these arguments
+ can be accessed within the function; it might be different from
+ normal function arguments.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createtrigger-notes">
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To create or replace a trigger on a table, the user must have the
+ <literal>TRIGGER</literal> privilege on the table. The user must
+ also have <literal>EXECUTE</literal> privilege on the trigger function.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Use <link linkend="sql-droptrigger"><command>DROP TRIGGER</command></link> to remove a trigger.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Creating a row-level trigger on a partitioned table will cause an
+ identical <quote>clone</quote> trigger to be created on each of its
+ existing partitions; and any partitions created or attached later will have
+ an identical trigger, too. If there is a conflictingly-named trigger on a
+ child partition already, an error occurs unless <command>CREATE OR REPLACE
+ TRIGGER</command> is used, in which case that trigger is replaced with a
+ clone trigger. When a partition is detached from its parent, its clone
+ triggers are removed.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A column-specific trigger (one defined using the <literal>UPDATE OF
+ <replaceable>column_name</replaceable></literal> syntax) will fire when any
+ of its columns are listed as targets in the <command>UPDATE</command>
+ command's <literal>SET</literal> list. It is possible for a column's value
+ to change even when the trigger is not fired, because changes made to the
+ row's contents by <literal>BEFORE UPDATE</literal> triggers are not considered.
+ Conversely, a command such as <literal>UPDATE ... SET x = x ...</literal>
+ will fire a trigger on column <literal>x</literal>, even though the column's
+ value did not change.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In a <literal>BEFORE</literal> trigger, the <literal>WHEN</literal> condition is
+ evaluated just before the function is or would be executed, so using
+ <literal>WHEN</literal> is not materially different from testing the same
+ condition at the beginning of the trigger function. Note in particular
+ that the <literal>NEW</literal> row seen by the condition is the current value,
+ as possibly modified by earlier triggers. Also, a <literal>BEFORE</literal>
+ trigger's <literal>WHEN</literal> condition is not allowed to examine the
+ system columns of the <literal>NEW</literal> row (such as <literal>ctid</literal>),
+ because those won't have been set yet.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In an <literal>AFTER</literal> trigger, the <literal>WHEN</literal> condition is
+ evaluated just after the row update occurs, and it determines whether an
+ event is queued to fire the trigger at the end of statement. So when an
+ <literal>AFTER</literal> trigger's <literal>WHEN</literal> condition does not return
+ true, it is not necessary to queue an event nor to re-fetch the row at end
+ of statement. This can result in significant speedups in statements that
+ modify many rows, if the trigger only needs to be fired for a few of the
+ rows.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In some cases it is possible for a single SQL command to fire more than
+ one kind of trigger. For instance an <command>INSERT</command> with
+ an <literal>ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE</literal> clause may cause both insert and
+ update operations, so it will fire both kinds of triggers as needed.
+ The transition relations supplied to triggers are
+ specific to their event type; thus an <command>INSERT</command> trigger
+ will see only the inserted rows, while an <command>UPDATE</command>
+ trigger will see only the updated rows.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Row updates or deletions caused by foreign-key enforcement actions, such
+ as <literal>ON UPDATE CASCADE</literal> or <literal>ON DELETE SET NULL</literal>, are
+ treated as part of the SQL command that caused them (note that such
+ actions are never deferred). Relevant triggers on the affected table will
+ be fired, so that this provides another way in which an SQL command might
+ fire triggers not directly matching its type. In simple cases, triggers
+ that request transition relations will see all changes caused in their
+ table by a single original SQL command as a single transition relation.
+ However, there are cases in which the presence of an <literal>AFTER ROW</literal>
+ trigger that requests transition relations will cause the foreign-key
+ enforcement actions triggered by a single SQL command to be split into
+ multiple steps, each with its own transition relation(s). In such cases,
+ any statement-level triggers that are present will be fired once per
+ creation of a transition relation set, ensuring that the triggers see
+ each affected row in a transition relation once and only once.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Statement-level triggers on a view are fired only if the action on the
+ view is handled by a row-level <literal>INSTEAD OF</literal> trigger.
+ If the action is handled by an <literal>INSTEAD</literal> rule, then
+ whatever statements are emitted by the rule are executed in place of the
+ original statement naming the view, so that the triggers that will be
+ fired are those on tables named in the replacement statements.
+ Similarly, if the view is automatically updatable, then the action is
+ handled by automatically rewriting the statement into an action on the
+ view's base table, so that the base table's statement-level triggers are
+ the ones that are fired.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Modifying a partitioned table or a table with inheritance children fires
+ statement-level triggers attached to the explicitly named table, but not
+ statement-level triggers for its partitions or child tables. In contrast,
+ row-level triggers are fired on the rows in affected partitions or
+ child tables, even if they are not explicitly named in the query.
+ If a statement-level trigger has been defined with transition relations
+ named by a <literal>REFERENCING</literal> clause, then before and after
+ images of rows are visible from all affected partitions or child tables.
+ In the case of inheritance children, the row images include only columns
+ that are present in the table that the trigger is attached to.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Currently, row-level triggers with transition relations cannot be defined
+ on partitions or inheritance child tables. Also, triggers on partitioned
+ tables may not be <literal>INSTEAD OF</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Currently, the <literal>OR REPLACE</literal> option is not supported for
+ constraint triggers.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Replacing an existing trigger within a transaction that has already
+ performed updating actions on the trigger's table is not recommended.
+ Trigger firing decisions, or portions of firing decisions, that have
+ already been made will not be reconsidered, so the effects could be
+ surprising.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ There are a few built-in trigger functions that can be used to
+ solve common problems without having to write your own trigger code;
+ see <xref linkend="functions-trigger"/>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createtrigger-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Execute the function <function>check_account_update</function> whenever
+ a row of the table <literal>accounts</literal> is about to be updated:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TRIGGER check_update
+ BEFORE UPDATE ON accounts
+ FOR EACH ROW
+ EXECUTE FUNCTION check_account_update();
+</programlisting>
+
+ Modify that trigger definition to only execute the function if
+ column <literal>balance</literal> is specified as a target in
+ the <command>UPDATE</command> command:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER check_update
+ BEFORE UPDATE OF balance ON accounts
+ FOR EACH ROW
+ EXECUTE FUNCTION check_account_update();
+</programlisting>
+
+ This form only executes the function if column <literal>balance</literal>
+ has in fact changed value:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TRIGGER check_update
+ BEFORE UPDATE ON accounts
+ FOR EACH ROW
+ WHEN (OLD.balance IS DISTINCT FROM NEW.balance)
+ EXECUTE FUNCTION check_account_update();
+</programlisting>
+
+ Call a function to log updates of <literal>accounts</literal>, but only if
+ something changed:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TRIGGER log_update
+ AFTER UPDATE ON accounts
+ FOR EACH ROW
+ WHEN (OLD.* IS DISTINCT FROM NEW.*)
+ EXECUTE FUNCTION log_account_update();
+</programlisting>
+
+ Execute the function <function>view_insert_row</function> for each row to insert
+ rows into the tables underlying a view:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TRIGGER view_insert
+ INSTEAD OF INSERT ON my_view
+ FOR EACH ROW
+ EXECUTE FUNCTION view_insert_row();
+</programlisting>
+
+ Execute the function <function>check_transfer_balances_to_zero</function> for each
+ statement to confirm that the <literal>transfer</literal> rows offset to a net of
+ zero:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TRIGGER transfer_insert
+ AFTER INSERT ON transfer
+ REFERENCING NEW TABLE AS inserted
+ FOR EACH STATEMENT
+ EXECUTE FUNCTION check_transfer_balances_to_zero();
+</programlisting>
+
+ Execute the function <function>check_matching_pairs</function> for each row to
+ confirm that changes are made to matching pairs at the same time (by the
+ same statement):
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TRIGGER paired_items_update
+ AFTER UPDATE ON paired_items
+ REFERENCING NEW TABLE AS newtab OLD TABLE AS oldtab
+ FOR EACH ROW
+ EXECUTE FUNCTION check_matching_pairs();
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <xref linkend="trigger-example"/> contains a complete example of a trigger
+ function written in C.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createtrigger-compatibility">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <!--
+ It's not clear whether SQL/MED contemplates triggers on foreign tables.
+ Its <drop basic column definition> General Rules do mention the possibility
+ of a reference from a trigger column list. On the other hand, nothing
+ overrides the fact that CREATE TRIGGER only targets base tables. For now,
+ do not document the compatibility status of triggers on foreign tables.
+ -->
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>CREATE TRIGGER</command> statement in
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> implements a subset of the
+ <acronym>SQL</acronym> standard. The following functionalities are currently
+ missing:
+
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ While transition table names for <literal>AFTER</literal> triggers are
+ specified using the <literal>REFERENCING</literal> clause in the standard way,
+ the row variables used in <literal>FOR EACH ROW</literal> triggers may not be
+ specified in a <literal>REFERENCING</literal> clause. They are available in a
+ manner that is dependent on the language in which the trigger function
+ is written, but is fixed for any one language. Some languages
+ effectively behave as though there is a <literal>REFERENCING</literal> clause
+ containing <literal>OLD ROW AS OLD NEW ROW AS NEW</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The standard allows transition tables to be used with
+ column-specific <literal>UPDATE</literal> triggers, but then the set of rows
+ that should be visible in the transition tables depends on the
+ trigger's column list. This is not currently implemented by
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> only allows the execution
+ of a user-defined function for the triggered action. The standard
+ allows the execution of a number of other SQL commands, such as
+ <command>CREATE TABLE</command>, as the triggered action. This
+ limitation is not hard to work around by creating a user-defined
+ function that executes the desired commands.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ </itemizedlist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ SQL specifies that multiple triggers should be fired in
+ time-of-creation order. <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> uses
+ name order, which was judged to be more convenient.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ SQL specifies that <literal>BEFORE DELETE</literal> triggers on cascaded
+ deletes fire <emphasis>after</emphasis> the cascaded <literal>DELETE</literal> completes.
+ The <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> behavior is for <literal>BEFORE
+ DELETE</literal> to always fire before the delete action, even a cascading
+ one. This is considered more consistent. There is also nonstandard
+ behavior if <literal>BEFORE</literal> triggers modify rows or prevent
+ updates during an update that is caused by a referential action. This can
+ lead to constraint violations or stored data that does not honor the
+ referential constraint.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The ability to specify multiple actions for a single trigger using
+ <literal>OR</literal> is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension of
+ the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The ability to fire triggers for <command>TRUNCATE</command> is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension of the SQL standard, as is the
+ ability to define statement-level triggers on views.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE CONSTRAINT TRIGGER</command> is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension of the <acronym>SQL</acronym>
+ standard.
+ So is the <literal>OR REPLACE</literal> option.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altertrigger"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droptrigger"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createfunction"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-set-constraints"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_tsconfig.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_tsconfig.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..390d3cf
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_tsconfig.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,126 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_tsconfig.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createtsconfig">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createtsconfig">
+ <primary>CREATE TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new text search configuration</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> (
+ PARSER = <replaceable class="parameter">parser_name</replaceable> |
+ COPY = <replaceable class="parameter">source_config</replaceable>
+)
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION</command> creates a new text
+ search configuration. A text search configuration specifies a text
+ search parser that can divide a string into tokens, plus dictionaries
+ that can be used to determine which tokens are of interest for searching.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If only the parser is specified, then the new text search configuration
+ initially has no mappings from token types to dictionaries, and therefore
+ will ignore all words. Subsequent <command>ALTER TEXT SEARCH
+ CONFIGURATION</command> commands must be used to create mappings to
+ make the configuration useful. Alternatively, an existing text search
+ configuration can be copied.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a schema name is given then the text search configuration is created in
+ the specified schema. Otherwise it is created in the current schema.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The user who defines a text search configuration becomes its owner.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Refer to <xref linkend="textsearch"/> for further information.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the text search configuration to be created. The name can be
+ schema-qualified.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">parser_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the text search parser to use for this configuration.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">source_config</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an existing text search configuration to copy.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>PARSER</literal> and <literal>COPY</literal> options are mutually
+ exclusive, because when an existing configuration is copied, its
+ parser selection is copied too.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>CREATE TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION</command> statement
+ in the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altertsconfig"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droptsconfig"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_tsdictionary.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_tsdictionary.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0608104
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_tsdictionary.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,141 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_tsdictionary.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createtsdictionary">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createtsdictionary">
+ <primary>CREATE TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new text search dictionary</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> (
+ TEMPLATE = <replaceable class="parameter">template</replaceable>
+ [, <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> = <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> [, ... ]]
+)
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY</command> creates a new text search
+ dictionary. A text search dictionary specifies a way of recognizing
+ interesting or uninteresting words for searching. A dictionary depends
+ on a text search template, which specifies the functions that actually
+ perform the work. Typically the dictionary provides some options that
+ control the detailed behavior of the template's functions.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a schema name is given then the text search dictionary is created in the
+ specified schema. Otherwise it is created in the current schema.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The user who defines a text search dictionary becomes its owner.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Refer to <xref linkend="textsearch"/> for further information.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the text search dictionary to be created. The name can be
+ schema-qualified.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">template</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the text search template that will define the basic
+ behavior of this dictionary.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a template-specific option to be set for this dictionary.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The value to use for a template-specific option. If the value
+ is not a simple identifier or number, it must be quoted (but you can
+ always quote it, if you wish).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ The options can appear in any order.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The following example command creates a Snowball-based dictionary
+ with a nonstandard list of stop words.
+ </para>
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY my_russian (
+ template = snowball,
+ language = russian,
+ stopwords = myrussian
+);
+</programlisting>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>CREATE TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY</command> statement in
+ the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altertsdictionary"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droptsdictionary"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_tsparser.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_tsparser.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..088d923
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_tsparser.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,153 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_tsparser.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createtsparser">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createtsparser">
+ <primary>CREATE TEXT SEARCH PARSER</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE TEXT SEARCH PARSER</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE TEXT SEARCH PARSER</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new text search parser</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE TEXT SEARCH PARSER <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> (
+ START = <replaceable class="parameter">start_function</replaceable> ,
+ GETTOKEN = <replaceable class="parameter">gettoken_function</replaceable> ,
+ END = <replaceable class="parameter">end_function</replaceable> ,
+ LEXTYPES = <replaceable class="parameter">lextypes_function</replaceable>
+ [, HEADLINE = <replaceable class="parameter">headline_function</replaceable> ]
+)
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE TEXT SEARCH PARSER</command> creates a new text search
+ parser. A text search parser defines a method for splitting a text
+ string into tokens and assigning types (categories) to the tokens.
+ A parser is not particularly useful by itself, but must be bound into a
+ text search configuration along with some text search dictionaries
+ to be used for searching.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a schema name is given then the text search parser is created in the
+ specified schema. Otherwise it is created in the current schema.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must be a superuser to use <command>CREATE TEXT SEARCH PARSER</command>.
+ (This restriction is made because an erroneous text search parser
+ definition could confuse or even crash the server.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Refer to <xref linkend="textsearch"/> for further information.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the text search parser to be created. The name can be
+ schema-qualified.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">start_function</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the start function for the parser.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">gettoken_function</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the get-next-token function for the parser.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">end_function</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the end function for the parser.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">lextypes_function</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the lextypes function for the parser (a function that
+ returns information about the set of token types it produces).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">headline_function</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the headline function for the parser (a function that
+ summarizes a set of tokens).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ The function names can be schema-qualified if necessary. Argument types
+ are not given, since the argument list for each type of function is
+ predetermined. All except the headline function are required.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The arguments can appear in any order, not only the one shown above.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no
+ <command>CREATE TEXT SEARCH PARSER</command> statement in the SQL
+ standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altertsparser"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droptsparser"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_tstemplate.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_tstemplate.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5b82d55
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_tstemplate.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,126 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_tstemplate.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createtstemplate">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createtstemplate">
+ <primary>CREATE TEXT SEARCH TEMPLATE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE TEXT SEARCH TEMPLATE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE TEXT SEARCH TEMPLATE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new text search template</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE TEXT SEARCH TEMPLATE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> (
+ [ INIT = <replaceable class="parameter">init_function</replaceable> , ]
+ LEXIZE = <replaceable class="parameter">lexize_function</replaceable>
+)
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE TEXT SEARCH TEMPLATE</command> creates a new text search
+ template. Text search templates define the functions that implement
+ text search dictionaries. A template is not useful by itself, but must
+ be instantiated as a dictionary to be used. The dictionary typically
+ specifies parameters to be given to the template functions.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a schema name is given then the text search template is created in the
+ specified schema. Otherwise it is created in the current schema.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must be a superuser to use <command>CREATE TEXT SEARCH
+ TEMPLATE</command>. This restriction is made because an erroneous text
+ search template definition could confuse or even crash the server.
+ The reason for separating templates from dictionaries is that a template
+ encapsulates the <quote>unsafe</quote> aspects of defining a dictionary.
+ The parameters that can be set when defining a dictionary are safe for
+ unprivileged users to set, and so creating a dictionary need not be a
+ privileged operation.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Refer to <xref linkend="textsearch"/> for further information.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the text search template to be created. The name can be
+ schema-qualified.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">init_function</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the init function for the template.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">lexize_function</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the lexize function for the template.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ The function names can be schema-qualified if necessary. Argument types
+ are not given, since the argument list for each type of function is
+ predetermined. The lexize function is required, but the init function
+ is optional.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The arguments can appear in any order, not only the one shown above.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no
+ <command>CREATE TEXT SEARCH TEMPLATE</command> statement in the SQL
+ standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altertstemplate"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droptstemplate"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_type.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_type.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..693423e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_type.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,1029 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_type.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createtype">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createtype">
+ <primary>CREATE TYPE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE TYPE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE TYPE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new data type</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE TYPE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> AS
+ ( [ <replaceable class="parameter">attribute_name</replaceable> <replaceable class="parameter">data_type</replaceable> [ COLLATE <replaceable>collation</replaceable> ] [, ... ] ] )
+
+CREATE TYPE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> AS ENUM
+ ( [ '<replaceable class="parameter">label</replaceable>' [, ... ] ] )
+
+CREATE TYPE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> AS RANGE (
+ SUBTYPE = <replaceable class="parameter">subtype</replaceable>
+ [ , SUBTYPE_OPCLASS = <replaceable class="parameter">subtype_operator_class</replaceable> ]
+ [ , COLLATION = <replaceable class="parameter">collation</replaceable> ]
+ [ , CANONICAL = <replaceable class="parameter">canonical_function</replaceable> ]
+ [ , SUBTYPE_DIFF = <replaceable class="parameter">subtype_diff_function</replaceable> ]
+ [ , MULTIRANGE_TYPE_NAME = <replaceable class="parameter">multirange_type_name</replaceable> ]
+)
+
+CREATE TYPE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> (
+ INPUT = <replaceable class="parameter">input_function</replaceable>,
+ OUTPUT = <replaceable class="parameter">output_function</replaceable>
+ [ , RECEIVE = <replaceable class="parameter">receive_function</replaceable> ]
+ [ , SEND = <replaceable class="parameter">send_function</replaceable> ]
+ [ , TYPMOD_IN = <replaceable class="parameter">type_modifier_input_function</replaceable> ]
+ [ , TYPMOD_OUT = <replaceable class="parameter">type_modifier_output_function</replaceable> ]
+ [ , ANALYZE = <replaceable class="parameter">analyze_function</replaceable> ]
+ [ , SUBSCRIPT = <replaceable class="parameter">subscript_function</replaceable> ]
+ [ , INTERNALLENGTH = { <replaceable class="parameter">internallength</replaceable> | VARIABLE } ]
+ [ , PASSEDBYVALUE ]
+ [ , ALIGNMENT = <replaceable class="parameter">alignment</replaceable> ]
+ [ , STORAGE = <replaceable class="parameter">storage</replaceable> ]
+ [ , LIKE = <replaceable class="parameter">like_type</replaceable> ]
+ [ , CATEGORY = <replaceable class="parameter">category</replaceable> ]
+ [ , PREFERRED = <replaceable class="parameter">preferred</replaceable> ]
+ [ , DEFAULT = <replaceable class="parameter">default</replaceable> ]
+ [ , ELEMENT = <replaceable class="parameter">element</replaceable> ]
+ [ , DELIMITER = <replaceable class="parameter">delimiter</replaceable> ]
+ [ , COLLATABLE = <replaceable class="parameter">collatable</replaceable> ]
+)
+
+CREATE TYPE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE TYPE</command> registers a new data type for use in
+ the current database. The user who defines a type becomes its
+ owner.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a schema name is given then the type is created in the specified
+ schema. Otherwise it is created in the current schema. The type
+ name must be distinct from the name of any existing type or domain
+ in the same schema. (Because tables have associated data types,
+ the type name must also be distinct from the name of any existing
+ table in the same schema.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ There are five forms of <command>CREATE TYPE</command>, as shown in the
+ syntax synopsis above. They respectively create a <firstterm>composite
+ type</firstterm>, an <firstterm>enum type</firstterm>, a <firstterm>range type</firstterm>, a
+ <firstterm>base type</firstterm>, or a <firstterm>shell type</firstterm>. The first four
+ of these are discussed in turn below. A shell type is simply a placeholder
+ for a type to be defined later; it is created by issuing <command>CREATE
+ TYPE</command> with no parameters except for the type name. Shell types
+ are needed as forward references when creating range types and base types,
+ as discussed in those sections.
+ </para>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Composite Types</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The first form of <command>CREATE TYPE</command>
+ creates a composite type.
+ The composite type is specified by a list of attribute names and data types.
+ An attribute's collation can be specified too, if its data type is
+ collatable. A composite type is essentially the same as the row type
+ of a table, but using <command>CREATE TYPE</command> avoids the need to
+ create an actual table when all that is wanted is to define a type.
+ A stand-alone composite type is useful, for example, as the argument or
+ return type of a function.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To be able to create a composite type, you must
+ have <literal>USAGE</literal> privilege on all attribute types.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2 id="sql-createtype-enum">
+ <title>Enumerated Types</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The second form of <command>CREATE TYPE</command> creates an enumerated
+ (enum) type, as described in <xref linkend="datatype-enum"/>.
+ Enum types take a list of quoted labels, each of which
+ must be less than <symbol>NAMEDATALEN</symbol> bytes long (64 bytes in a
+ standard <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> build). (It is possible to
+ create an enumerated type with zero labels, but such a type cannot be used
+ to hold values before at least one label is added using <link
+ linkend="sql-altertype"><command>ALTER TYPE</command></link>.)
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2 id="sql-createtype-range">
+ <title>Range Types</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The third form of <command>CREATE TYPE</command> creates a new
+ range type, as described in <xref linkend="rangetypes"/>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The range type's <replaceable class="parameter">subtype</replaceable> can
+ be any type with an associated b-tree operator class (to determine the
+ ordering of values for the range type). Normally the subtype's default
+ b-tree operator class is used to determine ordering; to use a non-default
+ operator class, specify its name with <replaceable
+ class="parameter">subtype_opclass</replaceable>. If the subtype is
+ collatable, and you want to use a non-default collation in the range's
+ ordering, specify the desired collation with the <replaceable
+ class="parameter">collation</replaceable> option.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The optional <replaceable class="parameter">canonical</replaceable>
+ function must take one argument of the range type being defined, and
+ return a value of the same type. This is used to convert range values
+ to a canonical form, when applicable. See <xref
+ linkend="rangetypes-defining"/> for more information. Creating a
+ <replaceable class="parameter">canonical</replaceable> function
+ is a bit tricky, since it must be defined before the range type can be
+ declared. To do this, you must first create a shell type, which is a
+ placeholder type that has no properties except a name and an
+ owner. This is done by issuing the command <literal>CREATE TYPE
+ <replaceable>name</replaceable></literal>, with no additional parameters. Then
+ the function can be declared using the shell type as argument and result,
+ and finally the range type can be declared using the same name. This
+ automatically replaces the shell type entry with a valid range type.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The optional <replaceable class="parameter">subtype_diff</replaceable>
+ function must take two values of the
+ <replaceable class="parameter">subtype</replaceable> type as argument,
+ and return a <type>double precision</type> value representing the
+ difference between the two given values. While this is optional,
+ providing it allows much greater efficiency of GiST indexes on columns of
+ the range type. See <xref linkend="rangetypes-defining"/> for more
+ information.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The optional <replaceable class="parameter">multirange_type_name</replaceable>
+ parameter specifies the name of the corresponding multirange type. If not
+ specified, this name is chosen automatically as follows.
+ If the range type name contains the substring <literal>range</literal>, then
+ the multirange type name is formed by replacement of the <literal>range</literal>
+ substring with <literal>multirange</literal> in the range
+ type name. Otherwise, the multirange type name is formed by appending a
+ <literal>_multirange</literal> suffix to the range type name.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Base Types</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The fourth form of <command>CREATE TYPE</command> creates a new base type
+ (scalar type). To create a new base type, you must be a superuser.
+ (This restriction is made because an erroneous type definition could
+ confuse or even crash the server.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The parameters can appear in any order, not only that
+ illustrated above, and most are optional. You must register
+ two or more functions (using <command>CREATE FUNCTION</command>) before
+ defining the type. The support functions
+ <replaceable class="parameter">input_function</replaceable> and
+ <replaceable class="parameter">output_function</replaceable>
+ are required, while the functions
+ <replaceable class="parameter">receive_function</replaceable>,
+ <replaceable class="parameter">send_function</replaceable>,
+ <replaceable class="parameter">type_modifier_input_function</replaceable>,
+ <replaceable class="parameter">type_modifier_output_function</replaceable>,
+ <replaceable class="parameter">analyze_function</replaceable>, and
+ <replaceable class="parameter">subscript_function</replaceable>
+ are optional. Generally these functions have to be coded in C
+ or another low-level language.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <replaceable class="parameter">input_function</replaceable>
+ converts the type's external textual representation to the internal
+ representation used by the operators and functions defined for the type.
+ <replaceable class="parameter">output_function</replaceable>
+ performs the reverse transformation. The input function can be
+ declared as taking one argument of type <type>cstring</type>,
+ or as taking three arguments of types
+ <type>cstring</type>, <type>oid</type>, <type>integer</type>.
+ The first argument is the input text as a C string, the second
+ argument is the type's own OID (except for array types, which instead
+ receive their element type's OID),
+ and the third is the <literal>typmod</literal> of the destination column, if known
+ (-1 will be passed if not).
+ The input function must return a value of the data type itself.
+ Usually, an input function should be declared STRICT; if it is not,
+ it will be called with a NULL first parameter when reading a NULL
+ input value. The function must still return NULL in this case, unless
+ it raises an error.
+ (This case is mainly meant to support domain input functions, which
+ might need to reject NULL inputs.)
+ The output function must be
+ declared as taking one argument of the new data type.
+ The output function must return type <type>cstring</type>.
+ Output functions are not invoked for NULL values.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The optional <replaceable class="parameter">receive_function</replaceable>
+ converts the type's external binary representation to the internal
+ representation. If this function is not supplied, the type cannot
+ participate in binary input. The binary representation should be
+ chosen to be cheap to convert to internal form, while being reasonably
+ portable. (For example, the standard integer data types use network
+ byte order as the external binary representation, while the internal
+ representation is in the machine's native byte order.) The receive
+ function should perform adequate checking to ensure that the value is
+ valid.
+ The receive function can be declared as taking one argument of type
+ <type>internal</type>, or as taking three arguments of types
+ <type>internal</type>, <type>oid</type>, <type>integer</type>.
+ The first argument is a pointer to a <type>StringInfo</type> buffer
+ holding the received byte string; the optional arguments are the
+ same as for the text input function.
+ The receive function must return a value of the data type itself.
+ Usually, a receive function should be declared STRICT; if it is not,
+ it will be called with a NULL first parameter when reading a NULL
+ input value. The function must still return NULL in this case, unless
+ it raises an error.
+ (This case is mainly meant to support domain receive functions, which
+ might need to reject NULL inputs.)
+ Similarly, the optional
+ <replaceable class="parameter">send_function</replaceable> converts
+ from the internal representation to the external binary representation.
+ If this function is not supplied, the type cannot participate in binary
+ output. The send function must be
+ declared as taking one argument of the new data type.
+ The send function must return type <type>bytea</type>.
+ Send functions are not invoked for NULL values.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You should at this point be wondering how the input and output functions
+ can be declared to have results or arguments of the new type, when they
+ have to be created before the new type can be created. The answer is that
+ the type should first be defined as a <firstterm>shell type</firstterm>, which is a
+ placeholder type that has no properties except a name and an owner. This
+ is done by issuing the command <literal>CREATE TYPE
+ <replaceable>name</replaceable></literal>, with no additional parameters. Then the
+ C I/O functions can be defined referencing the shell type. Finally,
+ <command>CREATE TYPE</command> with a full definition replaces the shell entry
+ with a complete, valid type definition, after which the new type can be
+ used normally.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The optional
+ <replaceable class="parameter">type_modifier_input_function</replaceable>
+ and <replaceable class="parameter">type_modifier_output_function</replaceable>
+ are needed if the type supports modifiers, that is optional constraints
+ attached to a type declaration, such as <literal>char(5)</literal> or
+ <literal>numeric(30,2)</literal>. <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> allows
+ user-defined types to take one or more simple constants or identifiers as
+ modifiers. However, this information must be capable of being packed into a
+ single non-negative integer value for storage in the system catalogs. The
+ <replaceable class="parameter">type_modifier_input_function</replaceable>
+ is passed the declared modifier(s) in the form of a <type>cstring</type>
+ array. It must check the values for validity (throwing an error if they
+ are wrong), and if they are correct, return a single non-negative
+ <type>integer</type> value that will be stored as the column <quote>typmod</quote>.
+ Type modifiers will be rejected if the type does not have a
+ <replaceable class="parameter">type_modifier_input_function</replaceable>.
+ The <replaceable class="parameter">type_modifier_output_function</replaceable>
+ converts the internal integer typmod value back to the correct form for
+ user display. It must return a <type>cstring</type> value that is the exact
+ string to append to the type name; for example <type>numeric</type>'s
+ function might return <literal>(30,2)</literal>.
+ It is allowed to omit the
+ <replaceable class="parameter">type_modifier_output_function</replaceable>,
+ in which case the default display format is just the stored typmod integer
+ value enclosed in parentheses.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The optional <replaceable class="parameter">analyze_function</replaceable>
+ performs type-specific statistics collection for columns of the data type.
+ By default, <command>ANALYZE</command> will attempt to gather statistics using
+ the type's <quote>equals</quote> and <quote>less-than</quote> operators, if there
+ is a default b-tree operator class for the type. For non-scalar types
+ this behavior is likely to be unsuitable, so it can be overridden by
+ specifying a custom analysis function. The analysis function must be
+ declared to take a single argument of type <type>internal</type>, and return
+ a <type>boolean</type> result. The detailed API for analysis functions appears
+ in <filename>src/include/commands/vacuum.h</filename>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The optional <replaceable class="parameter">subscript_function</replaceable>
+ allows the data type to be subscripted in SQL commands. Specifying this
+ function does not cause the type to be considered a <quote>true</quote>
+ array type; for example, it will not be a candidate for the result type
+ of <literal>ARRAY[]</literal> constructs. But if subscripting a value
+ of the type is a natural notation for extracting data from it, then
+ a <replaceable class="parameter">subscript_function</replaceable> can
+ be written to define what that means. The subscript function must be
+ declared to take a single argument of type <type>internal</type>, and
+ return an <type>internal</type> result, which is a pointer to a struct
+ of methods (functions) that implement subscripting.
+ The detailed API for subscript functions appears
+ in <filename>src/include/nodes/subscripting.h</filename>.
+ It may also be useful to read the array implementation
+ in <filename>src/backend/utils/adt/arraysubs.c</filename>,
+ or the simpler code
+ in <filename>contrib/hstore/hstore_subs.c</filename>.
+ Additional information appears in
+ <xref linkend="sql-createtype-array"/> below.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ While the details of the new type's internal representation are only
+ known to the I/O functions and other functions you create to work with
+ the type, there are several properties of the internal representation
+ that must be declared to <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>.
+ Foremost of these is
+ <replaceable class="parameter">internallength</replaceable>.
+ Base data types can be fixed-length, in which case
+ <replaceable class="parameter">internallength</replaceable> is a
+ positive integer, or variable-length, indicated by setting
+ <replaceable class="parameter">internallength</replaceable>
+ to <literal>VARIABLE</literal>. (Internally, this is represented
+ by setting <literal>typlen</literal> to -1.) The internal representation of all
+ variable-length types must start with a 4-byte integer giving the total
+ length of this value of the type. (Note that the length field is often
+ encoded, as described in <xref linkend="storage-toast"/>; it's unwise
+ to access it directly.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The optional flag <literal>PASSEDBYVALUE</literal> indicates that
+ values of this data type are passed by value, rather than by
+ reference. Types passed by value must be fixed-length, and their internal
+ representation cannot be larger than the size of the <type>Datum</type> type
+ (4 bytes on some machines, 8 bytes on others).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <replaceable class="parameter">alignment</replaceable> parameter
+ specifies the storage alignment required for the data type. The
+ allowed values equate to alignment on 1, 2, 4, or 8 byte boundaries.
+ Note that variable-length types must have an alignment of at least
+ 4, since they necessarily contain an <type>int4</type> as their first component.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <replaceable class="parameter">storage</replaceable> parameter
+ allows selection of storage strategies for variable-length data
+ types. (Only <literal>plain</literal> is allowed for fixed-length
+ types.) <literal>plain</literal> specifies that data of the type
+ will always be stored in-line and not compressed.
+ <literal>extended</literal> specifies that the system will first
+ try to compress a long data value, and will move the value out of
+ the main table row if it's still too long.
+ <literal>external</literal> allows the value to be moved out of the
+ main table, but the system will not try to compress it.
+ <literal>main</literal> allows compression, but discourages moving
+ the value out of the main table. (Data items with this storage
+ strategy might still be moved out of the main table if there is no
+ other way to make a row fit, but they will be kept in the main
+ table preferentially over <literal>extended</literal> and
+ <literal>external</literal> items.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ All <replaceable class="parameter">storage</replaceable> values other
+ than <literal>plain</literal> imply that the functions of the data type
+ can handle values that have been <firstterm>toasted</firstterm>, as described
+ in <xref linkend="storage-toast"/> and <xref linkend="xtypes-toast"/>.
+ The specific other value given merely determines the default TOAST
+ storage strategy for columns of a toastable data type; users can pick
+ other strategies for individual columns using <literal>ALTER TABLE
+ SET STORAGE</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <replaceable class="parameter">like_type</replaceable> parameter
+ provides an alternative method for specifying the basic representation
+ properties of a data type: copy them from some existing type. The values of
+ <replaceable class="parameter">internallength</replaceable>,
+ <replaceable class="parameter">passedbyvalue</replaceable>,
+ <replaceable class="parameter">alignment</replaceable>, and
+ <replaceable class="parameter">storage</replaceable> are copied from the
+ named type. (It is possible, though usually undesirable, to override
+ some of these values by specifying them along with the <literal>LIKE</literal>
+ clause.) Specifying representation this way is especially useful when
+ the low-level implementation of the new type <quote>piggybacks</quote> on an
+ existing type in some fashion.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <replaceable class="parameter">category</replaceable> and
+ <replaceable class="parameter">preferred</replaceable> parameters can be
+ used to help control which implicit cast will be applied in ambiguous
+ situations. Each data type belongs to a category named by a single ASCII
+ character, and each type is either <quote>preferred</quote> or not within its
+ category. The parser will prefer casting to preferred types (but only from
+ other types within the same category) when this rule is helpful in
+ resolving overloaded functions or operators. For more details see <xref
+ linkend="typeconv"/>. For types that have no implicit casts to or from any
+ other types, it is sufficient to leave these settings at the defaults.
+ However, for a group of related types that have implicit casts, it is often
+ helpful to mark them all as belonging to a category and select one or two
+ of the <quote>most general</quote> types as being preferred within the category.
+ The <replaceable class="parameter">category</replaceable> parameter is
+ especially useful when adding a user-defined type to an existing built-in
+ category, such as the numeric or string types. However, it is also
+ possible to create new entirely-user-defined type categories. Select any
+ ASCII character other than an upper-case letter to name such a category.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A default value can be specified, in case a user wants columns of the
+ data type to default to something other than the null value.
+ Specify the default with the <literal>DEFAULT</literal> key word.
+ (Such a default can be overridden by an explicit <literal>DEFAULT</literal>
+ clause attached to a particular column.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To indicate that a type is a fixed-length array type,
+ specify the type of the array
+ elements using the <literal>ELEMENT</literal> key word. For example, to
+ define an array of 4-byte integers (<type>int4</type>), specify
+ <literal>ELEMENT = int4</literal>. For more details,
+ see <xref linkend="sql-createtype-array"/> below.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To indicate the delimiter to be used between values in the external
+ representation of arrays of this type, <replaceable
+ class="parameter">delimiter</replaceable> can be
+ set to a specific character. The default delimiter is the comma
+ (<literal>,</literal>). Note that the delimiter is associated
+ with the array element type, not the array type itself.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the optional Boolean
+ parameter <replaceable class="parameter">collatable</replaceable>
+ is true, column definitions and expressions of the type may carry
+ collation information through use of
+ the <literal>COLLATE</literal> clause. It is up to the
+ implementations of the functions operating on the type to actually
+ make use of the collation information; this does not happen
+ automatically merely by marking the type collatable.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2 id="sql-createtype-array" xreflabel="Array Types">
+ <title>Array Types</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Whenever a user-defined type is created,
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> automatically creates an
+ associated array type, whose name consists of the element type's
+ name prepended with an underscore, and truncated if necessary to keep
+ it less than <symbol>NAMEDATALEN</symbol> bytes long. (If the name
+ so generated collides with an existing type name, the process is
+ repeated until a non-colliding name is found.)
+ This implicitly-created array type is variable length and uses the
+ built-in input and output functions <literal>array_in</literal> and
+ <literal>array_out</literal>. Furthermore, this type is what the system
+ uses for constructs such as <literal>ARRAY[]</literal> over the
+ user-defined type. The array type tracks any changes in its
+ element type's owner or schema, and is dropped if the element type is.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You might reasonably ask why there is an <option>ELEMENT</option>
+ option, if the system makes the correct array type automatically.
+ The main case where it's useful to use <option>ELEMENT</option> is when you are
+ making a fixed-length type that happens to be internally an array of a number of
+ identical things, and you want to allow these things to be accessed
+ directly by subscripting, in addition to whatever operations you plan
+ to provide for the type as a whole. For example, type <type>point</type>
+ is represented as just two floating-point numbers, which can be accessed
+ using <literal>point[0]</literal> and <literal>point[1]</literal>.
+ Note that
+ this facility only works for fixed-length types whose internal form
+ is exactly a sequence of identical fixed-length fields.
+ For historical reasons (i.e., this is clearly wrong but it's far too
+ late to change it), subscripting of fixed-length array types starts from
+ zero, rather than from one as for variable-length arrays.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Specifying the <option>SUBSCRIPT</option> option allows a data type to
+ be subscripted, even though the system does not otherwise regard it as
+ an array type. The behavior just described for fixed-length arrays is
+ actually implemented by the <option>SUBSCRIPT</option> handler
+ function <function>raw_array_subscript_handler</function>, which is
+ used automatically if you specify <option>ELEMENT</option> for a
+ fixed-length type without also writing <option>SUBSCRIPT</option>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When specifying a custom <option>SUBSCRIPT</option> function, it is
+ not necessary to specify <option>ELEMENT</option> unless
+ the <option>SUBSCRIPT</option> handler function needs to
+ consult <structfield>typelem</structfield> to find out what to return.
+ Be aware that specifying <option>ELEMENT</option> causes the system to
+ assume that the new type contains, or is somehow physically dependent on,
+ the element type; thus for example changing properties of the element
+ type won't be allowed if there are any columns of the dependent type.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of a type to be created.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">attribute_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an attribute (column) for the composite type.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">data_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an existing data type to become a column of the
+ composite type.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">collation</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an existing collation to be associated with a column of
+ a composite type, or with a range type.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">label</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A string literal representing the textual label associated with
+ one value of an enum type.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">subtype</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the element type that the range type will represent ranges
+ of.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">subtype_operator_class</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a b-tree operator class for the subtype.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">canonical_function</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the canonicalization function for the range type.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">subtype_diff_function</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a difference function for the subtype.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">multirange_type_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the corresponding multirange type.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">input_function</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a function that converts data from the type's
+ external textual form to its internal form.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">output_function</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a function that converts data from the type's
+ internal form to its external textual form.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">receive_function</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a function that converts data from the type's
+ external binary form to its internal form.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">send_function</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a function that converts data from the type's
+ internal form to its external binary form.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">type_modifier_input_function</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a function that converts an array of modifier(s) for the type
+ into internal form.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">type_modifier_output_function</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a function that converts the internal form of the type's
+ modifier(s) to external textual form.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">analyze_function</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a function that performs statistical analysis for the
+ data type.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">subscript_function</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a function that defines what subscripting a value of the
+ data type does.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">internallength</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A numeric constant that specifies the length in bytes of the new
+ type's internal representation. The default assumption is that
+ it is variable-length.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">alignment</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The storage alignment requirement of the data type. If specified,
+ it must be <literal>char</literal>, <literal>int2</literal>,
+ <literal>int4</literal>, or <literal>double</literal>; the
+ default is <literal>int4</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">storage</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The storage strategy for the data type. If specified, must be
+ <literal>plain</literal>, <literal>external</literal>,
+ <literal>extended</literal>, or <literal>main</literal>; the
+ default is <literal>plain</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">like_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an existing data type that the new type will have the
+ same representation as. The values of
+ <replaceable class="parameter">internallength</replaceable>,
+ <replaceable class="parameter">passedbyvalue</replaceable>,
+ <replaceable class="parameter">alignment</replaceable>, and
+ <replaceable class="parameter">storage</replaceable>
+ are copied from that type, unless overridden by explicit
+ specification elsewhere in this <command>CREATE TYPE</command> command.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">category</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The category code (a single ASCII character) for this type.
+ The default is <literal>'U'</literal> for <quote>user-defined type</quote>.
+ Other standard category codes can be found in
+ <xref linkend="catalog-typcategory-table"/>. You may also choose
+ other ASCII characters in order to create custom categories.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">preferred</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ True if this type is a preferred type within its type category,
+ else false. The default is false. Be very careful about creating
+ a new preferred type within an existing type category, as this
+ could cause surprising changes in behavior.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">default</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The default value for the data type. If this is omitted, the
+ default is null.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">element</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The type being created is an array; this specifies the type of
+ the array elements.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">delimiter</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The delimiter character to be used between values in arrays made
+ of this type.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">collatable</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ True if this type's operations can use collation information.
+ The default is false.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createtype-notes">
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Because there are no restrictions on use of a data type once it's been
+ created, creating a base type or range type is tantamount to granting
+ public execute permission on the functions mentioned in the type definition.
+ This is usually
+ not an issue for the sorts of functions that are useful in a type
+ definition. But you might want to think twice before designing a type
+ in a way that would require <quote>secret</quote> information to be used
+ while converting it to or from external form.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Before <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> version 8.3, the name of
+ a generated array type was always exactly the element type's name with one
+ underscore character (<literal>_</literal>) prepended. (Type names were
+ therefore restricted in length to one fewer character than other names.)
+ While this is still usually the case, the array type name may vary from
+ this in case of maximum-length names or collisions with user type names
+ that begin with underscore. Writing code that depends on this convention
+ is therefore deprecated. Instead, use
+ <structname>pg_type</structname>.<structfield>typarray</structfield> to locate the array type
+ associated with a given type.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ It may be advisable to avoid using type and table names that begin with
+ underscore. While the server will change generated array type names to
+ avoid collisions with user-given names, there is still risk of confusion,
+ particularly with old client software that may assume that type names
+ beginning with underscores always represent arrays.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Before <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> version 8.2, the shell-type
+ creation syntax
+ <literal>CREATE TYPE <replaceable>name</replaceable></literal> did not exist.
+ The way to create a new base type was to create its input function first.
+ In this approach, <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> will first see
+ the name of the new data type as the return type of the input function.
+ The shell type is implicitly created in this situation, and then it
+ can be referenced in the definitions of the remaining I/O functions.
+ This approach still works, but is deprecated and might be disallowed in
+ some future release. Also, to avoid accidentally cluttering
+ the catalogs with shell types as a result of simple typos in function
+ definitions, a shell type will only be made this way when the input
+ function is written in C.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This example creates a composite type and uses it in
+ a function definition:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TYPE compfoo AS (f1 int, f2 text);
+
+CREATE FUNCTION getfoo() RETURNS SETOF compfoo AS $$
+ SELECT fooid, fooname FROM foo
+$$ LANGUAGE SQL;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This example creates an enumerated type and uses it in
+ a table definition:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TYPE bug_status AS ENUM ('new', 'open', 'closed');
+
+CREATE TABLE bug (
+ id serial,
+ description text,
+ status bug_status
+);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This example creates a range type:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TYPE float8_range AS RANGE (subtype = float8, subtype_diff = float8mi);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This example creates the base data type <type>box</type> and then uses the
+ type in a table definition:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TYPE box;
+
+CREATE FUNCTION my_box_in_function(cstring) RETURNS box AS ... ;
+CREATE FUNCTION my_box_out_function(box) RETURNS cstring AS ... ;
+
+CREATE TYPE box (
+ INTERNALLENGTH = 16,
+ INPUT = my_box_in_function,
+ OUTPUT = my_box_out_function
+);
+
+CREATE TABLE myboxes (
+ id integer,
+ description box
+);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the internal structure of <type>box</type> were an array of four
+ <type>float4</type> elements, we might instead use:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TYPE box (
+ INTERNALLENGTH = 16,
+ INPUT = my_box_in_function,
+ OUTPUT = my_box_out_function,
+ ELEMENT = float4
+);
+</programlisting>
+ which would allow a box value's component numbers to be accessed
+ by subscripting. Otherwise the type behaves the same as before.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This example creates a large object type and uses it in
+ a table definition:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE TYPE bigobj (
+ INPUT = lo_filein, OUTPUT = lo_fileout,
+ INTERNALLENGTH = VARIABLE
+);
+CREATE TABLE big_objs (
+ id integer,
+ obj bigobj
+);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ More examples, including suitable input and output functions, are
+ in <xref linkend="xtypes"/>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createtype-compatibility">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The first form of the <command>CREATE TYPE</command> command, which
+ creates a composite type, conforms to the <acronym>SQL</acronym> standard.
+ The other forms are <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extensions. The <command>CREATE TYPE</command> statement in
+ the <acronym>SQL</acronym> standard also defines other forms that are not
+ implemented in <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The ability to create a composite type with zero attributes is
+ a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>-specific deviation from the
+ standard (analogous to the same case in <command>CREATE TABLE</command>).
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-createtype-see-also">
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altertype"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createdomain"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createfunction"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droptype"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_user.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_user.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..48d2089
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_user.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,78 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_user.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createuser">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createuser">
+ <primary>CREATE USER</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE USER</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE USER</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new database role</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE USER <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ [ WITH ] <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> [ ... ] ]
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> can be:</phrase>
+
+ SUPERUSER | NOSUPERUSER
+ | CREATEDB | NOCREATEDB
+ | CREATEROLE | NOCREATEROLE
+ | INHERIT | NOINHERIT
+ | LOGIN | NOLOGIN
+ | REPLICATION | NOREPLICATION
+ | BYPASSRLS | NOBYPASSRLS
+ | CONNECTION LIMIT <replaceable class="parameter">connlimit</replaceable>
+ | [ ENCRYPTED ] PASSWORD '<replaceable class="parameter">password</replaceable>' | PASSWORD NULL
+ | VALID UNTIL '<replaceable class="parameter">timestamp</replaceable>'
+ | IN ROLE <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ | IN GROUP <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ | ROLE <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ | ADMIN <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ | USER <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ | SYSID <replaceable class="parameter">uid</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE USER</command> is now an alias for
+ <link linkend="sql-createrole"><command>CREATE ROLE</command></link>.
+ The only difference is that when the command is spelled
+ <command>CREATE USER</command>, <literal>LOGIN</literal> is assumed
+ by default, whereas <literal>NOLOGIN</literal> is assumed when
+ the command is spelled
+ <command>CREATE ROLE</command>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>CREATE USER</command> statement is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension. The SQL standard
+ leaves the definition of users to the implementation.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createrole"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_user_mapping.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_user_mapping.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..55debd5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_user_mapping.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,132 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_user_mapping.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createusermapping">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createusermapping">
+ <primary>CREATE USER MAPPING</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE USER MAPPING</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE USER MAPPING</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new mapping of a user to a foreign server</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE USER MAPPING [ IF NOT EXISTS ] FOR { <replaceable class="parameter">user_name</replaceable> | USER | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | PUBLIC }
+ SERVER <replaceable class="parameter">server_name</replaceable>
+ [ OPTIONS ( <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> '<replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>' [ , ... ] ) ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE USER MAPPING</command> defines a mapping of a user
+ to a foreign server. A user mapping typically encapsulates
+ connection information that a foreign-data wrapper uses together
+ with the information encapsulated by a foreign server to access an
+ external data resource.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The owner of a foreign server can create user mappings for that
+ server for any user. Also, a user can create a user mapping for
+ their own user name if <literal>USAGE</literal> privilege on the server has
+ been granted to the user.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF NOT EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if a mapping of the given user to the given foreign
+ server already exists. A notice is issued in this case. Note that there
+ is no guarantee that the existing user mapping is anything like the one
+ that would have been created.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">user_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an existing user that is mapped to foreign server.
+ <literal>CURRENT_ROLE</literal>, <literal>CURRENT_USER</literal>, and <literal>USER</literal> match the name of
+ the current user. When <literal>PUBLIC</literal> is specified, a
+ so-called public mapping is created that is used when no
+ user-specific mapping is applicable.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">server_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an existing server for which the user mapping is
+ to be created.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>OPTIONS ( <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> '<replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>' [, ... ] )</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This clause specifies the options of the user mapping. The
+ options typically define the actual user name and password of
+ the mapping. Option names must be unique. The allowed option
+ names and values are specific to the server's foreign-data wrapper.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a user mapping for user <literal>bob</literal>, server <literal>foo</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE USER MAPPING FOR bob SERVER foo OPTIONS (user 'bob', password 'secret');
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE USER MAPPING</command> conforms to ISO/IEC 9075-9 (SQL/MED).
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterusermapping"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropusermapping"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createforeigndatawrapper"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createserver"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_view.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_view.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4b5b1cf
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/create_view.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,502 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/create_view.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-createview">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createview">
+ <primary>CREATE VIEW</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>CREATE VIEW</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>CREATE VIEW</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new view</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+CREATE [ OR REPLACE ] [ TEMP | TEMPORARY ] [ RECURSIVE ] VIEW <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ...] ) ]
+ [ WITH ( <replaceable class="parameter">view_option_name</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">view_option_value</replaceable>] [, ... ] ) ]
+ AS <replaceable class="parameter">query</replaceable>
+ [ WITH [ CASCADED | LOCAL ] CHECK OPTION ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE VIEW</command> defines a view of a query. The view
+ is not physically materialized. Instead, the query is run every time
+ the view is referenced in a query.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE OR REPLACE VIEW</command> is similar, but if a view
+ of the same name already exists, it is replaced. The new query must
+ generate the same columns that were generated by the existing view query
+ (that is, the same column names in the same order and with the same data
+ types), but it may add additional columns to the end of the list. The
+ calculations giving rise to the output columns may be completely different.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a schema name is given (for example, <literal>CREATE VIEW
+ myschema.myview ...</literal>) then the view is created in the specified
+ schema. Otherwise it is created in the current schema. Temporary
+ views exist in a special schema, so a schema name cannot be given
+ when creating a temporary view. The name of the view must be
+ distinct from the name of any other view, table, sequence, index or foreign table
+ in the same schema.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>TEMPORARY</literal> or <literal>TEMP</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If specified, the view is created as a temporary view.
+ Temporary views are automatically dropped at the end of the
+ current session. Existing
+ permanent relations with the same name are not visible to the
+ current session while the temporary view exists, unless they are
+ referenced with schema-qualified names.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If any of the tables referenced by the view are temporary,
+ the view is created as a temporary view (whether
+ <literal>TEMPORARY</literal> is specified or not).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RECURSIVE</literal>
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createview">
+ <primary>RECURSIVE</primary>
+ <secondary>in views</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Creates a recursive view. The syntax
+<synopsis>
+CREATE RECURSIVE VIEW [ <replaceable>schema</replaceable> . ] <replaceable>view_name</replaceable> (<replaceable>column_names</replaceable>) AS SELECT <replaceable>...</replaceable>;
+</synopsis>
+ is equivalent to
+<synopsis>
+CREATE VIEW [ <replaceable>schema</replaceable> . ] <replaceable>view_name</replaceable> AS WITH RECURSIVE <replaceable>view_name</replaceable> (<replaceable>column_names</replaceable>) AS (SELECT <replaceable>...</replaceable>) SELECT <replaceable>column_names</replaceable> FROM <replaceable>view_name</replaceable>;
+</synopsis>
+ A view column name list must be specified for a recursive view.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of a view to be created.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An optional list of names to be used for columns of the view.
+ If not given, the column names are deduced from the query.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>WITH ( <replaceable class="parameter">view_option_name</replaceable> [= <replaceable class="parameter">view_option_value</replaceable>] [, ... ] )</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This clause specifies optional parameters for a view; the following
+ parameters are supported:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>check_option</literal> (<type>enum</type>)</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This parameter may be either <literal>local</literal> or
+ <literal>cascaded</literal>, and is equivalent to specifying
+ <literal>WITH [ CASCADED | LOCAL ] CHECK OPTION</literal> (see below).
+ This option can be changed on existing views using <link
+ linkend="sql-alterview"><command>ALTER VIEW</command></link>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>security_barrier</literal> (<type>boolean</type>)</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This should be used if the view is intended to provide row-level
+ security. See <xref linkend="rules-privileges"/> for full details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist></para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">query</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A <link linkend="sql-select"><command>SELECT</command></link> or
+ <link linkend="sql-values"><command>VALUES</command></link> command
+ which will provide the columns and rows of the view.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>WITH [ CASCADED | LOCAL ] CHECK OPTION</literal>
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createview">
+ <primary>CHECK OPTION</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createview">
+ <primary>WITH CHECK OPTION</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option controls the behavior of automatically updatable views. When
+ this option is specified, <command>INSERT</command> and <command>UPDATE</command>
+ commands on the view will be checked to ensure that new rows satisfy the
+ view-defining condition (that is, the new rows are checked to ensure that
+ they are visible through the view). If they are not, the update will be
+ rejected. If the <literal>CHECK OPTION</literal> is not specified,
+ <command>INSERT</command> and <command>UPDATE</command> commands on the view are
+ allowed to create rows that are not visible through the view. The
+ following check options are supported:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>LOCAL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ New rows are only checked against the conditions defined directly in
+ the view itself. Any conditions defined on underlying base views are
+ not checked (unless they also specify the <literal>CHECK OPTION</literal>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADED</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ New rows are checked against the conditions of the view and all
+ underlying base views. If the <literal>CHECK OPTION</literal> is specified,
+ and neither <literal>LOCAL</literal> nor <literal>CASCADED</literal> is specified,
+ then <literal>CASCADED</literal> is assumed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>CHECK OPTION</literal> may not be used with <literal>RECURSIVE</literal>
+ views.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Note that the <literal>CHECK OPTION</literal> is only supported on views that
+ are automatically updatable, and do not have <literal>INSTEAD OF</literal>
+ triggers or <literal>INSTEAD</literal> rules. If an automatically updatable
+ view is defined on top of a base view that has <literal>INSTEAD OF</literal>
+ triggers, then the <literal>LOCAL CHECK OPTION</literal> may be used to check
+ the conditions on the automatically updatable view, but the conditions
+ on the base view with <literal>INSTEAD OF</literal> triggers will not be
+ checked (a cascaded check option will not cascade down to a
+ trigger-updatable view, and any check options defined directly on a
+ trigger-updatable view will be ignored). If the view or any of its base
+ relations has an <literal>INSTEAD</literal> rule that causes the
+ <command>INSERT</command> or <command>UPDATE</command> command to be rewritten, then
+ all check options will be ignored in the rewritten query, including any
+ checks from automatically updatable views defined on top of the relation
+ with the <literal>INSTEAD</literal> rule.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Use the <link linkend="sql-dropview"><command>DROP VIEW</command></link>
+ statement to drop views.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Be careful that the names and types of the view's columns will be
+ assigned the way you want. For example:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE VIEW vista AS SELECT 'Hello World';
+</programlisting>
+ is bad form because the column name defaults to <literal>?column?</literal>;
+ also, the column data type defaults to <type>text</type>, which might not
+ be what you wanted. Better style for a string literal in a view's
+ result is something like:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE VIEW vista AS SELECT text 'Hello World' AS hello;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Access to tables referenced in the view is determined by permissions of
+ the view owner. In some cases, this can be used to provide secure but
+ restricted access to the underlying tables. However, not all views are
+ secure against tampering; see <xref linkend="rules-privileges"/> for
+ details. Functions called in the view are treated the same as if they had
+ been called directly from the query using the view. Therefore the user of
+ a view must have permissions to call all functions used by the view.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When <command>CREATE OR REPLACE VIEW</command> is used on an
+ existing view, only the view's defining SELECT rule is changed.
+ Other view properties, including ownership, permissions, and non-SELECT
+ rules, remain unchanged. You must own the view
+ to replace it (this includes being a member of the owning role).
+ </para>
+
+ <refsect2 id="sql-createview-updatable-views">
+ <title>Updatable Views</title>
+
+ <indexterm zone="sql-createview-updatable-views">
+ <primary>updatable views</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <para>
+ Simple views are automatically updatable: the system will allow
+ <command>INSERT</command>, <command>UPDATE</command> and <command>DELETE</command> statements
+ to be used on the view in the same way as on a regular table. A view is
+ automatically updatable if it satisfies all of the following conditions:
+
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The view must have exactly one entry in its <literal>FROM</literal> list,
+ which must be a table or another updatable view.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The view definition must not contain <literal>WITH</literal>,
+ <literal>DISTINCT</literal>, <literal>GROUP BY</literal>, <literal>HAVING</literal>,
+ <literal>LIMIT</literal>, or <literal>OFFSET</literal> clauses at the top level.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The view definition must not contain set operations (<literal>UNION</literal>,
+ <literal>INTERSECT</literal> or <literal>EXCEPT</literal>) at the top level.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The view's select list must not contain any aggregates, window functions
+ or set-returning functions.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ An automatically updatable view may contain a mix of updatable and
+ non-updatable columns. A column is updatable if it is a simple reference
+ to an updatable column of the underlying base relation; otherwise the
+ column is read-only, and an error will be raised if an <command>INSERT</command>
+ or <command>UPDATE</command> statement attempts to assign a value to it.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the view is automatically updatable the system will convert any
+ <command>INSERT</command>, <command>UPDATE</command> or <command>DELETE</command> statement
+ on the view into the corresponding statement on the underlying base
+ relation. <command>INSERT</command> statements that have an <literal>ON
+ CONFLICT UPDATE</literal> clause are fully supported.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If an automatically updatable view contains a <literal>WHERE</literal>
+ condition, the condition restricts which rows of the base relation are
+ available to be modified by <command>UPDATE</command> and <command>DELETE</command>
+ statements on the view. However, an <command>UPDATE</command> is allowed to
+ change a row so that it no longer satisfies the <literal>WHERE</literal>
+ condition, and thus is no longer visible through the view. Similarly,
+ an <command>INSERT</command> command can potentially insert base-relation rows
+ that do not satisfy the <literal>WHERE</literal> condition and thus are not
+ visible through the view (<literal>ON CONFLICT UPDATE</literal> may
+ similarly affect an existing row not visible through the view).
+ The <literal>CHECK OPTION</literal> may be used to prevent
+ <command>INSERT</command> and <command>UPDATE</command> commands from creating
+ such rows that are not visible through the view.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If an automatically updatable view is marked with the
+ <literal>security_barrier</literal> property then all the view's <literal>WHERE</literal>
+ conditions (and any conditions using operators which are marked as <literal>LEAKPROOF</literal>)
+ will always be evaluated before any conditions that a user of the view has
+ added. See <xref linkend="rules-privileges"/> for full details. Note that,
+ due to this, rows which are not ultimately returned (because they do not
+ pass the user's <literal>WHERE</literal> conditions) may still end up being locked.
+ <command>EXPLAIN</command> can be used to see which conditions are
+ applied at the relation level (and therefore do not lock rows) and which are
+ not.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A more complex view that does not satisfy all these conditions is
+ read-only by default: the system will not allow an insert, update, or
+ delete on the view. You can get the effect of an updatable view by
+ creating <literal>INSTEAD OF</literal> triggers on the view, which must
+ convert attempted inserts, etc. on the view into appropriate actions
+ on other tables. For more information see <xref
+ linkend="sql-createtrigger"/>. Another possibility is to create rules
+ (see <xref linkend="sql-createrule"/>), but in practice triggers are
+ easier to understand and use correctly.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Note that the user performing the insert, update or delete on the view
+ must have the corresponding insert, update or delete privilege on the
+ view. In addition the view's owner must have the relevant privileges on
+ the underlying base relations, but the user performing the update does
+ not need any permissions on the underlying base relations (see
+ <xref linkend="rules-privileges"/>).
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a view consisting of all comedy films:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE VIEW comedies AS
+ SELECT *
+ FROM films
+ WHERE kind = 'Comedy';
+</programlisting>
+ This will create a view containing the columns that are in the
+ <literal>film</literal> table at the time of view creation. Though
+ <literal>*</literal> was used to create the view, columns added later to
+ the table will not be part of the view.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a view with <literal>LOCAL CHECK OPTION</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE VIEW universal_comedies AS
+ SELECT *
+ FROM comedies
+ WHERE classification = 'U'
+ WITH LOCAL CHECK OPTION;
+</programlisting>
+ This will create a view based on the <literal>comedies</literal> view, showing
+ only films with <literal>kind = 'Comedy'</literal> and
+ <literal>classification = 'U'</literal>. Any attempt to <command>INSERT</command> or
+ <command>UPDATE</command> a row in the view will be rejected if the new row
+ doesn't have <literal>classification = 'U'</literal>, but the film
+ <literal>kind</literal> will not be checked.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a view with <literal>CASCADED CHECK OPTION</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE VIEW pg_comedies AS
+ SELECT *
+ FROM comedies
+ WHERE classification = 'PG'
+ WITH CASCADED CHECK OPTION;
+</programlisting>
+ This will create a view that checks both the <literal>kind</literal> and
+ <literal>classification</literal> of new rows.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a view with a mix of updatable and non-updatable columns:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE VIEW comedies AS
+ SELECT f.*,
+ country_code_to_name(f.country_code) AS country,
+ (SELECT avg(r.rating)
+ FROM user_ratings r
+ WHERE r.film_id = f.id) AS avg_rating
+ FROM films f
+ WHERE f.kind = 'Comedy';
+</programlisting>
+ This view will support <command>INSERT</command>, <command>UPDATE</command> and
+ <command>DELETE</command>. All the columns from the <literal>films</literal> table will
+ be updatable, whereas the computed columns <literal>country</literal> and
+ <literal>avg_rating</literal> will be read-only.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a recursive view consisting of the numbers from 1 to 100:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE RECURSIVE VIEW public.nums_1_100 (n) AS
+ VALUES (1)
+UNION ALL
+ SELECT n+1 FROM nums_1_100 WHERE n &lt; 100;
+</programlisting>
+ Notice that although the recursive view's name is schema-qualified in this
+ <command>CREATE</command>, its internal self-reference is not schema-qualified.
+ This is because the implicitly-created CTE's name cannot be
+ schema-qualified.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>CREATE OR REPLACE VIEW</command> is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> language extension.
+ So is the concept of a temporary view.
+ The <literal>WITH ( ... )</literal> clause is an extension as well.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterview"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropview"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-creatematerializedview"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/createdb.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/createdb.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8647345
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/createdb.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,396 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/createdb.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="app-createdb">
+ <indexterm zone="app-createdb">
+ <primary>createdb</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>createdb</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>createdb</refname>
+ <refpurpose>create a new <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>createdb</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>connection-option</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><replaceable>dbname</replaceable>
+ <arg choice="opt"><replaceable>description</replaceable></arg></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+
+ <refsect1 id="r1-app-createdb-1">
+ <title>Description</title>
+ <para>
+ <application>createdb</application> creates a new <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Normally, the database user who executes this command becomes the owner of
+ the new database.
+ However, a different owner can be specified via the <option>-O</option>
+ option, if the executing user has appropriate privileges.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>createdb</application> is a wrapper around the
+ <acronym>SQL</acronym> command <link linkend="sql-createdatabase"><command>CREATE DATABASE</command></link>.
+ There is no effective difference between creating databases via
+ this utility and via other methods for accessing the server.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>createdb</application> accepts the following command-line arguments:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">dbname</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the name of the database to be created. The name must be
+ unique among all <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> databases in this cluster.
+ The default is to create a database with the same name as the
+ current system user.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">description</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies a comment to be associated with the newly created
+ database.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-D <replaceable class="parameter">tablespace</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--tablespace=<replaceable class="parameter">tablespace</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the default tablespace for the database. (This name
+ is processed as a double-quoted identifier.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-e</option></term>
+ <term><option>--echo</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Echo the commands that <application>createdb</application> generates
+ and sends to the server.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-E <replaceable class="parameter">encoding</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--encoding=<replaceable class="parameter">encoding</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the character encoding scheme to be used in this
+ database. The character sets supported by the
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> server are described in
+ <xref linkend="multibyte-charset-supported"/>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-l <replaceable class="parameter">locale</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--locale=<replaceable class="parameter">locale</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the locale to be used in this database. This is equivalent
+ to specifying both <option>--lc-collate</option> and <option>--lc-ctype</option>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--lc-collate=<replaceable class="parameter">locale</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the LC_COLLATE setting to be used in this database.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--lc-ctype=<replaceable class="parameter">locale</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the LC_CTYPE setting to be used in this database.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-O <replaceable class="parameter">owner</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--owner=<replaceable class="parameter">owner</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the database user who will own the new database.
+ (This name is processed as a double-quoted identifier.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-T <replaceable class="parameter">template</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--template=<replaceable class="parameter">template</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the template database from which to build this
+ database. (This name is processed as a double-quoted identifier.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-V</option></term>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the <application>createdb</application> version and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show help about <application>createdb</application> command line
+ arguments, and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The options <option>-D</option>, <option>-l</option>, <option>-E</option>,
+ <option>-O</option>, and
+ <option>-T</option> correspond to options of the underlying
+ SQL command <link linkend="sql-createdatabase"><command>CREATE DATABASE</command></link>; see there for more information
+ about them.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>createdb</application> also accepts the following
+ command-line arguments for connection parameters:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-h <replaceable class="parameter">host</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--host=<replaceable class="parameter">host</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the host name of the machine on which the
+ server is running. If the value begins with a slash, it is used
+ as the directory for the Unix domain socket.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-p <replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--port=<replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the TCP port or the local Unix domain socket file
+ extension on which the server is listening for connections.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-U <replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--username=<replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ User name to connect as.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-w</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Never issue a password prompt. If the server requires
+ password authentication and a password is not available by
+ other means such as a <filename>.pgpass</filename> file, the
+ connection attempt will fail. This option can be useful in
+ batch jobs and scripts where no user is present to enter a
+ password.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-W</option></term>
+ <term><option>--password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Force <application>createdb</application> to prompt for a
+ password before connecting to a database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This option is never essential, since
+ <application>createdb</application> will automatically prompt
+ for a password if the server demands password authentication.
+ However, <application>createdb</application> will waste a
+ connection attempt finding out that the server wants a password.
+ In some cases it is worth typing <option>-W</option> to avoid the extra
+ connection attempt.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--maintenance-db=<replaceable class="parameter">dbname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the name of the database to connect to when creating the
+ new database. If not specified, the <literal>postgres</literal>
+ database will be used; if that does not exist (or if it is the name
+ of the new database being created), <literal>template1</literal> will
+ be used.
+ This can be a <link linkend="libpq-connstring">connection
+ string</link>. If so, connection string parameters will override any
+ conflicting command line options.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Environment</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PGDATABASE</envar></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If set, the name of the database to create, unless overridden on
+ the command line.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PGHOST</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGPORT</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGUSER</envar></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Default connection parameters. <envar>PGUSER</envar> also
+ determines the name of the database to create, if it is not
+ specified on the command line or by <envar>PGDATABASE</envar>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PG_COLOR</envar></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether to use color in diagnostic messages. Possible values
+ are <literal>always</literal>, <literal>auto</literal> and
+ <literal>never</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ This utility, like most other <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> utilities,
+ also uses the environment variables supported by <application>libpq</application>
+ (see <xref linkend="libpq-envars"/>).
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Diagnostics</title>
+
+ <para>
+ In case of difficulty, see <xref linkend="sql-createdatabase"/>
+ and <xref linkend="app-psql"/> for
+ discussions of potential problems and error messages.
+ The database server must be running at the
+ targeted host. Also, any default connection settings and environment
+ variables used by the <application>libpq</application> front-end
+ library will apply.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To create the database <literal>demo</literal> using the default
+ database server:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$ </prompt><userinput>createdb demo</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To create the database <literal>demo</literal> using the
+ server on host <literal>eden</literal>, port 5000, using the
+ <literal>template0</literal> template database, here is the
+ command-line command and the underlying SQL command:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$ </prompt><userinput>createdb -p 5000 -h eden -T template0 -e demo</userinput>
+<computeroutput>CREATE DATABASE demo TEMPLATE template0;</computeroutput>
+</screen></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="app-dropdb"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createdatabase"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/createuser.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/createuser.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..17579e5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/createuser.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,498 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/createuser.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="app-createuser">
+ <indexterm zone="app-createuser">
+ <primary>createuser</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>createuser</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>createuser</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> user account</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>createuser</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>connection-option</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><replaceable>username</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+ <para>
+ <application>createuser</application> creates a
+ new <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> user (or more precisely, a role).
+ Only superusers and users with <literal>CREATEROLE</literal> privilege can create
+ new users, so <application>createuser</application> must be
+ invoked by someone who can connect as a superuser or a user with
+ <literal>CREATEROLE</literal> privilege.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If you wish to create a new superuser, you must connect as a
+ superuser, not merely with <literal>CREATEROLE</literal> privilege.
+ Being a superuser implies the ability to bypass all access permission
+ checks within the database, so superuser access should not be granted lightly.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>createuser</application> is a wrapper around the
+ <acronym>SQL</acronym> command <link linkend="sql-createrole"><command>CREATE ROLE</command></link>.
+ There is no effective difference between creating users via
+ this utility and via other methods for accessing the server.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>createuser</application> accepts the following command-line arguments:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the name of the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> user
+ to be created.
+ This name must be different from all existing roles in this
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> installation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-c <replaceable class="parameter">number</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--connection-limit=<replaceable class="parameter">number</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Set a maximum number of connections for the new user.
+ The default is to set no limit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-d</option></term>
+ <term><option>--createdb</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new user will be allowed to create databases.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-D</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-createdb</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new user will not be allowed to create databases. This is the
+ default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-e</option></term>
+ <term><option>--echo</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Echo the commands that <application>createuser</application> generates
+ and sends to the server.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-E</option></term>
+ <term><option>--encrypted</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option is obsolete but still accepted for backward
+ compatibility.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-g <replaceable class="parameter">role</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--role=<replaceable class="parameter">role</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Indicates role to which this role will be added immediately as a new
+ member. Multiple roles to which this role will be added as a member
+ can be specified by writing multiple
+ <option>-g</option> switches.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-i</option></term>
+ <term><option>--inherit</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new role will automatically inherit privileges of roles
+ it is a member of.
+ This is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-I</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-inherit</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new role will not automatically inherit privileges of roles
+ it is a member of.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--interactive</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Prompt for the user name if none is specified on the command line, and
+ also prompt for whichever of the options
+ <option>-d</option>/<option>-D</option>,
+ <option>-r</option>/<option>-R</option>,
+ <option>-s</option>/<option>-S</option> is not specified on the command
+ line. (This was the default behavior up to PostgreSQL 9.1.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-l</option></term>
+ <term><option>--login</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new user will be allowed to log in (that is, the user name
+ can be used as the initial session user identifier).
+ This is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-L</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-login</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new user will not be allowed to log in.
+ (A role without login privilege is still useful as a means of
+ managing database permissions.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-P</option></term>
+ <term><option>--pwprompt</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If given, <application>createuser</application> will issue a prompt for
+ the password of the new user. This is not necessary if you do not plan
+ on using password authentication.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-r</option></term>
+ <term><option>--createrole</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new user will be allowed to create new roles (that is,
+ this user will have <literal>CREATEROLE</literal> privilege).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-R</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-createrole</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new user will not be allowed to create new roles. This is the
+ default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-s</option></term>
+ <term><option>--superuser</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new user will be a superuser.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-S</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-superuser</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new user will not be a superuser. This is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-V</option></term>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the <application>createuser</application> version and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--replication</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new user will have the <literal>REPLICATION</literal> privilege,
+ which is described more fully in the documentation for <xref
+ linkend="sql-createrole"/>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-replication</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new user will not have the <literal>REPLICATION</literal>
+ privilege, which is described more fully in the documentation for <xref
+ linkend="sql-createrole"/>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show help about <application>createuser</application> command line
+ arguments, and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>createuser</application> also accepts the following
+ command-line arguments for connection parameters:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-h <replaceable class="parameter">host</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--host=<replaceable class="parameter">host</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the host name of the machine on which the
+ server
+ is running. If the value begins with a slash, it is used
+ as the directory for the Unix domain socket.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-p <replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--port=<replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the TCP port or local Unix domain socket file
+ extension on which the server
+ is listening for connections.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-U <replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--username=<replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ User name to connect as (not the user name to create).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-w</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Never issue a password prompt. If the server requires
+ password authentication and a password is not available by
+ other means such as a <filename>.pgpass</filename> file, the
+ connection attempt will fail. This option can be useful in
+ batch jobs and scripts where no user is present to enter a
+ password.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-W</option></term>
+ <term><option>--password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Force <application>createuser</application> to prompt for a
+ password (for connecting to the server, not for the
+ password of the new user).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This option is never essential, since
+ <application>createuser</application> will automatically prompt
+ for a password if the server demands password authentication.
+ However, <application>createuser</application> will waste a
+ connection attempt finding out that the server wants a password.
+ In some cases it is worth typing <option>-W</option> to avoid the extra
+ connection attempt.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Environment</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PGHOST</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGPORT</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGUSER</envar></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Default connection parameters
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PG_COLOR</envar></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether to use color in diagnostic messages. Possible values
+ are <literal>always</literal>, <literal>auto</literal> and
+ <literal>never</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ This utility, like most other <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> utilities,
+ also uses the environment variables supported by <application>libpq</application>
+ (see <xref linkend="libpq-envars"/>).
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Diagnostics</title>
+
+ <para>
+ In case of difficulty, see <xref linkend="sql-createrole"/>
+ and <xref linkend="app-psql"/> for
+ discussions of potential problems and error messages.
+ The database server must be running at the
+ targeted host. Also, any default connection settings and environment
+ variables used by the <application>libpq</application> front-end
+ library will apply.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To create a user <literal>joe</literal> on the default database
+ server:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$ </prompt><userinput>createuser joe</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To create a user <literal>joe</literal> on the default database
+ server with prompting for some additional attributes:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$ </prompt><userinput>createuser --interactive joe</userinput>
+<computeroutput>Shall the new role be a superuser? (y/n) </computeroutput><userinput>n</userinput>
+<computeroutput>Shall the new role be allowed to create databases? (y/n) </computeroutput><userinput>n</userinput>
+<computeroutput>Shall the new role be allowed to create more new roles? (y/n) </computeroutput><userinput>n</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To create the same user <literal>joe</literal> using the
+ server on host <literal>eden</literal>, port 5000, with attributes explicitly specified,
+ taking a look at the underlying command:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$ </prompt><userinput>createuser -h eden -p 5000 -S -D -R -e joe</userinput>
+<computeroutput>CREATE ROLE joe NOSUPERUSER NOCREATEDB NOCREATEROLE INHERIT LOGIN;</computeroutput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To create the user <literal>joe</literal> as a superuser,
+ and assign a password immediately:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$ </prompt><userinput>createuser -P -s -e joe</userinput>
+<computeroutput>Enter password for new role: </computeroutput><userinput>xyzzy</userinput>
+<computeroutput>Enter it again: </computeroutput><userinput>xyzzy</userinput>
+<computeroutput>CREATE ROLE joe PASSWORD 'md5b5f5ba1a423792b526f799ae4eb3d59e' SUPERUSER CREATEDB CREATEROLE INHERIT LOGIN;</computeroutput>
+</screen>
+ In the above example, the new password isn't actually echoed when typed,
+ but we show what was typed for clarity. As you see, the password is
+ encrypted before it is sent to the client.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="app-dropuser"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createrole"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/deallocate.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/deallocate.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3875e50
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/deallocate.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,98 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/deallocate.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-deallocate">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-deallocate">
+ <primary>DEALLOCATE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <indexterm zone="sql-deallocate">
+ <primary>prepared statements</primary>
+ <secondary>removing</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DEALLOCATE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DEALLOCATE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>deallocate a prepared statement</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DEALLOCATE [ PREPARE ] { <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> | ALL }
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DEALLOCATE</command> is used to deallocate a previously
+ prepared SQL statement. If you do not explicitly deallocate a
+ prepared statement, it is deallocated when the session ends.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For more information on prepared statements, see <xref
+ linkend="sql-prepare"/>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>PREPARE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This key word is ignored.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the prepared statement to deallocate.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ALL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Deallocate all prepared statements.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The SQL standard includes a <command>DEALLOCATE</command>
+ statement, but it is only for use in embedded SQL.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-execute"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-prepare"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/declare.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/declare.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..bbbd335
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/declare.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,361 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/declare.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-declare">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-declare">
+ <primary>DECLARE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <indexterm zone="sql-declare">
+ <primary>cursor</primary>
+ <secondary>DECLARE</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DECLARE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DECLARE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a cursor</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DECLARE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ BINARY ] [ ASENSITIVE | INSENSITIVE ] [ [ NO ] SCROLL ]
+ CURSOR [ { WITH | WITHOUT } HOLD ] FOR <replaceable class="parameter">query</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DECLARE</command> allows a user to create cursors, which
+ can be used to retrieve
+ a small number of rows at a time out of a larger query.
+ After the cursor is created, rows are fetched from it using
+ <link linkend="sql-fetch"><command>FETCH</command></link>.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ This page describes usage of cursors at the SQL command level.
+ If you are trying to use cursors inside a <application>PL/pgSQL</application>
+ function, the rules are different &mdash;
+ see <xref linkend="plpgsql-cursors"/>.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the cursor to be created.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>BINARY</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Causes the cursor to return data in binary rather than in text format.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ASENSITIVE</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>INSENSITIVE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Cursor sensitivity determines whether changes to the data underlying the
+ cursor, done in the same transaction, after the cursor has been
+ declared, are visible in the cursor. <literal>INSENSITIVE</literal>
+ means they are not visible, <literal>ASENSITIVE</literal> means the
+ behavior is implementation-dependent. A third behavior,
+ <literal>SENSITIVE</literal>, meaning that such changes are visible in
+ the cursor, is not available in <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>.
+ In <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>, all cursors are insensitive;
+ so these key words have no effect and are only accepted for
+ compatibility with the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Specifying <literal>INSENSITIVE</literal> together with <literal>FOR
+ UPDATE</literal> or <literal>FOR SHARE</literal> is an error.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SCROLL</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>NO SCROLL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para><literal>SCROLL</literal> specifies that the cursor can be used
+ to retrieve rows in a nonsequential fashion (e.g.,
+ backward). Depending upon the complexity of the query's
+ execution plan, specifying <literal>SCROLL</literal> might impose
+ a performance penalty on the query's execution time.
+ <literal>NO SCROLL</literal> specifies that the cursor cannot be
+ used to retrieve rows in a nonsequential fashion. The default is to
+ allow scrolling in some cases; this is not the same as specifying
+ <literal>SCROLL</literal>. See <xref linkend="sql-declare-notes"/>
+ below for details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>WITH HOLD</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>WITHOUT HOLD</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para><literal>WITH HOLD</literal> specifies that the cursor can
+ continue to be used after the transaction that created it
+ successfully commits. <literal>WITHOUT HOLD</literal> specifies
+ that the cursor cannot be used outside of the transaction that
+ created it. If neither <literal>WITHOUT HOLD</literal> nor
+ <literal>WITH HOLD</literal> is specified, <literal>WITHOUT
+ HOLD</literal> is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">query</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A <link linkend="sql-select"><command>SELECT</command></link> or
+ <link linkend="sql-values"><command>VALUES</command></link> command
+ which will provide the rows to be returned by the cursor.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ The key words <literal>ASENSITIVE</literal>, <literal>BINARY</literal>,
+ <literal>INSENSITIVE</literal>, and <literal>SCROLL</literal> can
+ appear in any order.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-declare-notes" xreflabel="Notes">
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Normal cursors return data in text format, the same as a
+ <command>SELECT</command> would produce. The <literal>BINARY</literal> option
+ specifies that the cursor should return data in binary format.
+ This reduces conversion effort for both the server and client,
+ at the cost of more programmer effort to deal with platform-dependent
+ binary data formats.
+ As an example, if a query returns a value of one from an integer column,
+ you would get a string of <literal>1</literal> with a default cursor,
+ whereas with a binary cursor you would get
+ a 4-byte field containing the internal representation of the value
+ (in big-endian byte order).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Binary cursors should be used carefully. Many applications,
+ including <application>psql</application>, are not prepared to
+ handle binary cursors and expect data to come back in the text
+ format.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ When the client application uses the <quote>extended query</quote> protocol
+ to issue a <command>FETCH</command> command, the Bind protocol message
+ specifies whether data is to be retrieved in text or binary format.
+ This choice overrides the way that the cursor is defined. The concept
+ of a binary cursor as such is thus obsolete when using extended query
+ protocol &mdash; any cursor can be treated as either text or binary.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+
+ <para>
+ Unless <literal>WITH HOLD</literal> is specified, the cursor
+ created by this command can only be used within the current
+ transaction. Thus, <command>DECLARE</command> without <literal>WITH
+ HOLD</literal> is useless outside a transaction block: the cursor would
+ survive only to the completion of the statement. Therefore
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> reports an error if such a
+ command is used outside a transaction block.
+ Use
+ <link linkend="sql-begin"><command>BEGIN</command></link> and
+ <link linkend="sql-commit"><command>COMMIT</command></link>
+ (or <link linkend="sql-rollback"><command>ROLLBACK</command></link>)
+ to define a transaction block.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If <literal>WITH HOLD</literal> is specified and the transaction
+ that created the cursor successfully commits, the cursor can
+ continue to be accessed by subsequent transactions in the same
+ session. (But if the creating transaction is aborted, the cursor
+ is removed.) A cursor created with <literal>WITH HOLD</literal>
+ is closed when an explicit <command>CLOSE</command> command is
+ issued on it, or the session ends. In the current implementation,
+ the rows represented by a held cursor are copied into a temporary
+ file or memory area so that they remain available for subsequent
+ transactions.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <literal>WITH HOLD</literal> may not be specified when the query
+ includes <literal>FOR UPDATE</literal> or <literal>FOR SHARE</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>SCROLL</literal> option should be specified when defining a
+ cursor that will be used to fetch backwards. This is required by
+ the SQL standard. However, for compatibility with earlier
+ versions, <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> will allow
+ backward fetches without <literal>SCROLL</literal>, if the cursor's query
+ plan is simple enough that no extra overhead is needed to support
+ it. However, application developers are advised not to rely on
+ using backward fetches from a cursor that has not been created
+ with <literal>SCROLL</literal>. If <literal>NO SCROLL</literal> is
+ specified, then backward fetches are disallowed in any case.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Backward fetches are also disallowed when the query
+ includes <literal>FOR UPDATE</literal> or <literal>FOR SHARE</literal>; therefore
+ <literal>SCROLL</literal> may not be specified in this case.
+ </para>
+
+ <caution>
+ <para>
+ Scrollable cursors may give unexpected
+ results if they invoke any volatile functions (see <xref
+ linkend="xfunc-volatility"/>). When a previously fetched row is
+ re-fetched, the functions might be re-executed, perhaps leading to
+ results different from the first time. It's best to
+ specify <literal>NO SCROLL</literal> for a query involving volatile
+ functions. If that is not practical, one workaround
+ is to declare the cursor <literal>SCROLL WITH HOLD</literal> and commit the
+ transaction before reading any rows from it. This will force the
+ entire output of the cursor to be materialized in temporary storage,
+ so that volatile functions are executed exactly once for each row.
+ </para>
+ </caution>
+
+ <para>
+ If the cursor's query includes <literal>FOR UPDATE</literal> or <literal>FOR
+ SHARE</literal>, then returned rows are locked at the time they are first
+ fetched, in the same way as for a regular
+ <link linkend="sql-select"><command>SELECT</command></link> command with
+ these options.
+ In addition, the returned rows will be the most up-to-date versions.
+ </para>
+
+ <caution>
+ <para>
+ It is generally recommended to use <literal>FOR UPDATE</literal> if the cursor
+ is intended to be used with <command>UPDATE ... WHERE CURRENT OF</command> or
+ <command>DELETE ... WHERE CURRENT OF</command>. Using <literal>FOR UPDATE</literal>
+ prevents other sessions from changing the rows between the time they are
+ fetched and the time they are updated. Without <literal>FOR UPDATE</literal>,
+ a subsequent <literal>WHERE CURRENT OF</literal> command will have no effect if
+ the row was changed since the cursor was created.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Another reason to use <literal>FOR UPDATE</literal> is that without it, a
+ subsequent <literal>WHERE CURRENT OF</literal> might fail if the cursor query
+ does not meet the SQL standard's rules for being <quote>simply
+ updatable</quote> (in particular, the cursor must reference just one table
+ and not use grouping or <literal>ORDER BY</literal>). Cursors
+ that are not simply updatable might work, or might not, depending on plan
+ choice details; so in the worst case, an application might work in testing
+ and then fail in production. If <literal>FOR UPDATE</literal> is
+ specified, the cursor is guaranteed to be updatable.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The main reason not to use <literal>FOR UPDATE</literal> with <literal>WHERE
+ CURRENT OF</literal> is if you need the cursor to be scrollable, or to be
+ isolated from concurrent updates (that is, continue to show the old
+ data). If this is a requirement, pay close heed to the caveats shown
+ above.
+ </para>
+ </caution>
+
+ <para>
+ The SQL standard only makes provisions for cursors in embedded
+ <acronym>SQL</acronym>. The <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ server does not implement an <command>OPEN</command> statement for
+ cursors; a cursor is considered to be open when it is declared.
+ However, <application>ECPG</application>, the embedded SQL
+ preprocessor for <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>, supports
+ the standard SQL cursor conventions, including those involving
+ <command>DECLARE</command> and <command>OPEN</command> statements.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You can see all available cursors by querying the <link
+ linkend="view-pg-cursors"><structname>pg_cursors</structname></link>
+ system view.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To declare a cursor:
+<programlisting>
+DECLARE liahona CURSOR FOR SELECT * FROM films;
+</programlisting>
+ See <xref linkend="sql-fetch"/> for more
+ examples of cursor usage.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The SQL standard allows cursors only in embedded
+ <acronym>SQL</acronym> and in modules. <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ permits cursors to be used interactively.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ According to the SQL standard, changes made to insensitive cursors by
+ <literal>UPDATE ... WHERE CURRENT OF</literal> and <literal>DELETE
+ ... WHERE CURRENT OF</literal> statements are visible in that same
+ cursor. <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> treats these statements like
+ all other data changing statements in that they are not visible in
+ insensitive cursors.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Binary cursors are a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-close"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-fetch"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-move"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/delete.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/delete.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1b81b4e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/delete.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,289 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/delete.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-delete">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-delete">
+ <primary>DELETE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DELETE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DELETE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>delete rows of a table</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+[ WITH [ RECURSIVE ] <replaceable class="parameter">with_query</replaceable> [, ...] ]
+DELETE FROM [ ONLY ] <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [ * ] [ [ AS ] <replaceable class="parameter">alias</replaceable> ]
+ [ USING <replaceable class="parameter">from_item</replaceable> [, ...] ]
+ [ WHERE <replaceable class="parameter">condition</replaceable> | WHERE CURRENT OF <replaceable class="parameter">cursor_name</replaceable> ]
+ [ RETURNING * | <replaceable class="parameter">output_expression</replaceable> [ [ AS ] <replaceable class="parameter">output_name</replaceable> ] [, ...] ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DELETE</command> deletes rows that satisfy the
+ <literal>WHERE</literal> clause from the specified table. If the
+ <literal>WHERE</literal> clause is absent, the effect is to delete
+ all rows in the table. The result is a valid, but empty table.
+ </para>
+
+ <tip>
+ <para>
+ <link linkend="sql-truncate"><command>TRUNCATE</command></link> provides a
+ faster mechanism to remove all rows from a table.
+ </para>
+ </tip>
+
+ <para>
+ There are two ways to delete rows in a table using information
+ contained in other tables in the database: using sub-selects, or
+ specifying additional tables in the <literal>USING</literal> clause.
+ Which technique is more appropriate depends on the specific
+ circumstances.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The optional <literal>RETURNING</literal> clause causes <command>DELETE</command>
+ to compute and return value(s) based on each row actually deleted.
+ Any expression using the table's columns, and/or columns of other
+ tables mentioned in <literal>USING</literal>, can be computed.
+ The syntax of the <literal>RETURNING</literal> list is identical to that of the
+ output list of <command>SELECT</command>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must have the <literal>DELETE</literal> privilege on the table
+ to delete from it, as well as the <literal>SELECT</literal>
+ privilege for any table in the <literal>USING</literal> clause or
+ whose values are read in the <replaceable
+ class="parameter">condition</replaceable>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">with_query</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>WITH</literal> clause allows you to specify one or more
+ subqueries that can be referenced by name in the <command>DELETE</command>
+ query. See <xref linkend="queries-with"/> and <xref linkend="sql-select"/>
+ for details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the table to delete rows
+ from. If <literal>ONLY</literal> is specified before the table name,
+ matching rows are deleted from the named table only. If
+ <literal>ONLY</literal> is not specified, matching rows are also deleted
+ from any tables inheriting from the named table. Optionally,
+ <literal>*</literal> can be specified after the table name to explicitly
+ indicate that descendant tables are included.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">alias</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A substitute name for the target table. When an alias is
+ provided, it completely hides the actual name of the table. For
+ example, given <literal>DELETE FROM foo AS f</literal>, the remainder
+ of the <command>DELETE</command> statement must refer to this
+ table as <literal>f</literal> not <literal>foo</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">from_item</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A table expression allowing columns from other tables to appear
+ in the <literal>WHERE</literal> condition. This uses the same
+ syntax as the <link linkend="sql-from"><literal>FROM</literal></link>
+ clause of a <command>SELECT</command> statement; for example, an alias
+ for the table name can be specified. Do not repeat the target
+ table as a <replaceable class="parameter">from_item</replaceable>
+ unless you wish to set up a self-join (in which case it must appear
+ with an alias in the <replaceable>from_item</replaceable>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">condition</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An expression that returns a value of type <type>boolean</type>.
+ Only rows for which this expression returns <literal>true</literal>
+ will be deleted.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">cursor_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the cursor to use in a <literal>WHERE CURRENT OF</literal>
+ condition. The row to be deleted is the one most recently fetched
+ from this cursor. The cursor must be a non-grouping
+ query on the <command>DELETE</command>'s target table.
+ Note that <literal>WHERE CURRENT OF</literal> cannot be
+ specified together with a Boolean condition. See
+ <xref linkend="sql-declare"/>
+ for more information about using cursors with
+ <literal>WHERE CURRENT OF</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">output_expression</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An expression to be computed and returned by the <command>DELETE</command>
+ command after each row is deleted. The expression can use any
+ column names of the table named by <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable>
+ or table(s) listed in <literal>USING</literal>.
+ Write <literal>*</literal> to return all columns.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">output_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A name to use for a returned column.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Outputs</title>
+
+ <para>
+ On successful completion, a <command>DELETE</command> command returns a command
+ tag of the form
+<screen>
+DELETE <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable>
+</screen>
+ The <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable> is the number
+ of rows deleted. Note that the number may be less than the number of
+ rows that matched the <replaceable
+ class="parameter">condition</replaceable> when deletes were
+ suppressed by a <literal>BEFORE DELETE</literal> trigger. If <replaceable
+ class="parameter">count</replaceable> is 0, no rows were deleted by
+ the query (this is not considered an error).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the <command>DELETE</command> command contains a <literal>RETURNING</literal>
+ clause, the result will be similar to that of a <command>SELECT</command>
+ statement containing the columns and values defined in the
+ <literal>RETURNING</literal> list, computed over the row(s) deleted by the
+ command.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> lets you reference columns of
+ other tables in the <literal>WHERE</literal> condition by specifying the
+ other tables in the <literal>USING</literal> clause. For example,
+ to delete all films produced by a given producer, one can do:
+<programlisting>
+DELETE FROM films USING producers
+ WHERE producer_id = producers.id AND producers.name = 'foo';
+</programlisting>
+ What is essentially happening here is a join between <structname>films</structname>
+ and <structname>producers</structname>, with all successfully joined
+ <structname>films</structname> rows being marked for deletion.
+ This syntax is not standard. A more standard way to do it is:
+<programlisting>
+DELETE FROM films
+ WHERE producer_id IN (SELECT id FROM producers WHERE name = 'foo');
+</programlisting>
+ In some cases the join style is easier to write or faster to
+ execute than the sub-select style.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Delete all films but musicals:
+<programlisting>
+DELETE FROM films WHERE kind &lt;&gt; 'Musical';
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Clear the table <literal>films</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+DELETE FROM films;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Delete completed tasks, returning full details of the deleted rows:
+<programlisting>
+DELETE FROM tasks WHERE status = 'DONE' RETURNING *;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Delete the row of <structname>tasks</structname> on which the cursor
+ <literal>c_tasks</literal> is currently positioned:
+<programlisting>
+DELETE FROM tasks WHERE CURRENT OF c_tasks;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This command conforms to the <acronym>SQL</acronym> standard, except
+ that the <literal>USING</literal> and <literal>RETURNING</literal> clauses
+ are <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extensions, as is the ability
+ to use <literal>WITH</literal> with <command>DELETE</command>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-truncate"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/discard.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/discard.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..bf44c52
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/discard.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,118 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/discard.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-discard">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-discard">
+ <primary>DISCARD</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DISCARD</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DISCARD</refname>
+ <refpurpose>discard session state</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DISCARD { ALL | PLANS | SEQUENCES | TEMPORARY | TEMP }
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DISCARD</command> releases internal resources associated with a
+ database session. This command is useful for partially or fully
+ resetting the session's state. There are several subcommands to
+ release different types of resources; the <command>DISCARD ALL</command>
+ variant subsumes all the others, and also resets additional state.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>PLANS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Releases all cached query plans, forcing re-planning to occur
+ the next time the associated prepared statement is used.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SEQUENCES</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Discards all cached sequence-related state,
+ including <function>currval()</function>/<function>lastval()</function>
+ information and any preallocated sequence values that have not
+ yet been returned by <function>nextval()</function>.
+ (See <xref linkend="sql-createsequence"/> for a description of
+ preallocated sequence values.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>TEMPORARY</literal> or <literal>TEMP</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Drops all temporary tables created in the current session.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ALL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Releases all temporary resources associated with the current
+ session and resets the session to its initial state.
+ Currently, this has the same effect as executing the following sequence
+ of statements:
+<programlisting>
+CLOSE ALL;
+SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION DEFAULT;
+RESET ALL;
+DEALLOCATE ALL;
+UNLISTEN *;
+SELECT pg_advisory_unlock_all();
+DISCARD PLANS;
+DISCARD TEMP;
+DISCARD SEQUENCES;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DISCARD ALL</command> cannot be executed inside a transaction block.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DISCARD</command> is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/do.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/do.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..96901b7
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/do.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,135 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/do.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-do">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-do">
+ <primary>DO</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <indexterm zone="sql-do">
+ <primary>anonymous code blocks</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DO</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DO</refname>
+ <refpurpose>execute an anonymous code block</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DO [ LANGUAGE <replaceable class="parameter">lang_name</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">code</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DO</command> executes an anonymous code block, or in other
+ words a transient anonymous function in a procedural language.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The code block is treated as though it were the body of a function
+ with no parameters, returning <type>void</type>. It is parsed and
+ executed a single time.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The optional <literal>LANGUAGE</literal> clause can be written either
+ before or after the code block.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">code</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The procedural language code to be executed. This must be specified
+ as a string literal, just as in <command>CREATE FUNCTION</command>.
+ Use of a dollar-quoted literal is recommended.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">lang_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the procedural language the code is written in.
+ If omitted, the default is <literal>plpgsql</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The procedural language to be used must already have been installed
+ into the current database by means of <command>CREATE EXTENSION</command>.
+ <literal>plpgsql</literal> is installed by default, but other languages are not.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The user must have <literal>USAGE</literal> privilege for the procedural
+ language, or must be a superuser if the language is untrusted.
+ This is the same privilege requirement as for creating a function
+ in the language.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If <command>DO</command> is executed in a transaction block, then the
+ procedure code cannot execute transaction control statements. Transaction
+ control statements are only allowed if <command>DO</command> is executed in
+ its own transaction.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-do-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+ <para>
+ Grant all privileges on all views in schema <literal>public</literal> to
+ role <literal>webuser</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+DO $$DECLARE r record;
+BEGIN
+ FOR r IN SELECT table_schema, table_name FROM information_schema.tables
+ WHERE table_type = 'VIEW' AND table_schema = 'public'
+ LOOP
+ EXECUTE 'GRANT ALL ON ' || quote_ident(r.table_schema) || '.' || quote_ident(r.table_name) || ' TO webuser';
+ END LOOP;
+END$$;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>DO</command> statement in the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createlanguage"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_access_method.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_access_method.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a908a64
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_access_method.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,111 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_access_method.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-drop-access-method">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-drop-access-method">
+ <primary>DROP ACCESS METHOD</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP ACCESS METHOD</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP ACCESS METHOD</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove an access method</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP ACCESS METHOD [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP ACCESS METHOD</command> removes an existing access method.
+ Only superusers can drop access methods.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the access method does not exist.
+ A notice is issued in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an existing access method.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the access method
+ (such as operator classes, operator families, and indexes),
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the access method if any objects depend on it.
+ This is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Drop the access method <literal>heptree</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+DROP ACCESS METHOD heptree;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP ACCESS METHOD</command> is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-create-access-method"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_aggregate.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_aggregate.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ba74f4f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_aggregate.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,184 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_aggregate.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-dropaggregate">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-dropaggregate">
+ <primary>DROP AGGREGATE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP AGGREGATE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP AGGREGATE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove an aggregate function</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP AGGREGATE [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable>name</replaceable> ( <replaceable>aggregate_signature</replaceable> ) [, ...] [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable>aggregate_signature</replaceable> is:</phrase>
+
+* |
+[ <replaceable>argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable>argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable>argtype</replaceable> [ , ... ] |
+[ [ <replaceable>argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable>argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable>argtype</replaceable> [ , ... ] ] ORDER BY [ <replaceable>argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable>argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable>argtype</replaceable> [ , ... ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP AGGREGATE</command> removes an existing
+ aggregate function. To execute this command the current
+ user must be the owner of the aggregate function.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the aggregate does not exist. A notice is issued
+ in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing aggregate function.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The mode of an argument: <literal>IN</literal> or <literal>VARIADIC</literal>.
+ If omitted, the default is <literal>IN</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an argument.
+ Note that <command>DROP AGGREGATE</command> does not actually pay
+ any attention to argument names, since only the argument data
+ types are needed to determine the aggregate function's identity.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An input data type on which the aggregate function operates.
+ To reference a zero-argument aggregate function, write <literal>*</literal>
+ in place of the list of argument specifications.
+ To reference an ordered-set aggregate function, write
+ <literal>ORDER BY</literal> between the direct and aggregated argument
+ specifications.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the aggregate function
+ (such as views using it),
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the aggregate function if any objects depend on
+ it. This is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Alternative syntaxes for referencing ordered-set aggregates
+ are described under <xref linkend="sql-alteraggregate"/>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To remove the aggregate function <literal>myavg</literal> for type
+ <type>integer</type>:
+<programlisting>
+DROP AGGREGATE myavg(integer);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To remove the hypothetical-set aggregate function <literal>myrank</literal>,
+ which takes an arbitrary list of ordering columns and a matching list
+ of direct arguments:
+<programlisting>
+DROP AGGREGATE myrank(VARIADIC "any" ORDER BY VARIADIC "any");
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To remove multiple aggregate functions in one command:
+<programlisting>
+DROP AGGREGATE myavg(integer), myavg(bigint);
+</programlisting></para>
+</refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>DROP AGGREGATE</command> statement in the SQL
+ standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alteraggregate"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createaggregate"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_cast.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_cast.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5cb704b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_cast.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,117 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_cast.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-dropcast">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-dropcast">
+ <primary>DROP CAST</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP CAST</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP CAST</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a cast</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP CAST [ IF EXISTS ] (<replaceable>source_type</replaceable> AS <replaceable>target_type</replaceable>) [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-dropcast-description">
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP CAST</command> removes a previously defined cast.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To be able to drop a cast, you must own the source or the target
+ data type. These are the same privileges that are required to
+ create a cast.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the cast does not exist. A notice is issued
+ in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>source_type</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the source data type of the cast.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>target_type</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the target data type of the cast.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These key words do not have any effect, since there are no
+ dependencies on casts.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-dropcast-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To drop the cast from type <type>text</type> to type <type>int</type>:
+<programlisting>
+DROP CAST (text AS int);
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-dropcast-compat">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>DROP CAST</command> command conforms to the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createcast"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_collation.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_collation.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..60867b0
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_collation.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,114 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_collation.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-dropcollation">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-dropcollation">
+ <primary>DROP COLLATION</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP COLLATION</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP COLLATION</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a collation</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP COLLATION [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable>name</replaceable> [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-dropcollation-description">
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP COLLATION</command> removes a previously defined collation.
+ To be able to drop a collation, you must own the collation.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the collation does not exist.
+ A notice is issued in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>name</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the collation. The collation name can be
+ schema-qualified.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the collation,
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the collation if any objects depend on it. This
+ is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-dropcollation-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To drop the collation named <literal>german</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+DROP COLLATION german;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-dropcollation-compat">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>DROP COLLATION</command> command conforms to the
+ <acronym>SQL</acronym> standard, apart from the <literal>IF
+ EXISTS</literal> option, which is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altercollation"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createcollation"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_conversion.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_conversion.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..08558ad
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_conversion.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,107 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_conversion.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-dropconversion">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-dropconversion">
+ <primary>DROP CONVERSION</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP CONVERSION</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP CONVERSION</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a conversion</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP CONVERSION [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable>name</replaceable> [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-dropconversion-description">
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP CONVERSION</command> removes a previously defined conversion.
+ To be able to drop a conversion, you must own the conversion.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the conversion does not exist.
+ A notice is issued in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>name</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the conversion. The conversion name can be
+ schema-qualified.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These key words do not have any effect, since there are no
+ dependencies on conversions.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-dropconversion-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To drop the conversion named <literal>myname</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+DROP CONVERSION myname;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-dropconversion-compat">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>DROP CONVERSION</command> statement in the SQL
+ standard, but a <command>DROP TRANSLATION</command> statement that
+ goes along with the <command>CREATE TRANSLATION</command> statement
+ that is similar to the <command>CREATE CONVERSION</command>
+ statement in PostgreSQL.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterconversion"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createconversion"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_database.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_database.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ff01450
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_database.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,126 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_database.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-dropdatabase">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-dropdatabase">
+ <primary>DROP DATABASE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP DATABASE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP DATABASE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a database</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP DATABASE [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ [ WITH ] ( <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> [, ...] ) ]
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> can be:</phrase>
+
+ FORCE
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP DATABASE</command> drops a database. It removes the
+ catalog entries for the database and deletes the directory
+ containing the data. It can only be executed by the database owner.
+ It cannot be executed while you are connected to the target database.
+ (Connect to <literal>postgres</literal> or any other database to issue this
+ command.)
+ Also, if anyone else is connected to the target database, this command will
+ fail unless you use the <literal>FORCE</literal> option described below.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP DATABASE</command> cannot be undone. Use it with care!
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the database does not exist. A notice is issued
+ in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the database to remove.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>FORCE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Attempt to terminate all existing connections to the target database.
+ It doesn't terminate if prepared transactions, active logical replication
+ slots or subscriptions are present in the target database.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ This will fail if the current user has no permissions to terminate other
+ connections. Required permissions are the same as with
+ <literal>pg_terminate_backend</literal>, described in
+ <xref linkend="functions-admin-signal"/>. This will also fail if we
+ are not able to terminate connections.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP DATABASE</command> cannot be executed inside a transaction
+ block.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This command cannot be executed while connected to the target
+ database. Thus, it might be more convenient to use the program
+ <xref linkend="app-dropdb"/> instead,
+ which is a wrapper around this command.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>DROP DATABASE</command> statement in the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createdatabase"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_domain.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_domain.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b18faf3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_domain.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,114 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_domain.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-dropdomain">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-dropdomain">
+ <primary>DROP DOMAIN</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP DOMAIN</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP DOMAIN</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a domain</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP DOMAIN [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [, ...] [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP DOMAIN</command> removes a domain. Only the owner of
+ a domain can remove it.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the domain does not exist. A notice is issued
+ in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing domain.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the domain (such as
+ table columns),
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the domain if any objects depend on it. This is
+ the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-dropdomain-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To remove the domain <type>box</type>:
+
+<programlisting>
+DROP DOMAIN box;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-dropdomain-compatibility">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This command conforms to the SQL standard, except for the
+ <literal>IF EXISTS</literal> option, which is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-dropdomain-see-also">
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createdomain"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterdomain"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_event_trigger.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_event_trigger.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..137884c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_event_trigger.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,115 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_event_trigger.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-dropeventtrigger">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-dropeventtrigger">
+ <primary>DROP EVENT TRIGGER</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP EVENT TRIGGER</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP EVENT TRIGGER</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove an event trigger</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP EVENT TRIGGER [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP EVENT TRIGGER</command> removes an existing event trigger.
+ To execute this command, the current user must be the owner of the event
+ trigger.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the event trigger does not exist. A notice
+ is issued in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the event trigger to remove.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the trigger,
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the trigger if any objects depend on it. This is
+ the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-dropeventtrigger-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Destroy the trigger <literal>snitch</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+DROP EVENT TRIGGER snitch;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-dropeventtrigger-compatibility">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>DROP EVENT TRIGGER</command> statement in the
+ SQL standard.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createeventtrigger"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altereventtrigger"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_extension.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_extension.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..dcc52c2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_extension.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,126 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_extension.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-dropextension">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-dropextension">
+ <primary>DROP EXTENSION</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP EXTENSION</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP EXTENSION</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove an extension</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP EXTENSION [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [, ...] [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP EXTENSION</command> removes extensions from the database.
+ Dropping an extension causes its component objects, and other explicitly
+ dependent routines (see <xref linkend="sql-alterroutine"/>,
+ the <literal>DEPENDS ON EXTENSION <replaceable>extension_name</replaceable>
+ </literal> action), to be dropped as well.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must own the extension to use <command>DROP EXTENSION</command>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the extension does not exist. A notice is issued
+ in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an installed extension.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the extension,
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option prevents the specified extensions from being dropped
+ if there exist non-extension-member objects that depend on any
+ of the extensions. This is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To remove the extension <literal>hstore</literal> from the current
+ database:
+<programlisting>
+DROP EXTENSION hstore;
+</programlisting>
+ This command will fail if any of <literal>hstore</literal>'s objects
+ are in use in the database, for example if any tables have columns
+ of the <type>hstore</type> type. Add the <literal>CASCADE</literal> option to
+ forcibly remove those dependent objects as well.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP EXTENSION</command> is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createextension"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterextension"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_foreign_data_wrapper.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_foreign_data_wrapper.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e53178b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_foreign_data_wrapper.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,114 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_foreign_data_wrapper.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-dropforeigndatawrapper">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-dropforeigndatawrapper">
+ <primary>DROP FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a foreign-data wrapper</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [, ...] [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER</command> removes an existing
+ foreign-data wrapper. To execute this command, the current user
+ must be the owner of the foreign-data wrapper.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the foreign-data wrapper does not
+ exist. A notice is issued in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an existing foreign-data wrapper.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the foreign-data
+ wrapper (such as foreign tables and servers),
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the foreign-data wrapper if any objects depend
+ on it. This is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Drop the foreign-data wrapper <literal>dbi</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+DROP FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER dbi;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER</command> conforms to ISO/IEC
+ 9075-9 (SQL/MED). The <literal>IF EXISTS</literal> clause is
+ a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createforeigndatawrapper"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterforeigndatawrapper"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_foreign_table.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_foreign_table.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..07b3fd4
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_foreign_table.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,115 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_foreign_table.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-dropforeigntable">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-dropforeigntable">
+ <primary>DROP FOREIGN TABLE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP FOREIGN TABLE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP FOREIGN TABLE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a foreign table</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP FOREIGN TABLE [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [, ...] [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP FOREIGN TABLE</command> removes a foreign table.
+ Only the owner of a foreign table can remove it.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the foreign table does not exist.
+ A notice is issued in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the foreign table to drop.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the foreign table (such as
+ views), and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the foreign table if any objects depend on it. This is
+ the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To destroy two foreign tables, <literal>films</literal> and
+ <literal>distributors</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+DROP FOREIGN TABLE films, distributors;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This command conforms to ISO/IEC 9075-9 (SQL/MED), except that the
+ standard only allows one foreign table to be dropped per command, and apart
+ from the <literal>IF EXISTS</literal> option, which is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterforeigntable"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createforeigntable"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_function.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_function.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d84bebc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_function.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,192 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_function.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-dropfunction">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-dropfunction">
+ <primary>DROP FUNCTION</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP FUNCTION</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP FUNCTION</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a function</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP FUNCTION [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) ] [, ...]
+ [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP FUNCTION</command> removes the definition of an existing
+ function. To execute this command the user must be the
+ owner of the function. The argument types to the
+ function must be specified, since several different functions
+ can exist with the same name and different argument lists.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the function does not exist. A notice is issued
+ in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing function. If no
+ argument list is specified, the name must be unique in its schema.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The mode of an argument: <literal>IN</literal>, <literal>OUT</literal>,
+ <literal>INOUT</literal>, or <literal>VARIADIC</literal>.
+ If omitted, the default is <literal>IN</literal>.
+ Note that <command>DROP FUNCTION</command> does not actually pay
+ any attention to <literal>OUT</literal> arguments, since only the input
+ arguments are needed to determine the function's identity.
+ So it is sufficient to list the <literal>IN</literal>, <literal>INOUT</literal>,
+ and <literal>VARIADIC</literal> arguments.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an argument.
+ Note that <command>DROP FUNCTION</command> does not actually pay
+ any attention to argument names, since only the argument data
+ types are needed to determine the function's identity.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The data type(s) of the function's arguments (optionally
+ schema-qualified), if any.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the function (such as
+ operators or triggers),
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the function if any objects depend on it. This
+ is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-dropfunction-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This command removes the square root function:
+
+<programlisting>
+DROP FUNCTION sqrt(integer);
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ <para>
+ Drop multiple functions in one command:
+<programlisting>
+DROP FUNCTION sqrt(integer), sqrt(bigint);
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the function name is unique in its schema, it can be referred to without
+ an argument list:
+<programlisting>
+DROP FUNCTION update_employee_salaries;
+</programlisting>
+ Note that this is different from
+<programlisting>
+DROP FUNCTION update_employee_salaries();
+</programlisting>
+ which refers to a function with zero arguments, whereas the first variant
+ can refer to a function with any number of arguments, including zero, as
+ long as the name is unique.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-dropfunction-compatibility">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This command conforms to the SQL standard, with
+ these <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extensions:
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>The standard only allows one function to be dropped per command.</para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>The <literal>IF EXISTS</literal> option</para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>The ability to specify argument modes and names</para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createfunction"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterfunction"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropprocedure"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droproutine"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_group.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_group.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..eb7dc18
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_group.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,53 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_group.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-dropgroup">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-dropgroup">
+ <primary>DROP GROUP</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP GROUP</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP GROUP</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a database role</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP GROUP [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [, ...]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP GROUP</command> is now an alias for
+ <link linkend="sql-droprole"><command>DROP ROLE</command></link>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>DROP GROUP</command> statement in the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droprole"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_index.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_index.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..aabc85e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_index.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,143 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_index.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-dropindex">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-dropindex">
+ <primary>DROP INDEX</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP INDEX</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP INDEX</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove an index</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP INDEX [ CONCURRENTLY ] [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [, ...] [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP INDEX</command> drops an existing index from the database
+ system. To execute this command you must be the owner of
+ the index.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CONCURRENTLY</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Drop the index without locking out concurrent selects, inserts, updates,
+ and deletes on the index's table. A normal <command>DROP INDEX</command>
+ acquires an <literal>ACCESS EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock on the table,
+ blocking other accesses until the index drop can be completed. With
+ this option, the command instead waits until conflicting transactions
+ have completed.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ There are several caveats to be aware of when using this option.
+ Only one index name can be specified, and the <literal>CASCADE</literal> option
+ is not supported. (Thus, an index that supports a <literal>UNIQUE</literal> or
+ <literal>PRIMARY KEY</literal> constraint cannot be dropped this way.)
+ Also, regular <command>DROP INDEX</command> commands can be
+ performed within a transaction block, but
+ <command>DROP INDEX CONCURRENTLY</command> cannot.
+ Lastly, indexes on partitioned tables cannot be dropped using this
+ option.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ For temporary tables, <command>DROP INDEX</command> is always
+ non-concurrent, as no other session can access them, and
+ non-concurrent index drop is cheaper.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the index does not exist. A notice is issued
+ in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an index to remove.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the index,
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the index if any objects depend on it. This is
+ the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This command will remove the index <literal>title_idx</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+DROP INDEX title_idx;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP INDEX</command> is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> language extension. There
+ are no provisions for indexes in the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createindex"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_language.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_language.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8ba6621
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_language.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,125 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_language.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-droplanguage">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-droplanguage">
+ <primary>DROP LANGUAGE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP LANGUAGE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP LANGUAGE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a procedural language</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP [ PROCEDURAL ] LANGUAGE [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP LANGUAGE</command> removes the definition of a
+ previously registered procedural language. You must be a superuser
+ or the owner of the language to use <command>DROP LANGUAGE</command>.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ As of <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 9.1, most procedural
+ languages have been made into <quote>extensions</quote>, and should
+ therefore be removed with <link linkend="sql-dropextension"><command>DROP EXTENSION</command></link>
+ not <command>DROP LANGUAGE</command>.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the language does not exist. A notice is issued
+ in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an existing procedural language.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the language (such as
+ functions in the language),
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the language if any objects depend on it. This
+ is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This command removes the procedural language
+ <literal>plsample</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+DROP LANGUAGE plsample;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>DROP LANGUAGE</command> statement in the SQL
+ standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterlanguage"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createlanguage"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_materialized_view.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_materialized_view.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c8f3bc5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_materialized_view.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,116 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_materialized_view.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-dropmaterializedview">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-dropmaterializedview">
+ <primary>DROP MATERIALIZED VIEW</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP MATERIALIZED VIEW</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP MATERIALIZED VIEW</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a materialized view</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP MATERIALIZED VIEW [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [, ...] [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP MATERIALIZED VIEW</command> drops an existing materialized
+ view. To execute this command you must be the owner of the materialized
+ view.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the materialized view does not exist. A notice
+ is issued in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the materialized view to
+ remove.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the materialized view (such as
+ other materialized views, or regular views),
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the materialized view if any objects depend on it. This
+ is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This command will remove the materialized view called
+ <literal>order_summary</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+DROP MATERIALIZED VIEW order_summary;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP MATERIALIZED VIEW</command> is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-creatematerializedview"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altermaterializedview"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-refreshmaterializedview"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_opclass.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_opclass.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4cb4cc3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_opclass.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,149 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_opclass.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-dropopclass">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-dropopclass">
+ <primary>DROP OPERATOR CLASS</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP OPERATOR CLASS</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP OPERATOR CLASS</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove an operator class</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP OPERATOR CLASS [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> USING <replaceable class="parameter">index_method</replaceable> [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP OPERATOR CLASS</command> drops an existing operator class.
+ To execute this command you must be the owner of the operator class.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP OPERATOR CLASS</command> does not drop any of the operators
+ or functions referenced by the class. If there are any indexes depending
+ on the operator class, you will need to specify
+ <literal>CASCADE</literal> for the drop to complete.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the operator class does not exist. A notice is issued
+ in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing operator class.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">index_method</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the index access method the operator class is for.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the operator class (such as
+ indexes), and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the operator class if any objects depend on it.
+ This is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP OPERATOR CLASS</command> will not drop the operator family
+ containing the class, even if there is nothing else left in the
+ family (in particular, in the case where the family was implicitly
+ created by <command>CREATE OPERATOR CLASS</command>). An empty operator
+ family is harmless, but for the sake of tidiness you might wish to
+ remove the family with <command>DROP OPERATOR FAMILY</command>; or perhaps
+ better, use <command>DROP OPERATOR FAMILY</command> in the first place.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Remove the B-tree operator class <literal>widget_ops</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+DROP OPERATOR CLASS widget_ops USING btree;
+</programlisting>
+
+ This command will not succeed if there are any existing indexes
+ that use the operator class. Add <literal>CASCADE</literal> to drop
+ such indexes along with the operator class.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>DROP OPERATOR CLASS</command> statement in the
+ SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alteropclass"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createopclass"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropopfamily"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_operator.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_operator.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7bcdd08
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_operator.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,146 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_operator.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-dropoperator">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-dropoperator">
+ <primary>DROP OPERATOR</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP OPERATOR</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP OPERATOR</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove an operator</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP OPERATOR [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> ( { <replaceable class="parameter">left_type</replaceable> | NONE } , <replaceable class="parameter">right_type</replaceable> ) [, ...] [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP OPERATOR</command> drops an existing operator from
+ the database system. To execute this command you must be the owner
+ of the operator.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the operator does not exist. A notice is issued
+ in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing operator.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">left_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The data type of the operator's left operand; write
+ <literal>NONE</literal> if the operator has no left operand.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">right_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The data type of the operator's right operand.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the operator (such as views
+ using it), and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the operator if any objects depend on it. This
+ is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Remove the power operator <literal>a^b</literal> for type <type>integer</type>:
+<programlisting>
+DROP OPERATOR ^ (integer, integer);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Remove the bitwise-complement prefix operator
+ <literal>~b</literal> for type <type>bit</type>:
+<programlisting>
+DROP OPERATOR ~ (none, bit);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Remove multiple operators in one command:
+<programlisting>
+DROP OPERATOR ~ (none, bit), ^ (integer, integer);
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>DROP OPERATOR</command> statement in the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createoperator"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alteroperator"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_opfamily.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_opfamily.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c1bcd0d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_opfamily.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,138 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_opfamily.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-dropopfamily">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-dropopfamily">
+ <primary>DROP OPERATOR FAMILY</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP OPERATOR FAMILY</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP OPERATOR FAMILY</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove an operator family</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP OPERATOR FAMILY [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> USING <replaceable class="parameter">index_method</replaceable> [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP OPERATOR FAMILY</command> drops an existing operator family.
+ To execute this command you must be the owner of the operator family.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP OPERATOR FAMILY</command> includes dropping any operator
+ classes contained in the family, but it does not drop any of the operators
+ or functions referenced by the family. If there are any indexes depending
+ on operator classes within the family, you will need to specify
+ <literal>CASCADE</literal> for the drop to complete.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the operator family does not exist.
+ A notice is issued in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing operator family.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">index_method</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the index access method the operator family is for.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the operator family,
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the operator family if any objects depend on it.
+ This is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Remove the B-tree operator family <literal>float_ops</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+DROP OPERATOR FAMILY float_ops USING btree;
+</programlisting>
+
+ This command will not succeed if there are any existing indexes
+ that use operator classes within the family. Add <literal>CASCADE</literal> to
+ drop such indexes along with the operator family.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>DROP OPERATOR FAMILY</command> statement in the
+ SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alteropfamily"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createopfamily"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alteropclass"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createopclass"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropopclass"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_owned.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_owned.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8fa8c41
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_owned.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,126 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_owned.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-drop-owned">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-drop-owned">
+ <primary>DROP OWNED</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP OWNED</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP OWNED</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove database objects owned by a database role</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP OWNED BY { <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER } [, ...] [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP OWNED</command> drops all the objects within the current
+ database that are owned by one of the specified roles. Any
+ privileges granted to the given roles on objects in the current
+ database or on shared objects (databases, tablespaces) will also be
+ revoked.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a role whose objects will be dropped, and whose
+ privileges will be revoked.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the affected objects,
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the objects owned by a role if any other database
+ objects depend on one of the affected objects. This is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP OWNED</command> is often used to prepare for the
+ removal of one or more roles. Because <command>DROP OWNED</command>
+ only affects the objects in the current database, it is usually
+ necessary to execute this command in each database that contains
+ objects owned by a role that is to be removed.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Using the <literal>CASCADE</literal> option might make the command
+ recurse to objects owned by other users.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <link linkend="sql-reassign-owned"><command>REASSIGN OWNED</command></link> command is an alternative that
+ reassigns the ownership of all the database objects owned by one or
+ more roles. However, <command>REASSIGN OWNED</command> does not deal with
+ privileges for other objects.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Databases and tablespaces owned by the role(s) will not be removed.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ See <xref linkend="role-removal"/> for more discussion.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>DROP OWNED</command> command is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-reassign-owned"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droprole"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_policy.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_policy.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7d3771
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_policy.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,119 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_policy.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-droppolicy">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-droppolicy">
+ <primary>DROP POLICY</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP POLICY</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP POLICY</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a row-level security policy from a table</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP POLICY [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> ON <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP POLICY</command> removes the specified policy from the table.
+ Note that if the last policy is removed for a table and the table still has
+ row-level security enabled via <command>ALTER TABLE</command>, then the
+ default-deny policy will be used. <literal>ALTER TABLE ... DISABLE ROW
+ LEVEL SECURITY</literal> can be used to disable row-level security for a
+ table, whether policies for the table exist or not.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the policy does not exist. A notice is issued
+ in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the policy to drop.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the table that
+ the policy is on.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These key words do not have any effect, since there are no
+ dependencies on policies.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To drop the policy called <literal>p1</literal> on the table named
+ <literal>my_table</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+DROP POLICY p1 ON my_table;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP POLICY</command> is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createpolicy"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterpolicy"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_procedure.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_procedure.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4c86062
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_procedure.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,232 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_procedure.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-dropprocedure">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-dropprocedure">
+ <primary>DROP PROCEDURE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP PROCEDURE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP PROCEDURE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a procedure</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP PROCEDURE [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) ] [, ...]
+ [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP PROCEDURE</command> removes the definition of one or more
+ existing procedures. To execute this command the user must be the
+ owner of the procedure(s). The argument types to the
+ procedure(s) usually must be specified, since several different procedures
+ can exist with the same name and different argument lists.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the procedure does not exist. A notice is issued
+ in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing procedure.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The mode of an argument: <literal>IN</literal>, <literal>OUT</literal>,
+ <literal>INOUT</literal>, or <literal>VARIADIC</literal>. If omitted,
+ the default is <literal>IN</literal> (but see below).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an argument.
+ Note that <command>DROP PROCEDURE</command> does not actually pay
+ any attention to argument names, since only the argument data
+ types are used to determine the procedure's identity.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The data type(s) of the procedure's arguments (optionally
+ schema-qualified), if any.
+ See below for details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the procedure,
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the procedure if any objects depend on it. This
+ is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-dropprocedure-notes">
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ If there is only one procedure of the given name, the argument list
+ can be omitted. Omit the parentheses too in this case.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>, it's sufficient to list the
+ input (including <literal>INOUT</literal>) arguments,
+ because no two routines of the same name are allowed to share the same
+ input-argument list. Moreover, the <command>DROP</command> command
+ will not actually check that you wrote the types
+ of <literal>OUT</literal> arguments correctly; so any arguments that
+ are explicitly marked <literal>OUT</literal> are just noise. But
+ writing them is recommendable for consistency with the
+ corresponding <command>CREATE</command> command.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For compatibility with the SQL standard, it is also allowed to write
+ all the argument data types (including those of <literal>OUT</literal>
+ arguments) without
+ any <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> markers.
+ When this is done, the types of the procedure's <literal>OUT</literal>
+ argument(s) <emphasis>will</emphasis> be verified against the command.
+ This provision creates an ambiguity, in that when the argument list
+ contains no <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable>
+ markers, it's unclear which rule is intended.
+ The <command>DROP</command> command will attempt the lookup both ways,
+ and will throw an error if two different procedures are found.
+ To avoid the risk of such ambiguity, it's recommendable to
+ write <literal>IN</literal> markers explicitly rather than letting them
+ be defaulted, thus forcing the
+ traditional <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> interpretation to be
+ used.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The lookup rules just explained are also used by other commands that
+ act on existing procedures, such as <command>ALTER PROCEDURE</command>
+ and <command>COMMENT ON PROCEDURE</command>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-dropprocedure-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ If there is only one procedure <literal>do_db_maintenance</literal>,
+ this command is sufficient to drop it:
+<programlisting>
+DROP PROCEDURE do_db_maintenance;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Given this procedure definition:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE PROCEDURE do_db_maintenance(IN target_schema text, OUT results text) ...
+</programlisting>
+ any one of these commands would work to drop it:
+<programlisting>
+DROP PROCEDURE do_db_maintenance(IN target_schema text, OUT results text);
+DROP PROCEDURE do_db_maintenance(IN text, OUT text);
+DROP PROCEDURE do_db_maintenance(IN text);
+DROP PROCEDURE do_db_maintenance(text);
+DROP PROCEDURE do_db_maintenance(text, text); -- potentially ambiguous
+</programlisting>
+ However, the last example would be ambiguous if there is also, say,
+<programlisting>
+CREATE PROCEDURE do_db_maintenance(IN target_schema text, IN options text) ...
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-dropprocedure-compatibility">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This command conforms to the SQL standard, with
+ these <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extensions:
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>The standard only allows one procedure to be dropped per command.</para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>The <literal>IF EXISTS</literal> option is an extension.</para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>The ability to specify argument modes and names is an
+ extension, and the lookup rules differ when modes are given.</para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createprocedure"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterprocedure"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropfunction"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droproutine"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_publication.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_publication.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5dcbb83
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_publication.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,105 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_publication.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-droppublication">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-droppublication">
+ <primary>DROP PUBLICATION</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP PUBLICATION</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP PUBLICATION</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a publication</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP PUBLICATION [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [, ...] [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP PUBLICATION</command> removes an existing publication from
+ the database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A publication can only be dropped by its owner or a superuser.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the publication does not exist. A notice is
+ issued in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an existing publication.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These key words do not have any effect, since there are no dependencies
+ on publications.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Drop a publication:
+<programlisting>
+DROP PUBLICATION mypublication;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP PUBLICATION</command> is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createpublication"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterpublication"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_role.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_role.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..13dc1cc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_role.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,124 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_role.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-droprole">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-droprole">
+ <primary>DROP ROLE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP ROLE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP ROLE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a database role</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP ROLE [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [, ...]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP ROLE</command> removes the specified role(s).
+ To drop a superuser role, you must be a superuser yourself;
+ to drop non-superuser roles, you must have <literal>CREATEROLE</literal>
+ privilege.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A role cannot be removed if it is still referenced in any database
+ of the cluster; an error will be raised if so. Before dropping the role,
+ you must drop all the objects it owns (or reassign their ownership)
+ and revoke any privileges the role has been granted on other objects.
+ The <link linkend="sql-reassign-owned"><command>REASSIGN
+ OWNED</command></link> and <link linkend="sql-drop-owned"><command>DROP
+ OWNED</command></link>
+ commands can be useful for this purpose; see <xref linkend="role-removal"/>
+ for more discussion.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ However, it is not necessary to remove role memberships involving
+ the role; <command>DROP ROLE</command> automatically revokes any memberships
+ of the target role in other roles, and of other roles in the target role.
+ The other roles are not dropped nor otherwise affected.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the role does not exist. A notice is issued
+ in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the role to remove.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> includes a program <xref
+ linkend="app-dropuser"/> that has the
+ same functionality as this command (in fact, it calls this command)
+ but can be run from the command shell.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To drop a role:
+<programlisting>
+DROP ROLE jonathan;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The SQL standard defines <command>DROP ROLE</command>, but it allows
+ only one role to be dropped at a time, and it specifies different
+ privilege requirements than <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> uses.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createrole"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterrole"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-set-role"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_routine.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_routine.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0a0a140
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_routine.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,123 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_routine.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-droproutine">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-droproutine">
+ <primary>DROP ROUTINE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP ROUTINE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP ROUTINE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a routine</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP ROUTINE [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) ] [, ...]
+ [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP ROUTINE</command> removes the definition of one or more
+ existing routines. The term <quote>routine</quote> includes
+ aggregate functions, normal functions, and procedures. See
+ under <xref linkend="sql-dropaggregate"/>, <xref linkend="sql-dropfunction"/>,
+ and <xref linkend="sql-dropprocedure"/> for the description of the
+ parameters, more examples, and further details.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-droproutine-notes">
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The lookup rules used by <command>DROP ROUTINE</command> are
+ fundamentally the same as for <command>DROP PROCEDURE</command>; in
+ particular, <command>DROP ROUTINE</command> shares that command's
+ behavior of considering an argument list that has
+ no <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> markers to be
+ possibly using the SQL standard's definition that <literal>OUT</literal>
+ arguments are included in the list. (<command>DROP AGGREGATE</command>
+ and <command>DROP FUNCTION</command> do not do that.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In some cases where the same name is shared by routines of different
+ kinds, it is possible for <command>DROP ROUTINE</command> to fail with
+ an ambiguity error when a more specific command (<command>DROP
+ FUNCTION</command>, etc.) would work. Specifying the argument type
+ list more carefully will also resolve such problems.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ These lookup rules are also used by other commands that
+ act on existing routines, such as <command>ALTER ROUTINE</command>
+ and <command>COMMENT ON ROUTINE</command>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-droproutine-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To drop the routine <literal>foo</literal> for type
+ <type>integer</type>:
+<programlisting>
+DROP ROUTINE foo(integer);
+</programlisting>
+ This command will work independent of whether <literal>foo</literal> is an
+ aggregate, function, or procedure.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-droproutine-compatibility">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This command conforms to the SQL standard, with
+ these <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extensions:
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>The standard only allows one routine to be dropped per command.</para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>The <literal>IF EXISTS</literal> option is an extension.</para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>The ability to specify argument modes and names is an
+ extension, and the lookup rules differ when modes are given.</para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>User-definable aggregate functions are an extension.</para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropaggregate"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropfunction"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropprocedure"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterroutine"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+
+ <para>
+ Note that there is no <literal>CREATE ROUTINE</literal> command.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_rule.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_rule.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..cc5d00e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_rule.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,123 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_rule.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-droprule">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-droprule">
+ <primary>DROP RULE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP RULE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP RULE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a rewrite rule</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP RULE [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> ON <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP RULE</command> drops a rewrite rule.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the rule does not exist. A notice is issued
+ in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the rule to drop.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the table or view that
+ the rule applies to.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the rule,
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the rule if any objects depend on it. This is
+ the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To drop the rewrite rule <literal>newrule</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+DROP RULE newrule ON mytable;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP RULE</command> is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> language extension, as is the
+ entire query rewrite system.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createrule"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterrule"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_schema.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_schema.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4d5d9f5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_schema.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,131 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_schema.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-dropschema">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-dropschema">
+ <primary>DROP SCHEMA</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP SCHEMA</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP SCHEMA</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a schema</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP SCHEMA [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [, ...] [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP SCHEMA</command> removes schemas from the database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A schema can only be dropped by its owner or a superuser. Note that
+ the owner can drop the schema (and thereby all contained objects)
+ even if they do not own some of the objects within the schema.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the schema does not exist. A notice is issued
+ in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a schema.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects (tables, functions, etc.) that are
+ contained in the schema,
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the schema if it contains any objects. This is
+ the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Using the <literal>CASCADE</literal> option might make the command
+ remove objects in other schemas besides the one(s) named.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To remove schema <literal>mystuff</literal> from the database,
+ along with everything it contains:
+
+<programlisting>
+DROP SCHEMA mystuff CASCADE;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP SCHEMA</command> is fully conforming with the SQL
+ standard, except that the standard only allows one schema to be
+ dropped per command, and apart from the
+ <literal>IF EXISTS</literal> option, which is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterschema"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createschema"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_sequence.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_sequence.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..387c98e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_sequence.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,115 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_sequence.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-dropsequence">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-dropsequence">
+ <primary>DROP SEQUENCE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP SEQUENCE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP SEQUENCE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a sequence</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP SEQUENCE [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [, ...] [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP SEQUENCE</command> removes sequence number
+ generators. A sequence can only be dropped by its owner or a superuser.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the sequence does not exist. A notice is issued
+ in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of a sequence.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the sequence,
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the sequence if any objects depend on it. This
+ is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To remove the sequence <literal>serial</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+DROP SEQUENCE serial;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP SEQUENCE</command> conforms to the <acronym>SQL</acronym>
+ standard, except that the standard only allows one
+ sequence to be dropped per command, and apart from the
+ <literal>IF EXISTS</literal> option, which is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createsequence"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altersequence"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_server.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_server.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f83a661
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_server.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,114 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_server.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-dropserver">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-dropserver">
+ <primary>DROP SERVER</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP SERVER</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP SERVER</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a foreign server descriptor</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP SERVER [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [, ...] [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP SERVER</command> removes an existing foreign server
+ descriptor. To execute this command, the current user must be the
+ owner of the server.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the server does not exist. A notice is
+ issued in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of an existing server.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the server (such as
+ user mappings),
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the server if any objects depend on it. This is
+ the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Drop a server <literal>foo</literal> if it exists:
+<programlisting>
+DROP SERVER IF EXISTS foo;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP SERVER</command> conforms to ISO/IEC 9075-9
+ (SQL/MED). The <literal>IF EXISTS</literal> clause is
+ a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createserver"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterserver"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_statistics.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_statistics.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1532ca9
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_statistics.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,108 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_statistics.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-dropstatistics">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-dropstatistics">
+ <primary>DROP STATISTICS</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP STATISTICS</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP STATISTICS</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove extended statistics</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP STATISTICS [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [, ...] [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP STATISTICS</command> removes statistics object(s) from the
+ database. Only the statistics object's owner, the schema owner, or a
+ superuser can drop a statistics object.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the statistics object does not exist. A notice
+ is issued in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the statistics object to drop.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These key words do not have any effect, since there are no dependencies
+ on statistics.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To destroy two statistics objects in different schemas, without failing
+ if they don't exist:
+
+<programlisting>
+DROP STATISTICS IF EXISTS
+ accounting.users_uid_creation,
+ public.grants_user_role;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>DROP STATISTICS</command> command in the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterstatistics"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createstatistics"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_subscription.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_subscription.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..aee9615
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_subscription.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,132 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_subscription.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-dropsubscription">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-dropsubscription">
+ <primary>DROP SUBSCRIPTION</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP SUBSCRIPTION</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP SUBSCRIPTION</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a subscription</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP SUBSCRIPTION [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP SUBSCRIPTION</command> removes a subscription from the
+ database cluster.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A subscription can only be dropped by a superuser.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP SUBSCRIPTION</command> cannot be executed inside a
+ transaction block if the subscription is associated with a replication
+ slot. (You can use <command>ALTER SUBSCRIPTION</command> to unset the
+ slot.)
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a subscription to be dropped.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These key words do not have any effect, since there are no dependencies
+ on subscriptions.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ When dropping a subscription that is associated with a replication slot on
+ the remote host (the normal state), <command>DROP SUBSCRIPTION</command>
+ will connect to the remote host and try to drop the replication slot (and
+ any remaining table synchronization slots) as
+ part of its operation. This is necessary so that the resources allocated
+ for the subscription on the remote host are released. If this fails,
+ either because the remote host is not reachable or because the remote
+ replication slot cannot be dropped or does not exist or never existed,
+ the <command>DROP SUBSCRIPTION</command> command will fail. To proceed in
+ this situation, disassociate the subscription from the replication slot by
+ executing <literal>ALTER SUBSCRIPTION ... SET (slot_name = NONE)</literal>.
+ After that, <command>DROP SUBSCRIPTION</command> will no longer attempt any
+ actions on a remote host. Note that if the remote replication slot still
+ exists, it (and any related table synchronization slots) should then be
+ dropped manually; otherwise it/they will continue to
+ reserve WAL and might eventually cause the disk to fill up. See
+ also <xref linkend="logical-replication-subscription-slot"/>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a subscription is associated with a replication slot, then <command>DROP
+ SUBSCRIPTION</command> cannot be executed inside a transaction block.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Drop a subscription:
+<programlisting>
+DROP SUBSCRIPTION mysub;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP SUBSCRIPTION</command> is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createsubscription"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altersubscription"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_table.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_table.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..450458f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_table.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,129 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_table.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-droptable">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-droptable">
+ <primary>DROP TABLE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP TABLE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP TABLE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a table</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP TABLE [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [, ...] [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP TABLE</command> removes tables from the database.
+ Only the table owner, the schema owner, and superuser can drop a
+ table. To empty a table of rows
+ without destroying the table, use <link linkend="sql-delete"><command>DELETE</command></link>
+ or <link linkend="sql-truncate"><command>TRUNCATE</command></link>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP TABLE</command> always removes any indexes, rules,
+ triggers, and constraints that exist for the target table.
+ However, to drop a table that is referenced by a view or a foreign-key
+ constraint of another table, <literal>CASCADE</literal> must be
+ specified. (<literal>CASCADE</literal> will remove a dependent view entirely,
+ but in the foreign-key case it will only remove the foreign-key
+ constraint, not the other table entirely.)
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the table does not exist. A notice is issued
+ in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the table to drop.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the table (such as
+ views),
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the table if any objects depend on it. This is
+ the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To destroy two tables, <literal>films</literal> and
+ <literal>distributors</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+DROP TABLE films, distributors;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This command conforms to the SQL standard, except that the standard only
+ allows one table to be dropped per command, and apart from the
+ <literal>IF EXISTS</literal> option, which is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altertable"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createtable"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_tablespace.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_tablespace.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..047e4e0
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_tablespace.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,110 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_tablespace.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-droptablespace">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-droptablespace">
+ <primary>DROP TABLESPACE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP TABLESPACE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP TABLESPACE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a tablespace</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP TABLESPACE [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP TABLESPACE</command> removes a tablespace from the system.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A tablespace can only be dropped by its owner or a superuser.
+ The tablespace must be empty of all database objects before it can be
+ dropped. It is possible that objects in other databases might still reside
+ in the tablespace even if no objects in the current database are using
+ the tablespace. Also, if the tablespace is listed in the <xref
+ linkend="guc-temp-tablespaces"/> setting of any active session, the
+ <command>DROP</command> might fail due to temporary files residing in the
+ tablespace.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the tablespace does not exist. A notice is issued
+ in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a tablespace.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP TABLESPACE</command> cannot be executed inside a transaction block.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To remove tablespace <literal>mystuff</literal> from the system:
+<programlisting>
+DROP TABLESPACE mystuff;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP TABLESPACE</command> is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createtablespace"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altertablespace"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_transform.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_transform.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d25cb51
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_transform.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,128 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_transform.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-droptransform">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-droptransform">
+ <primary>DROP TRANSFORM</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP TRANSFORM</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP TRANSFORM</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a transform</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP TRANSFORM [ IF EXISTS ] FOR <replaceable>type_name</replaceable> LANGUAGE <replaceable>lang_name</replaceable> [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-droptransform-description">
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP TRANSFORM</command> removes a previously defined transform.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To be able to drop a transform, you must own the type and the language.
+ These are the same privileges that are required to create a transform.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the transform does not exist. A notice is issued
+ in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>type_name</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the data type of the transform.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>lang_name</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the language of the transform.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the transform,
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the transform if any objects depend on it. This is the
+ default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-droptransform-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To drop the transform for type <type>hstore</type> and language
+ <literal>plpythonu</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+DROP TRANSFORM FOR hstore LANGUAGE plpythonu;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-droptransform-compat">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This form of <command>DROP TRANSFORM</command> is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension. See <xref
+ linkend="sql-createtransform"/> for details.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createtransform"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_trigger.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_trigger.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..728541e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_trigger.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,127 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_trigger.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-droptrigger">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-droptrigger">
+ <primary>DROP TRIGGER</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP TRIGGER</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP TRIGGER</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a trigger</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP TRIGGER [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> ON <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP TRIGGER</command> removes an existing
+ trigger definition. To execute this command, the current
+ user must be the owner of the table for which the trigger is defined.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the trigger does not exist. A notice is issued
+ in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the trigger to remove.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the table for which
+ the trigger is defined.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the trigger,
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the trigger if any objects depend on it. This is
+ the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-droptrigger-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Destroy the trigger <literal>if_dist_exists</literal> on the table
+ <literal>films</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+DROP TRIGGER if_dist_exists ON films;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-droptrigger-compatibility">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>DROP TRIGGER</command> statement in
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> is incompatible with the SQL
+ standard. In the SQL standard, trigger names are not local to
+ tables, so the command is simply <literal>DROP TRIGGER
+ <replaceable>name</replaceable></literal>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createtrigger"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_tsconfig.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_tsconfig.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9eec4ba
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_tsconfig.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,121 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_tsconfig.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-droptsconfig">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-droptsconfig">
+ <primary>DROP TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a text search configuration</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION</command> drops an existing text
+ search configuration. To execute this command you must be the owner of the
+ configuration.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the text search configuration does not exist.
+ A notice is issued in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing text search
+ configuration.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the text search configuration,
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the text search configuration if any objects depend on it.
+ This is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Remove the text search configuration <literal>my_english</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+DROP TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION my_english;
+</programlisting>
+
+ This command will not succeed if there are any existing indexes
+ that reference the configuration in <function>to_tsvector</function> calls.
+ Add <literal>CASCADE</literal> to
+ drop such indexes along with the text search configuration.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>DROP TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION</command> statement in
+ the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altertsconfig"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createtsconfig"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_tsdictionary.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_tsdictionary.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8d22cfd
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_tsdictionary.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,120 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_tsdictionary.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-droptsdictionary">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-droptsdictionary">
+ <primary>DROP TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a text search dictionary</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY</command> drops an existing text
+ search dictionary. To execute this command you must be the owner of the
+ dictionary.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the text search dictionary does not exist.
+ A notice is issued in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing text search
+ dictionary.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the text search dictionary,
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the text search dictionary if any objects depend on it.
+ This is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Remove the text search dictionary <literal>english</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+DROP TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY english;
+</programlisting>
+
+ This command will not succeed if there are any existing text search
+ configurations that use the dictionary. Add <literal>CASCADE</literal> to
+ drop such configurations along with the dictionary.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>DROP TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY</command> statement in the
+ SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altertsdictionary"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createtsdictionary"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_tsparser.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_tsparser.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2b647cc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_tsparser.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,118 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_tsparser.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-droptsparser">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-droptsparser">
+ <primary>DROP TEXT SEARCH PARSER</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP TEXT SEARCH PARSER</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP TEXT SEARCH PARSER</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a text search parser</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP TEXT SEARCH PARSER [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP TEXT SEARCH PARSER</command> drops an existing text search
+ parser. You must be a superuser to use this command.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the text search parser does not exist.
+ A notice is issued in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing text search parser.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the text search parser,
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the text search parser if any objects depend on it.
+ This is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Remove the text search parser <literal>my_parser</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+DROP TEXT SEARCH PARSER my_parser;
+</programlisting>
+
+ This command will not succeed if there are any existing text search
+ configurations that use the parser. Add <literal>CASCADE</literal> to
+ drop such configurations along with the parser.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>DROP TEXT SEARCH PARSER</command> statement in the
+ SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altertsparser"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createtsparser"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_tstemplate.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_tstemplate.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..972b90a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_tstemplate.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,119 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_tstemplate.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-droptstemplate">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-droptstemplate">
+ <primary>DROP TEXT SEARCH TEMPLATE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP TEXT SEARCH TEMPLATE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP TEXT SEARCH TEMPLATE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a text search template</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP TEXT SEARCH TEMPLATE [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP TEXT SEARCH TEMPLATE</command> drops an existing text search
+ template. You must be a superuser to use this command.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the text search template does not exist.
+ A notice is issued in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing text search
+ template.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the text search template,
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the text search template if any objects depend on it.
+ This is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Remove the text search template <literal>thesaurus</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+DROP TEXT SEARCH TEMPLATE thesaurus;
+</programlisting>
+
+ This command will not succeed if there are any existing text search
+ dictionaries that use the template. Add <literal>CASCADE</literal> to
+ drop such dictionaries along with the template.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>DROP TEXT SEARCH TEMPLATE</command> statement in the
+ SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altertstemplate"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createtstemplate"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_type.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_type.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9e555c0
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_type.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,116 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_type.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-droptype">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-droptype">
+ <primary>DROP TYPE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP TYPE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP TYPE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a data type</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP TYPE [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [, ...] [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP TYPE</command> removes a user-defined data type.
+ Only the owner of a type can remove it.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the type does not exist. A notice is issued
+ in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the data type to remove.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the type (such as
+ table columns, functions, and operators),
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the type if any objects depend on it. This is
+ the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-droptype-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To remove the data type <type>box</type>:
+<programlisting>
+DROP TYPE box;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-droptype-compatibility">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This command is similar to the corresponding command in the SQL
+ standard, apart from the <literal>IF EXISTS</literal>
+ option, which is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ But note that much of the <command>CREATE TYPE</command> command
+ and the data type extension mechanisms in
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> differ from the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-droptype-see-also">
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altertype"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createtype"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_user.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_user.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..74e736b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_user.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,55 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_user.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-dropuser">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-dropuser">
+ <primary>DROP USER</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP USER</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP USER</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a database role</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP USER [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [, ...]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP USER</command> is simply an alternate spelling of
+ <link linkend="sql-droprole"><command>DROP ROLE</command></link>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>DROP USER</command> statement is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension. The SQL standard
+ leaves the definition of users to the implementation.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droprole"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_user_mapping.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_user_mapping.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9e8896a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_user_mapping.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,110 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_user_mapping.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-dropusermapping">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-dropusermapping">
+ <primary>DROP USER MAPPING</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP USER MAPPING</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP USER MAPPING</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a user mapping for a foreign server</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP USER MAPPING [ IF EXISTS ] FOR { <replaceable class="parameter">user_name</replaceable> | USER | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | PUBLIC } SERVER <replaceable class="parameter">server_name</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP USER MAPPING</command> removes an existing user
+ mapping from foreign server.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The owner of a foreign server can drop user mappings for that server
+ for any user. Also, a user can drop a user mapping for their own
+ user name if <literal>USAGE</literal> privilege on the server has been
+ granted to the user.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the user mapping does not exist. A
+ notice is issued in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">user_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ User name of the mapping. <literal>CURRENT_ROLE</literal>, <literal>CURRENT_USER</literal>,
+ and <literal>USER</literal> match the name of the current
+ user. <literal>PUBLIC</literal> is used to match all present and
+ future user names in the system.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">server_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Server name of the user mapping.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Drop a user mapping <literal>bob</literal>, server <literal>foo</literal> if it exists:
+<programlisting>
+DROP USER MAPPING IF EXISTS FOR bob SERVER foo;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP USER MAPPING</command> conforms to ISO/IEC 9075-9
+ (SQL/MED). The <literal>IF EXISTS</literal> clause is
+ a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createusermapping"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterusermapping"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_view.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_view.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a1c550e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_view.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,114 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/drop_view.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-dropview">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-dropview">
+ <primary>DROP VIEW</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>DROP VIEW</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>DROP VIEW</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a view</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+DROP VIEW [ IF EXISTS ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [, ...] [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>DROP VIEW</command> drops an existing view. To execute
+ this command you must be the owner of the view.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IF EXISTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the view does not exist. A notice is issued
+ in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the view to remove.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically drop objects that depend on the view (such as
+ other views),
+ and in turn all objects that depend on those objects
+ (see <xref linkend="ddl-depend"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to drop the view if any objects depend on it. This is
+ the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This command will remove the view called <literal>kinds</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+DROP VIEW kinds;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This command conforms to the SQL standard, except that the standard only
+ allows one view to be dropped per command, and apart from the
+ <literal>IF EXISTS</literal> option, which is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterview"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createview"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/dropdb.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/dropdb.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d36aed3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/dropdb.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,317 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/dropdb.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="app-dropdb">
+ <indexterm zone="app-dropdb">
+ <primary>dropdb</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>dropdb</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>dropdb</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>dropdb</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>connection-option</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><replaceable>dbname</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>dropdb</application> destroys an existing
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database.
+ The user who executes this command must be a database
+ superuser or the owner of the database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>dropdb</application> is a wrapper around the
+ <acronym>SQL</acronym> command <link linkend="sql-dropdatabase"><command>DROP DATABASE</command></link>.
+ There is no effective difference between dropping databases via
+ this utility and via other methods for accessing the server.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>dropdb</application> accepts the following command-line arguments:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">dbname</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the name of the database to be removed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-e</option></term>
+ <term><option>--echo</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Echo the commands that <application>dropdb</application> generates
+ and sends to the server.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-f</option></term>
+ <term><option>--force</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Attempt to terminate all existing connections to the target database
+ before dropping it. See <xref linkend="sql-dropdatabase"/> for more
+ information on this option.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-i</option></term>
+ <term><option>--interactive</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Issues a verification prompt before doing anything destructive.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-V</option></term>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the <application>dropdb</application> version and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--if-exists</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the database does not exist. A notice is issued
+ in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show help about <application>dropdb</application> command line
+ arguments, and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>dropdb</application> also accepts the following
+ command-line arguments for connection parameters:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-h <replaceable class="parameter">host</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--host=<replaceable class="parameter">host</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the host name of the machine on which the
+ server
+ is running. If the value begins with a slash, it is used
+ as the directory for the Unix domain socket.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-p <replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--port=<replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the TCP port or local Unix domain socket file
+ extension on which the server
+ is listening for connections.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-U <replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--username=<replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ User name to connect as.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-w</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Never issue a password prompt. If the server requires
+ password authentication and a password is not available by
+ other means such as a <filename>.pgpass</filename> file, the
+ connection attempt will fail. This option can be useful in
+ batch jobs and scripts where no user is present to enter a
+ password.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-W</option></term>
+ <term><option>--password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Force <application>dropdb</application> to prompt for a
+ password before connecting to a database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This option is never essential, since
+ <application>dropdb</application> will automatically prompt
+ for a password if the server demands password authentication.
+ However, <application>dropdb</application> will waste a
+ connection attempt finding out that the server wants a password.
+ In some cases it is worth typing <option>-W</option> to avoid the extra
+ connection attempt.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--maintenance-db=<replaceable class="parameter">dbname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the name of the database to connect to in order to drop the
+ target database. If not specified, the <literal>postgres</literal>
+ database will be used; if that does not exist (or is the database
+ being dropped), <literal>template1</literal> will be used.
+ This can be a <link linkend="libpq-connstring">connection
+ string</link>. If so, connection string parameters will override any
+ conflicting command line options.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Environment</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PGHOST</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGPORT</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGUSER</envar></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Default connection parameters
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PG_COLOR</envar></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether to use color in diagnostic messages. Possible values
+ are <literal>always</literal>, <literal>auto</literal> and
+ <literal>never</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ This utility, like most other <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> utilities,
+ also uses the environment variables supported by <application>libpq</application>
+ (see <xref linkend="libpq-envars"/>).
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Diagnostics</title>
+
+ <para>
+ In case of difficulty, see <xref linkend="sql-dropdatabase"/>
+ and <xref linkend="app-psql"/> for
+ discussions of potential problems and error messages.
+ The database server must be running at the
+ targeted host. Also, any default connection settings and environment
+ variables used by the <application>libpq</application> front-end
+ library will apply.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To destroy the database <literal>demo</literal> on the default
+ database server:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$ </prompt><userinput>dropdb demo</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To destroy the database <literal>demo</literal> using the
+ server on host <literal>eden</literal>, port 5000, with verification and a peek
+ at the underlying command:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$ </prompt><userinput>dropdb -p 5000 -h eden -i -e demo</userinput>
+<computeroutput>Database "demo" will be permanently deleted.
+Are you sure? (y/n) </computeroutput><userinput>y</userinput>
+<computeroutput>DROP DATABASE demo;</computeroutput>
+</screen></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="app-createdb"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropdatabase"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/dropuser.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/dropuser.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8158050
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/dropuser.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,294 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/dropuser.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="app-dropuser">
+ <indexterm zone="app-dropuser">
+ <primary>dropuser</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>dropuser</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>dropuser</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> user account</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>dropuser</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>connection-option</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><replaceable>username</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>dropuser</application> removes an existing
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> user.
+ Only superusers and users with the <literal>CREATEROLE</literal> privilege can
+ remove <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> users. (To remove a
+ superuser, you must yourself be a superuser.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>dropuser</application> is a wrapper around the
+ <acronym>SQL</acronym> command <link linkend="sql-droprole"><command>DROP ROLE</command></link>.
+ There is no effective difference between dropping users via
+ this utility and via other methods for accessing the server.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>dropuser</application> accepts the following command-line arguments:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the name of the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> user to be removed.
+ You will be prompted for a name if none is specified on the command
+ line and the <option>-i</option>/<option>--interactive</option> option
+ is used.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-e</option></term>
+ <term><option>--echo</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Echo the commands that <application>dropuser</application> generates
+ and sends to the server.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-i</option></term>
+ <term><option>--interactive</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Prompt for confirmation before actually removing the user, and prompt
+ for the user name if none is specified on the command line.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-V</option></term>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the <application>dropuser</application> version and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--if-exists</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not throw an error if the user does not exist. A notice is
+ issued in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show help about <application>dropuser</application> command line
+ arguments, and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>dropuser</application> also accepts the following
+ command-line arguments for connection parameters:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-h <replaceable class="parameter">host</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--host=<replaceable class="parameter">host</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the host name of the machine on which the
+ server
+ is running. If the value begins with a slash, it is used
+ as the directory for the Unix domain socket.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-p <replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--port=<replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the TCP port or local Unix domain socket file
+ extension on which the server
+ is listening for connections.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-U <replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--username=<replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ User name to connect as (not the user name to drop).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-w</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Never issue a password prompt. If the server requires
+ password authentication and a password is not available by
+ other means such as a <filename>.pgpass</filename> file, the
+ connection attempt will fail. This option can be useful in
+ batch jobs and scripts where no user is present to enter a
+ password.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-W</option></term>
+ <term><option>--password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Force <application>dropuser</application> to prompt for a
+ password before connecting to a database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This option is never essential, since
+ <application>dropuser</application> will automatically prompt
+ for a password if the server demands password authentication.
+ However, <application>dropuser</application> will waste a
+ connection attempt finding out that the server wants a password.
+ In some cases it is worth typing <option>-W</option> to avoid the extra
+ connection attempt.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Environment</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PGHOST</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGPORT</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGUSER</envar></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Default connection parameters
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PG_COLOR</envar></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether to use color in diagnostic messages. Possible values
+ are <literal>always</literal>, <literal>auto</literal> and
+ <literal>never</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ This utility, like most other <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> utilities,
+ also uses the environment variables supported by <application>libpq</application>
+ (see <xref linkend="libpq-envars"/>).
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Diagnostics</title>
+
+ <para>
+ In case of difficulty, see <xref linkend="sql-droprole"/>
+ and <xref linkend="app-psql"/> for
+ discussions of potential problems and error messages.
+ The database server must be running at the
+ targeted host. Also, any default connection settings and environment
+ variables used by the <application>libpq</application> front-end
+ library will apply.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To remove user <literal>joe</literal> from the default database
+ server:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$ </prompt><userinput>dropuser joe</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To remove user <literal>joe</literal> using the server on host
+ <literal>eden</literal>, port 5000, with verification and a peek at the underlying
+ command:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$ </prompt><userinput>dropuser -p 5000 -h eden -i -e joe</userinput>
+<computeroutput>Role "joe" will be permanently removed.
+Are you sure? (y/n) </computeroutput><userinput>y</userinput>
+<computeroutput>DROP ROLE joe;</computeroutput>
+</screen></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="app-createuser"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droprole"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/ecpg-ref.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/ecpg-ref.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f3b6034
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/ecpg-ref.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,278 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/ecpg-ref.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="app-ecpg">
+ <indexterm zone="app-ecpg">
+ <primary>ecpg</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>ecpg</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname><application>ecpg</application></refname>
+ <refpurpose>embedded SQL C preprocessor</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>ecpg</command>
+ <arg choice="opt" rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain" rep="repeat"><replaceable>file</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+
+ <refsect1 id="app-ecpg-description">
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ecpg</command> is the embedded SQL preprocessor for C
+ programs. It converts C programs with embedded SQL statements to
+ normal C code by replacing the SQL invocations with special
+ function calls. The output files can then be processed with any C
+ compiler tool chain.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ecpg</command> will convert each input file given on the
+ command line to the corresponding C output file. If an input file
+ name does not have any extension, <filename>.pgc</filename> is
+ assumed. The file's extension will be replaced
+ by <filename>.c</filename> to construct the output file name.
+ But the output file name can be overridden using the
+ <option>-o</option> option.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If an input file name is just <literal>-</literal>,
+ <command>ecpg</command> reads the program from standard input
+ (and writes to standard output, unless that is overridden
+ with <option>-o</option>).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This reference page does not describe the embedded SQL language.
+ See <xref linkend="ecpg"/> for more information on that topic.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ecpg</command> accepts the following command-line
+ arguments:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-c</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically generate certain C code from SQL code. Currently, this
+ works for <literal>EXEC SQL TYPE</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-C <replaceable>mode</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Set a compatibility mode. <replaceable>mode</replaceable> can
+ be <literal>INFORMIX</literal>,
+ <literal>INFORMIX_SE</literal>, or <literal>ORACLE</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-D <replaceable>symbol</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Define a C preprocessor symbol.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-h</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Process header files. When this option is specified, the output file
+ extension becomes <literal>.h</literal> not <literal>.c</literal>,
+ and the default input file extension is <literal>.pgh</literal>
+ not <literal>.pgc</literal>. Also, the <option>-c</option> option is
+ forced on.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-i</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Parse system include files as well.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-I <replaceable class="parameter">directory</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specify an additional include path, used to find files included
+ via <literal>EXEC SQL INCLUDE</literal>. Defaults are
+ <filename>.</filename> (current directory),
+ <filename>/usr/local/include</filename>, the
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> include directory which
+ is defined at compile time (default:
+ <filename>/usr/local/pgsql/include</filename>), and
+ <filename>/usr/include</filename>, in that order.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-o <replaceable>filename</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies that <command>ecpg</command> should write all
+ its output to the given <replaceable>filename</replaceable>.
+ Write <literal>-o -</literal> to send all output to standard output.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-r <replaceable>option</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Selects run-time behavior. <replaceable>Option</replaceable> can be
+ one of the following:
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>no_indicator</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not use indicators but instead use special values to represent
+ null values. Historically there have been databases using this approach.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>prepare</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Prepare all statements before using them. Libecpg will keep a cache of
+ prepared statements and reuse a statement if it gets executed again. If the
+ cache runs full, libecpg will free the least used statement.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>questionmarks</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Allow question mark as placeholder for compatibility reasons.
+ This used to be the default long ago.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist></para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-t</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Turn on autocommit of transactions. In this mode, each SQL command is
+ automatically committed unless it is inside an explicit
+ transaction block. In the default mode, commands are committed
+ only when <command>EXEC SQL COMMIT</command> is issued.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-v</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print additional information including the version and the
+ "include" path.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the <application>ecpg</application> version and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show help about <application>ecpg</application> command line
+ arguments, and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ When compiling the preprocessed C code files, the compiler needs to
+ be able to find the <application>ECPG</application> header files in the
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> include directory. Therefore, you might
+ have to use the <option>-I</option> option when invoking the compiler
+ (e.g., <literal>-I/usr/local/pgsql/include</literal>).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Programs using C code with embedded SQL have to be linked against
+ the <filename>libecpg</filename> library, for example using the
+ linker options <literal>-L/usr/local/pgsql/lib -lecpg</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The value of either of these directories that is appropriate for
+ the installation can be found out using <xref
+ linkend="app-pgconfig"/>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ If you have an embedded SQL C source file named
+ <filename>prog1.pgc</filename>, you can create an executable
+ program using the following sequence of commands:
+<programlisting>
+ecpg prog1.pgc
+cc -I/usr/local/pgsql/include -c prog1.c
+cc -o prog1 prog1.o -L/usr/local/pgsql/lib -lecpg
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/end.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/end.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4986529
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/end.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,112 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/end.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-end">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-end">
+ <primary>END</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>END</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>END</refname>
+ <refpurpose>commit the current transaction</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+END [ WORK | TRANSACTION ] [ AND [ NO ] CHAIN ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>END</command> commits the current transaction. All changes
+ made by the transaction become visible to others and are guaranteed
+ to be durable if a crash occurs. This command is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension
+ that is equivalent to <link linkend="sql-commit"><command>COMMIT</command></link>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>WORK</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>TRANSACTION</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Optional key words. They have no effect.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>AND CHAIN</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If <literal>AND CHAIN</literal> is specified, a new transaction is
+ immediately started with the same transaction characteristics (see <xref
+ linkend="sql-set-transaction"/>) as the just finished one. Otherwise,
+ no new transaction is started.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Use <link linkend="sql-rollback"><command>ROLLBACK</command></link> to
+ abort a transaction.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Issuing <command>END</command> when not inside a transaction does
+ no harm, but it will provoke a warning message.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To commit the current transaction and make all changes permanent:
+<programlisting>
+END;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>END</command> is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension that provides functionality equivalent to <link
+ linkend="sql-commit"><command>COMMIT</command></link>, which is
+ specified in the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-begin"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-commit"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-rollback"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/execute.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/execute.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1d887f3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/execute.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,121 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/execute.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-execute">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-execute">
+ <primary>EXECUTE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <indexterm zone="sql-execute">
+ <primary>prepared statements</primary>
+ <secondary>executing</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>EXECUTE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>EXECUTE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>execute a prepared statement</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+EXECUTE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">parameter</replaceable> [, ...] ) ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>EXECUTE</command> is used to execute a previously prepared
+ statement. Since prepared statements only exist for the duration of a
+ session, the prepared statement must have been created by a
+ <command>PREPARE</command> statement executed earlier in the
+ current session.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the <command>PREPARE</command> statement that created the statement
+ specified some parameters, a compatible set of parameters must be
+ passed to the <command>EXECUTE</command> statement, or else an
+ error is raised. Note that (unlike functions) prepared statements are
+ not overloaded based on the type or number of their parameters; the
+ name of a prepared statement must be unique within a database session.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For more information on the creation and usage of prepared statements,
+ see <xref linkend="sql-prepare"/>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the prepared statement to execute.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">parameter</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The actual value of a parameter to the prepared statement. This
+ must be an expression yielding a value that is compatible with
+ the data type of this parameter, as was determined when the
+ prepared statement was created.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Outputs</title>
+ <para>
+ The command tag returned by <command>EXECUTE</command>
+ is that of the prepared statement, and not <literal>EXECUTE</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+ <para>
+ Examples are given in <xref linkend="sql-prepare-examples"/>
+ in the <xref linkend="sql-prepare"/> documentation.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The SQL standard includes an <command>EXECUTE</command> statement,
+ but it is only for use in embedded SQL. This version of the
+ <command>EXECUTE</command> statement also uses a somewhat different
+ syntax.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-deallocate"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-prepare"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/explain.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/explain.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4d758fb
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/explain.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,484 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/explain.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-explain">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-explain">
+ <primary>EXPLAIN</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <indexterm zone="sql-explain">
+ <primary>prepared statements</primary>
+ <secondary>showing the query plan</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <indexterm zone="sql-explain">
+ <primary>cursor</primary>
+ <secondary>showing the query plan</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>EXPLAIN</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>EXPLAIN</refname>
+ <refpurpose>show the execution plan of a statement</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+EXPLAIN [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> [, ...] ) ] <replaceable class="parameter">statement</replaceable>
+EXPLAIN [ ANALYZE ] [ VERBOSE ] <replaceable class="parameter">statement</replaceable>
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> can be one of:</phrase>
+
+ ANALYZE [ <replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable> ]
+ VERBOSE [ <replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable> ]
+ COSTS [ <replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable> ]
+ SETTINGS [ <replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable> ]
+ BUFFERS [ <replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable> ]
+ WAL [ <replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable> ]
+ TIMING [ <replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable> ]
+ SUMMARY [ <replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable> ]
+ FORMAT { TEXT | XML | JSON | YAML }
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This command displays the execution plan that the
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> planner generates for the
+ supplied statement. The execution plan shows how the table(s)
+ referenced by the statement will be scanned &mdash; by plain sequential scan,
+ index scan, etc. &mdash; and if multiple tables are referenced, what join
+ algorithms will be used to bring together the required rows from
+ each input table.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The most critical part of the display is the estimated statement execution
+ cost, which is the planner's guess at how long it will take to run the
+ statement (measured in cost units that are arbitrary, but conventionally
+ mean disk page fetches). Actually two numbers
+ are shown: the start-up cost before the first row can be returned, and
+ the total cost to return all the rows. For most queries the total cost
+ is what matters, but in contexts such as a subquery in <literal>EXISTS</literal>, the planner
+ will choose the smallest start-up cost instead of the smallest total cost
+ (since the executor will stop after getting one row, anyway).
+ Also, if you limit the number of rows to return with a <literal>LIMIT</literal> clause,
+ the planner makes an appropriate interpolation between the endpoint
+ costs to estimate which plan is really the cheapest.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>ANALYZE</literal> option causes the statement to be actually
+ executed, not only planned. Then actual run time statistics are added to
+ the display, including the total elapsed time expended within each plan
+ node (in milliseconds) and the total number of rows it actually returned.
+ This is useful for seeing whether the planner's estimates
+ are close to reality.
+ </para>
+
+ <important>
+ <para>
+ Keep in mind that the statement is actually executed when
+ the <literal>ANALYZE</literal> option is used. Although
+ <command>EXPLAIN</command> will discard any output that a
+ <command>SELECT</command> would return, other side effects of the
+ statement will happen as usual. If you wish to use
+ <command>EXPLAIN ANALYZE</command> on an
+ <command>INSERT</command>, <command>UPDATE</command>,
+ <command>DELETE</command>, <command>CREATE TABLE AS</command>,
+ or <command>EXECUTE</command> statement
+ without letting the command affect your data, use this approach:
+<programlisting>
+BEGIN;
+EXPLAIN ANALYZE ...;
+ROLLBACK;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+ </important>
+
+ <para>
+ Only the <literal>ANALYZE</literal> and <literal>VERBOSE</literal> options
+ can be specified, and only in that order, without surrounding the option
+ list in parentheses. Prior to <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 9.0,
+ the unparenthesized syntax was the only one supported. It is expected that
+ all new options will be supported only in the parenthesized syntax.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ANALYZE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Carry out the command and show actual run times and other statistics.
+ This parameter defaults to <literal>FALSE</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>VERBOSE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Display additional information regarding the plan. Specifically, include
+ the output column list for each node in the plan tree, schema-qualify
+ table and function names, always label variables in expressions with
+ their range table alias, and always print the name of each trigger for
+ which statistics are displayed. The query identifier will also be
+ displayed if one has been computed, see <xref
+ linkend="guc-compute-query-id"/> for more details. This parameter
+ defaults to <literal>FALSE</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>COSTS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Include information on the estimated startup and total cost of each
+ plan node, as well as the estimated number of rows and the estimated
+ width of each row.
+ This parameter defaults to <literal>TRUE</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SETTINGS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Include information on configuration parameters. Specifically, include
+ options affecting query planning with value different from the built-in
+ default value. This parameter defaults to <literal>FALSE</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>BUFFERS</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Include information on buffer usage. Specifically, include the number of
+ shared blocks hit, read, dirtied, and written, the number of local blocks
+ hit, read, dirtied, and written, the number of temp blocks read and
+ written, and the time spent reading and writing data file blocks
+ (in milliseconds) if <xref linkend="guc-track-io-timing"/> is enabled.
+ A <emphasis>hit</emphasis> means that a read was avoided because the block was
+ found already in cache when needed.
+ Shared blocks contain data from regular tables and indexes;
+ local blocks contain data from temporary tables and indexes;
+ while temp blocks contain short-term working data used in sorts, hashes,
+ Materialize plan nodes, and similar cases.
+ The number of blocks <emphasis>dirtied</emphasis> indicates the number of
+ previously unmodified blocks that were changed by this query; while the
+ number of blocks <emphasis>written</emphasis> indicates the number of
+ previously-dirtied blocks evicted from cache by this backend during
+ query processing.
+ The number of blocks shown for an
+ upper-level node includes those used by all its child nodes. In text
+ format, only non-zero values are printed. It defaults to
+ <literal>FALSE</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>WAL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Include information on WAL record generation. Specifically, include the
+ number of records, number of full page images (fpi) and the amount of WAL
+ generated in bytes. In text format, only non-zero values are printed.
+ This parameter may only be used when <literal>ANALYZE</literal> is also
+ enabled. It defaults to <literal>FALSE</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>TIMING</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Include actual startup time and time spent in each node in the output.
+ The overhead of repeatedly reading the system clock can slow down the
+ query significantly on some systems, so it may be useful to set this
+ parameter to <literal>FALSE</literal> when only actual row counts, and
+ not exact times, are needed. Run time of the entire statement is
+ always measured, even when node-level timing is turned off with this
+ option.
+ This parameter may only be used when <literal>ANALYZE</literal> is also
+ enabled. It defaults to <literal>TRUE</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SUMMARY</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Include summary information (e.g., totaled timing information) after the
+ query plan. Summary information is included by default when
+ <literal>ANALYZE</literal> is used but otherwise is not included by
+ default, but can be enabled using this option. Planning time in
+ <command>EXPLAIN EXECUTE</command> includes the time required to fetch
+ the plan from the cache and the time required for re-planning, if
+ necessary.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>FORMAT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specify the output format, which can be TEXT, XML, JSON, or YAML.
+ Non-text output contains the same information as the text output
+ format, but is easier for programs to parse. This parameter defaults to
+ <literal>TEXT</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether the selected option should be turned on or off.
+ You can write <literal>TRUE</literal>, <literal>ON</literal>, or
+ <literal>1</literal> to enable the option, and <literal>FALSE</literal>,
+ <literal>OFF</literal>, or <literal>0</literal> to disable it. The
+ <replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable> value can also
+ be omitted, in which case <literal>TRUE</literal> is assumed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">statement</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Any <command>SELECT</command>, <command>INSERT</command>, <command>UPDATE</command>,
+ <command>DELETE</command>, <command>VALUES</command>, <command>EXECUTE</command>,
+ <command>DECLARE</command>, <command>CREATE TABLE AS</command>, or
+ <command>CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW AS</command> statement, whose execution
+ plan you wish to see.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Outputs</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The command's result is a textual description of the plan selected
+ for the <replaceable class="parameter">statement</replaceable>,
+ optionally annotated with execution statistics.
+ <xref linkend="using-explain"/> describes the information provided.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ In order to allow the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> query
+ planner to make reasonably informed decisions when optimizing
+ queries, the <link
+ linkend="catalog-pg-statistic"><structname>pg_statistic</structname></link>
+ data should be up-to-date for all tables used in the query. Normally
+ the <link linkend="autovacuum">autovacuum daemon</link> will take care
+ of that automatically. But if a table has recently had substantial
+ changes in its contents, you might need to do a manual
+ <link linkend="sql-analyze"><command>ANALYZE</command></link> rather than wait for autovacuum to catch up
+ with the changes.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In order to measure the run-time cost of each node in the execution
+ plan, the current implementation of <command>EXPLAIN
+ ANALYZE</command> adds profiling overhead to query execution.
+ As a result, running <command>EXPLAIN ANALYZE</command>
+ on a query can sometimes take significantly longer than executing
+ the query normally. The amount of overhead depends on the nature of
+ the query, as well as the platform being used. The worst case occurs
+ for plan nodes that in themselves require very little time per
+ execution, and on machines that have relatively slow operating
+ system calls for obtaining the time of day.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To show the plan for a simple query on a table with a single
+ <type>integer</type> column and 10000 rows:
+
+<programlisting>
+EXPLAIN SELECT * FROM foo;
+
+ QUERY PLAN
+---------------------------------------------------------
+ Seq Scan on foo (cost=0.00..155.00 rows=10000 width=4)
+(1 row)
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Here is the same query, with JSON output formatting:
+<programlisting>
+EXPLAIN (FORMAT JSON) SELECT * FROM foo;
+ QUERY PLAN
+--------------------------------
+ [ +
+ { +
+ "Plan": { +
+ "Node Type": "Seq Scan",+
+ "Relation Name": "foo", +
+ "Alias": "foo", +
+ "Startup Cost": 0.00, +
+ "Total Cost": 155.00, +
+ "Plan Rows": 10000, +
+ "Plan Width": 4 +
+ } +
+ } +
+ ]
+(1 row)
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If there is an index and we use a query with an indexable
+ <literal>WHERE</literal> condition, <command>EXPLAIN</command>
+ might show a different plan:
+
+<programlisting>
+EXPLAIN SELECT * FROM foo WHERE i = 4;
+
+ QUERY PLAN
+--------------------------------------------------------------
+ Index Scan using fi on foo (cost=0.00..5.98 rows=1 width=4)
+ Index Cond: (i = 4)
+(2 rows)
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Here is the same query, but in YAML format:
+<programlisting>
+EXPLAIN (FORMAT YAML) SELECT * FROM foo WHERE i='4';
+ QUERY PLAN
+-------------------------------
+ - Plan: +
+ Node Type: "Index Scan" +
+ Scan Direction: "Forward"+
+ Index Name: "fi" +
+ Relation Name: "foo" +
+ Alias: "foo" +
+ Startup Cost: 0.00 +
+ Total Cost: 5.98 +
+ Plan Rows: 1 +
+ Plan Width: 4 +
+ Index Cond: "(i = 4)"
+(1 row)
+</programlisting>
+
+ XML format is left as an exercise for the reader.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Here is the same plan with cost estimates suppressed:
+
+<programlisting>
+EXPLAIN (COSTS FALSE) SELECT * FROM foo WHERE i = 4;
+
+ QUERY PLAN
+----------------------------
+ Index Scan using fi on foo
+ Index Cond: (i = 4)
+(2 rows)
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Here is an example of a query plan for a query using an aggregate
+ function:
+
+<programlisting>
+EXPLAIN SELECT sum(i) FROM foo WHERE i &lt; 10;
+
+ QUERY PLAN
+-------------------------------------------------------------------&zwsp;--
+ Aggregate (cost=23.93..23.93 rows=1 width=4)
+ -&gt; Index Scan using fi on foo (cost=0.00..23.92 rows=6 width=4)
+ Index Cond: (i &lt; 10)
+(3 rows)
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Here is an example of using <command>EXPLAIN EXECUTE</command> to
+ display the execution plan for a prepared query:
+
+<programlisting>
+PREPARE query(int, int) AS SELECT sum(bar) FROM test
+ WHERE id &gt; $1 AND id &lt; $2
+ GROUP BY foo;
+
+EXPLAIN ANALYZE EXECUTE query(100, 200);
+
+ QUERY PLAN
+-------------------------------------------------------------------&zwsp;-----------------------------------------------------
+ HashAggregate (cost=9.54..9.54 rows=1 width=8) (actual time=0.156..0.161 rows=11 loops=1)
+ Group Key: foo
+ -&gt; Index Scan using test_pkey on test (cost=0.29..9.29 rows=50 width=8) (actual time=0.039..0.091 rows=99 loops=1)
+ Index Cond: ((id &gt; $1) AND (id &lt; $2))
+ Planning time: 0.197 ms
+ Execution time: 0.225 ms
+(6 rows)
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Of course, the specific numbers shown here depend on the actual
+ contents of the tables involved. Also note that the numbers, and
+ even the selected query strategy, might vary between
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> releases due to planner
+ improvements. In addition, the <command>ANALYZE</command> command
+ uses random sampling to estimate data statistics; therefore, it is
+ possible for cost estimates to change after a fresh run of
+ <command>ANALYZE</command>, even if the actual distribution of data
+ in the table has not changed.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>EXPLAIN</command> statement defined in the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-analyze"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/fetch.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/fetch.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ec843f5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/fetch.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,418 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/fetch.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-fetch">
+
+ <indexterm zone="sql-fetch">
+ <primary>FETCH</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <indexterm zone="sql-fetch">
+ <primary>cursor</primary>
+ <secondary>FETCH</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>FETCH</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>FETCH</refname>
+ <refpurpose>retrieve rows from a query using a cursor</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<!-- Note the "direction" bit is also in ref/move.sgml -->
+<synopsis>
+FETCH [ <replaceable class="parameter">direction</replaceable> [ FROM | IN ] ] <replaceable class="parameter">cursor_name</replaceable>
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">direction</replaceable> can be empty or one of:</phrase>
+
+ NEXT
+ PRIOR
+ FIRST
+ LAST
+ ABSOLUTE <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable>
+ RELATIVE <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable>
+ <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable>
+ ALL
+ FORWARD
+ FORWARD <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable>
+ FORWARD ALL
+ BACKWARD
+ BACKWARD <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable>
+ BACKWARD ALL
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>FETCH</command> retrieves rows using a previously-created cursor.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A cursor has an associated position, which is used by
+ <command>FETCH</command>. The cursor position can be before the first row of the
+ query result, on any particular row of the result, or after the last row
+ of the result. When created, a cursor is positioned before the first row.
+ After fetching some rows, the cursor is positioned on the row most recently
+ retrieved. If <command>FETCH</command> runs off the end of the available rows
+ then the cursor is left positioned after the last row, or before the first
+ row if fetching backward. <command>FETCH ALL</command> or <command>FETCH BACKWARD
+ ALL</command> will always leave the cursor positioned after the last row or before
+ the first row.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The forms <literal>NEXT</literal>, <literal>PRIOR</literal>, <literal>FIRST</literal>,
+ <literal>LAST</literal>, <literal>ABSOLUTE</literal>, <literal>RELATIVE</literal> fetch
+ a single row after moving the cursor appropriately. If there is no
+ such row, an empty result is returned, and the cursor is left
+ positioned before the first row or after the last row as
+ appropriate.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The forms using <literal>FORWARD</literal> and <literal>BACKWARD</literal>
+ retrieve the indicated number of rows moving in the forward or
+ backward direction, leaving the cursor positioned on the
+ last-returned row (or after/before all rows, if the <replaceable
+ class="parameter">count</replaceable> exceeds the number of rows
+ available).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <literal>RELATIVE 0</literal>, <literal>FORWARD 0</literal>, and
+ <literal>BACKWARD 0</literal> all request fetching the current row without
+ moving the cursor, that is, re-fetching the most recently fetched
+ row. This will succeed unless the cursor is positioned before the
+ first row or after the last row; in which case, no row is returned.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ This page describes usage of cursors at the SQL command level.
+ If you are trying to use cursors inside a <application>PL/pgSQL</application>
+ function, the rules are different &mdash;
+ see <xref linkend="plpgsql-cursor-using"/>.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">direction</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para><replaceable class="parameter">direction</replaceable> defines
+ the fetch direction and number of rows to fetch. It can be one
+ of the following:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>NEXT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Fetch the next row. This is the default if <replaceable
+ class="parameter">direction</replaceable> is omitted.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>PRIOR</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Fetch the prior row.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>FIRST</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Fetch the first row of the query (same as <literal>ABSOLUTE 1</literal>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>LAST</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Fetch the last row of the query (same as <literal>ABSOLUTE -1</literal>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ABSOLUTE <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Fetch the <replaceable
+ class="parameter">count</replaceable>'th row of the query,
+ or the <literal>abs(<replaceable
+ class="parameter">count</replaceable>)</literal>'th row from
+ the end if <replaceable
+ class="parameter">count</replaceable> is negative. Position
+ before first row or after last row if <replaceable
+ class="parameter">count</replaceable> is out of range; in
+ particular, <literal>ABSOLUTE 0</literal> positions before
+ the first row.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RELATIVE <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Fetch the <replaceable
+ class="parameter">count</replaceable>'th succeeding row, or
+ the <literal>abs(<replaceable
+ class="parameter">count</replaceable>)</literal>'th prior
+ row if <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable> is
+ negative. <literal>RELATIVE 0</literal> re-fetches the
+ current row, if any.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Fetch the next <replaceable
+ class="parameter">count</replaceable> rows (same as
+ <literal>FORWARD <replaceable
+ class="parameter">count</replaceable></literal>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ALL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Fetch all remaining rows (same as <literal>FORWARD ALL</literal>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>FORWARD</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Fetch the next row (same as <literal>NEXT</literal>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>FORWARD <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Fetch the next <replaceable
+ class="parameter">count</replaceable> rows.
+ <literal>FORWARD 0</literal> re-fetches the current row.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>FORWARD ALL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Fetch all remaining rows.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>BACKWARD</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Fetch the prior row (same as <literal>PRIOR</literal>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>BACKWARD <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Fetch the prior <replaceable
+ class="parameter">count</replaceable> rows (scanning
+ backwards). <literal>BACKWARD 0</literal> re-fetches the
+ current row.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>BACKWARD ALL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Fetch all prior rows (scanning backwards).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist></para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para><replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable> is a
+ possibly-signed integer constant, determining the location or
+ number of rows to fetch. For <literal>FORWARD</literal> and
+ <literal>BACKWARD</literal> cases, specifying a negative <replaceable
+ class="parameter">count</replaceable> is equivalent to changing
+ the sense of <literal>FORWARD</literal> and <literal>BACKWARD</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">cursor_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An open cursor's name.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Outputs</title>
+
+ <para>
+ On successful completion, a <command>FETCH</command> command returns a command
+ tag of the form
+<screen>
+FETCH <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable>
+</screen>
+ The <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable> is the number
+ of rows fetched (possibly zero). Note that in
+ <application>psql</application>, the command tag will not actually be
+ displayed, since <application>psql</application> displays the fetched
+ rows instead.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The cursor should be declared with the <literal>SCROLL</literal>
+ option if one intends to use any variants of <command>FETCH</command>
+ other than <command>FETCH NEXT</command> or <command>FETCH FORWARD</command> with
+ a positive count. For simple queries
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> will allow backwards fetch
+ from cursors not declared with <literal>SCROLL</literal>, but this
+ behavior is best not relied on. If the cursor is declared with
+ <literal>NO SCROLL</literal>, no backward fetches are allowed.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <literal>ABSOLUTE</literal> fetches are not any faster than
+ navigating to the desired row with a relative move: the underlying
+ implementation must traverse all the intermediate rows anyway.
+ Negative absolute fetches are even worse: the query must be read to
+ the end to find the last row, and then traversed backward from
+ there. However, rewinding to the start of the query (as with
+ <literal>FETCH ABSOLUTE 0</literal>) is fast.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <link linkend="sql-declare"><command>DECLARE</command></link>
+ is used to define a cursor. Use
+ <link linkend="sql-move"><command>MOVE</command></link>
+ to change cursor position without retrieving data.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The following example traverses a table using a cursor:
+
+<programlisting>
+BEGIN WORK;
+
+-- Set up a cursor:
+DECLARE liahona SCROLL CURSOR FOR SELECT * FROM films;
+
+-- Fetch the first 5 rows in the cursor liahona:
+FETCH FORWARD 5 FROM liahona;
+
+ code | title | did | date_prod | kind | len
+-------+-------------------------+-----+------------+----------+-------
+ BL101 | The Third Man | 101 | 1949-12-23 | Drama | 01:44
+ BL102 | The African Queen | 101 | 1951-08-11 | Romantic | 01:43
+ JL201 | Une Femme est une Femme | 102 | 1961-03-12 | Romantic | 01:25
+ P_301 | Vertigo | 103 | 1958-11-14 | Action | 02:08
+ P_302 | Becket | 103 | 1964-02-03 | Drama | 02:28
+
+-- Fetch the previous row:
+FETCH PRIOR FROM liahona;
+
+ code | title | did | date_prod | kind | len
+-------+---------+-----+------------+--------+-------
+ P_301 | Vertigo | 103 | 1958-11-14 | Action | 02:08
+
+-- Close the cursor and end the transaction:
+CLOSE liahona;
+COMMIT WORK;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The SQL standard defines <command>FETCH</command> for use in
+ embedded SQL only. The variant of <command>FETCH</command>
+ described here returns the data as if it were a
+ <command>SELECT</command> result rather than placing it in host
+ variables. Other than this point, <command>FETCH</command> is
+ fully upward-compatible with the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>FETCH</command> forms involving
+ <literal>FORWARD</literal> and <literal>BACKWARD</literal>, as well
+ as the forms <literal>FETCH <replaceable
+ class="parameter">count</replaceable></literal> and <literal>FETCH
+ ALL</literal>, in which <literal>FORWARD</literal> is implicit, are
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extensions.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The SQL standard allows only <literal>FROM</literal> preceding the cursor
+ name; the option to use <literal>IN</literal>, or to leave them out altogether, is
+ an extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-close"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-declare"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-move"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/grant.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/grant.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a897712
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/grant.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,471 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/grant.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-grant">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-grant">
+ <primary>GRANT</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>GRANT</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>GRANT</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define access privileges</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+GRANT { { SELECT | INSERT | UPDATE | DELETE | TRUNCATE | REFERENCES | TRIGGER }
+ [, ...] | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON { [ TABLE ] <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ | ALL TABLES IN SCHEMA <replaceable class="parameter">schema_name</replaceable> [, ...] }
+ TO <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [, ...] [ WITH GRANT OPTION ]
+ [ GRANTED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ]
+
+GRANT { { SELECT | INSERT | UPDATE | REFERENCES } ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ...] )
+ [, ...] | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ...] ) }
+ ON [ TABLE ] <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ TO <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [, ...] [ WITH GRANT OPTION ]
+ [ GRANTED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ]
+
+GRANT { { USAGE | SELECT | UPDATE }
+ [, ...] | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON { SEQUENCE <replaceable class="parameter">sequence_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ | ALL SEQUENCES IN SCHEMA <replaceable class="parameter">schema_name</replaceable> [, ...] }
+ TO <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [, ...] [ WITH GRANT OPTION ]
+ [ GRANTED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ]
+
+GRANT { { CREATE | CONNECT | TEMPORARY | TEMP } [, ...] | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON DATABASE <replaceable>database_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ TO <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [, ...] [ WITH GRANT OPTION ]
+ [ GRANTED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ]
+
+GRANT { USAGE | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON DOMAIN <replaceable>domain_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ TO <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [, ...] [ WITH GRANT OPTION ]
+ [ GRANTED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ]
+
+GRANT { USAGE | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER <replaceable>fdw_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ TO <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [, ...] [ WITH GRANT OPTION ]
+ [ GRANTED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ]
+
+GRANT { USAGE | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON FOREIGN SERVER <replaceable>server_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ TO <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [, ...] [ WITH GRANT OPTION ]
+ [ GRANTED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ]
+
+GRANT { EXECUTE | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON { { FUNCTION | PROCEDURE | ROUTINE } <replaceable>routine_name</replaceable> [ ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">arg_name</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">arg_type</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) ] [, ...]
+ | ALL { FUNCTIONS | PROCEDURES | ROUTINES } IN SCHEMA <replaceable class="parameter">schema_name</replaceable> [, ...] }
+ TO <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [, ...] [ WITH GRANT OPTION ]
+ [ GRANTED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ]
+
+GRANT { USAGE | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON LANGUAGE <replaceable>lang_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ TO <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [, ...] [ WITH GRANT OPTION ]
+ [ GRANTED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ]
+
+GRANT { { SELECT | UPDATE } [, ...] | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON LARGE OBJECT <replaceable class="parameter">loid</replaceable> [, ...]
+ TO <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [, ...] [ WITH GRANT OPTION ]
+ [ GRANTED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ]
+
+GRANT { { CREATE | USAGE } [, ...] | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON SCHEMA <replaceable>schema_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ TO <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [, ...] [ WITH GRANT OPTION ]
+ [ GRANTED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ]
+
+GRANT { CREATE | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON TABLESPACE <replaceable>tablespace_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ TO <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [, ...] [ WITH GRANT OPTION ]
+ [ GRANTED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ]
+
+GRANT { USAGE | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON TYPE <replaceable>type_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ TO <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [, ...] [ WITH GRANT OPTION ]
+ [ GRANTED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ]
+
+GRANT <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> [, ...] TO <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [, ...]
+ [ WITH ADMIN OPTION ]
+ [ GRANTED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ]
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> can be:</phrase>
+
+ [ GROUP ] <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable>
+ | PUBLIC
+ | CURRENT_ROLE
+ | CURRENT_USER
+ | SESSION_USER
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-grant-description">
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>GRANT</command> command has two basic variants: one
+ that grants privileges on a database object (table, column, view, foreign
+ table, sequence, database, foreign-data wrapper, foreign server, function, procedure,
+ procedural language, schema, or tablespace), and one that grants
+ membership in a role. These variants are similar in many ways, but
+ they are different enough to be described separately.
+ </para>
+
+ <refsect2 id="sql-grant-description-objects">
+ <title>GRANT on Database Objects</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This variant of the <command>GRANT</command> command gives specific
+ privileges on a database object to
+ one or more roles. These privileges are added
+ to those already granted, if any.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The key word <literal>PUBLIC</literal> indicates that the
+ privileges are to be granted to all roles, including those that might
+ be created later. <literal>PUBLIC</literal> can be thought of as an
+ implicitly defined group that always includes all roles.
+ Any particular role will have the sum
+ of privileges granted directly to it, privileges granted to any role it
+ is presently a member of, and privileges granted to
+ <literal>PUBLIC</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If <literal>WITH GRANT OPTION</literal> is specified, the recipient
+ of the privilege can in turn grant it to others. Without a grant
+ option, the recipient cannot do that. Grant options cannot be granted
+ to <literal>PUBLIC</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If <literal>GRANTED BY</literal> is specified, the specified grantor must
+ be the current user. This clause is currently present in this form only
+ for SQL compatibility.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no need to grant privileges to the owner of an object
+ (usually the user that created it),
+ as the owner has all privileges by default. (The owner could,
+ however, choose to revoke some of their own privileges for safety.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The right to drop an object, or to alter its definition in any way, is
+ not treated as a grantable privilege; it is inherent in the owner,
+ and cannot be granted or revoked. (However, a similar effect can be
+ obtained by granting or revoking membership in the role that owns
+ the object; see below.) The owner implicitly has all grant
+ options for the object, too.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The possible privileges are:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SELECT</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>INSERT</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>UPDATE</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>DELETE</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>TRUNCATE</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>REFERENCES</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>TRIGGER</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>CREATE</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>CONNECT</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>TEMPORARY</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>EXECUTE</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>USAGE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specific types of privileges, as defined in <xref linkend="ddl-priv"/>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>TEMP</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Alternative spelling for <literal>TEMPORARY</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ALL PRIVILEGES</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Grant all of the privileges available for the object's type.
+ The <literal>PRIVILEGES</literal> key word is optional in
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>, though it is required by
+ strict SQL.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>FUNCTION</literal> syntax works for plain functions,
+ aggregate functions, and window functions, but not for procedures;
+ use <literal>PROCEDURE</literal> for those.
+ Alternatively, use <literal>ROUTINE</literal> to refer to a function,
+ aggregate function, window function, or procedure regardless of its
+ precise type.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ There is also an option to grant privileges on all objects of the same
+ type within one or more schemas. This functionality is currently supported
+ only for tables, sequences, functions, and procedures. <literal>ALL
+ TABLES</literal> also affects views and foreign tables, just like the
+ specific-object <command>GRANT</command> command. <literal>ALL
+ FUNCTIONS</literal> also affects aggregate and window functions, but not
+ procedures, again just like the specific-object <command>GRANT</command>
+ command. Use <literal>ALL ROUTINES</literal> to include procedures.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2 id="sql-grant-description-roles">
+ <title>GRANT on Roles</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This variant of the <command>GRANT</command> command grants membership
+ in a role to one or more other roles. Membership in a role is significant
+ because it conveys the privileges granted to a role to each of its
+ members.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If <literal>WITH ADMIN OPTION</literal> is specified, the member can
+ in turn grant membership in the role to others, and revoke membership
+ in the role as well. Without the admin option, ordinary users cannot
+ do that. A role is not considered to hold <literal>WITH ADMIN
+ OPTION</literal> on itself, but it may grant or revoke membership in
+ itself from a database session where the session user matches the
+ role. Database superusers can grant or revoke membership in any role
+ to anyone. Roles having <literal>CREATEROLE</literal> privilege can grant
+ or revoke membership in any role that is not a superuser.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If <literal>GRANTED BY</literal> is specified, the grant is recorded as
+ having been done by the specified role. Only database superusers may
+ use this option, except when it names the same role executing the command.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Unlike the case with privileges, membership in a role cannot be granted
+ to <literal>PUBLIC</literal>. Note also that this form of the command
+ does not allow the noise word <literal>GROUP</literal>
+ in <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-grant-notes">
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <link linkend="sql-revoke"><command>REVOKE</command></link> command is used
+ to revoke access privileges.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Since <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 8.1, the concepts of users and
+ groups have been unified into a single kind of entity called a role.
+ It is therefore no longer necessary to use the keyword <literal>GROUP</literal>
+ to identify whether a grantee is a user or a group. <literal>GROUP</literal>
+ is still allowed in the command, but it is a noise word.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A user may perform <command>SELECT</command>, <command>INSERT</command>, etc. on a
+ column if they hold that privilege for either the specific column or
+ its whole table. Granting the privilege at the table level and then
+ revoking it for one column will not do what one might wish: the
+ table-level grant is unaffected by a column-level operation.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When a non-owner of an object attempts to <command>GRANT</command> privileges
+ on the object, the command will fail outright if the user has no
+ privileges whatsoever on the object. As long as some privilege is
+ available, the command will proceed, but it will grant only those
+ privileges for which the user has grant options. The <command>GRANT ALL
+ PRIVILEGES</command> forms will issue a warning message if no grant options are
+ held, while the other forms will issue a warning if grant options for
+ any of the privileges specifically named in the command are not held.
+ (In principle these statements apply to the object owner as well, but
+ since the owner is always treated as holding all grant options, the
+ cases can never occur.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ It should be noted that database superusers can access
+ all objects regardless of object privilege settings. This
+ is comparable to the rights of <literal>root</literal> in a Unix system.
+ As with <literal>root</literal>, it's unwise to operate as a superuser
+ except when absolutely necessary.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a superuser chooses to issue a <command>GRANT</command> or <command>REVOKE</command>
+ command, the command is performed as though it were issued by the
+ owner of the affected object. In particular, privileges granted via
+ such a command will appear to have been granted by the object owner.
+ (For role membership, the membership appears to have been granted
+ by the containing role itself.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>GRANT</command> and <command>REVOKE</command> can also be done by a role
+ that is not the owner of the affected object, but is a member of the role
+ that owns the object, or is a member of a role that holds privileges
+ <literal>WITH GRANT OPTION</literal> on the object. In this case the
+ privileges will be recorded as having been granted by the role that
+ actually owns the object or holds the privileges
+ <literal>WITH GRANT OPTION</literal>. For example, if table
+ <literal>t1</literal> is owned by role <literal>g1</literal>, of which role
+ <literal>u1</literal> is a member, then <literal>u1</literal> can grant privileges
+ on <literal>t1</literal> to <literal>u2</literal>, but those privileges will appear
+ to have been granted directly by <literal>g1</literal>. Any other member
+ of role <literal>g1</literal> could revoke them later.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the role executing <command>GRANT</command> holds the required privileges
+ indirectly via more than one role membership path, it is unspecified
+ which containing role will be recorded as having done the grant. In such
+ cases it is best practice to use <command>SET ROLE</command> to become the
+ specific role you want to do the <command>GRANT</command> as.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Granting permission on a table does not automatically extend
+ permissions to any sequences used by the table, including
+ sequences tied to <type>SERIAL</type> columns. Permissions on
+ sequences must be set separately.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ See <xref linkend="ddl-priv"/> for more information about specific
+ privilege types, as well as how to inspect objects' privileges.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-grant-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Grant insert privilege to all users on table <literal>films</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+GRANT INSERT ON films TO PUBLIC;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Grant all available privileges to user <literal>manuel</literal> on view
+ <literal>kinds</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON kinds TO manuel;
+</programlisting>
+
+ Note that while the above will indeed grant all privileges if executed by a
+ superuser or the owner of <literal>kinds</literal>, when executed by someone
+ else it will only grant those permissions for which the someone else has
+ grant options.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Grant membership in role <literal>admins</literal> to user <literal>joe</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+GRANT admins TO joe;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-grant-compatibility">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ According to the SQL standard, the <literal>PRIVILEGES</literal>
+ key word in <literal>ALL PRIVILEGES</literal> is required. The
+ SQL standard does not support setting the privileges on more than
+ one object per command.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> allows an object owner to revoke their
+ own ordinary privileges: for example, a table owner can make the table
+ read-only to themselves by revoking their own <literal>INSERT</literal>,
+ <literal>UPDATE</literal>, <literal>DELETE</literal>, and <literal>TRUNCATE</literal>
+ privileges. This is not possible according to the SQL standard. The
+ reason is that <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> treats the owner's
+ privileges as having been granted by the owner to themselves; therefore they
+ can revoke them too. In the SQL standard, the owner's privileges are
+ granted by an assumed entity <quote>_SYSTEM</quote>. Not being
+ <quote>_SYSTEM</quote>, the owner cannot revoke these rights.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ According to the SQL standard, grant options can be granted to
+ <literal>PUBLIC</literal>; PostgreSQL only supports granting grant options
+ to roles.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The SQL standard allows the <literal>GRANTED BY</literal> option to
+ specify only <literal>CURRENT_USER</literal> or
+ <literal>CURRENT_ROLE</literal>. The other variants are PostgreSQL
+ extensions.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The SQL standard provides for a <literal>USAGE</literal> privilege
+ on other kinds of objects: character sets, collations,
+ translations.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In the SQL standard, sequences only have a <literal>USAGE</literal>
+ privilege, which controls the use of the <literal>NEXT VALUE FOR</literal>
+ expression, which is equivalent to the
+ function <function>nextval</function> in PostgreSQL. The sequence
+ privileges <literal>SELECT</literal> and <literal>UPDATE</literal> are
+ PostgreSQL extensions. The application of the
+ sequence <literal>USAGE</literal> privilege to
+ the <literal>currval</literal> function is also a PostgreSQL extension (as
+ is the function itself).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Privileges on databases, tablespaces, schemas, and languages are
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extensions.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-revoke"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterdefaultprivileges"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/import_foreign_schema.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/import_foreign_schema.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f07f757
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/import_foreign_schema.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,166 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/import_foreign_schema.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-importforeignschema">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-importforeignschema">
+ <primary>IMPORT FOREIGN SCHEMA</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>IMPORT FOREIGN SCHEMA</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>IMPORT FOREIGN SCHEMA</refname>
+ <refpurpose>import table definitions from a foreign server</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+IMPORT FOREIGN SCHEMA <replaceable class="parameter">remote_schema</replaceable>
+ [ { LIMIT TO | EXCEPT } ( <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [, ...] ) ]
+ FROM SERVER <replaceable class="parameter">server_name</replaceable>
+ INTO <replaceable class="parameter">local_schema</replaceable>
+ [ OPTIONS ( <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> '<replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>' [, ... ] ) ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-importforeignschema-description">
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>IMPORT FOREIGN SCHEMA</command> creates foreign tables that
+ represent tables existing on a foreign server. The new foreign tables
+ will be owned by the user issuing the command and are created with
+ the correct column definitions and options to match the remote tables.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ By default, all tables and views existing in a particular schema on the
+ foreign server are imported. Optionally, the list of tables can be limited
+ to a specified subset, or specific tables can be excluded. The new foreign
+ tables are all created in the target schema, which must already exist.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To use <command>IMPORT FOREIGN SCHEMA</command>, the user must have
+ <literal>USAGE</literal> privilege on the foreign server, as well as
+ <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on the target schema.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">remote_schema</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The remote schema to import from. The specific meaning of a remote schema
+ depends on the foreign data wrapper in use.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>LIMIT TO ( <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [, ...] )</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Import only foreign tables matching one of the given table names.
+ Other tables existing in the foreign schema will be ignored.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>EXCEPT ( <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [, ...] )</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Exclude specified foreign tables from the import. All tables
+ existing in the foreign schema will be imported except the
+ ones listed here.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">server_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The foreign server to import from.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">local_schema</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The schema in which the imported foreign tables will be created.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>OPTIONS ( <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> '<replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>' [, ...] )</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Options to be used during the import.
+ The allowed option names and values are specific to each foreign
+ data wrapper.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-importforeignschema-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Import table definitions from a remote schema <structname>foreign_films</structname>
+ on server <structname>film_server</structname>, creating the foreign tables in
+ local schema <structname>films</structname>:
+
+<programlisting>
+IMPORT FOREIGN SCHEMA foreign_films
+ FROM SERVER film_server INTO films;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ As above, but import only the two tables <structname>actors</structname> and
+ <literal>directors</literal> (if they exist):
+
+<programlisting>
+IMPORT FOREIGN SCHEMA foreign_films LIMIT TO (actors, directors)
+ FROM SERVER film_server INTO films;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-importforeignschema-compatibility">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>IMPORT FOREIGN SCHEMA</command> command conforms to the
+ <acronym>SQL</acronym> standard, except that the <literal>OPTIONS</literal>
+ clause is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createforeigntable"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createserver"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/initdb.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/initdb.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6604575
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/initdb.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,539 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/initdb.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="app-initdb">
+ <indexterm zone="app-initdb">
+ <primary>initdb</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>initdb</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>initdb</refname>
+ <refpurpose>create a new <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database cluster</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>initdb</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+ <group choice="plain">
+ <group choice="opt">
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>--pgdata</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>-D</option></arg>
+ </group>
+ <replaceable> directory</replaceable>
+ </group>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1 id="r1-app-initdb-1">
+ <title>Description</title>
+ <para>
+ <command>initdb</command> creates a new
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database cluster. A database
+ cluster is a collection of databases that are managed by a single
+ server instance.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Creating a database cluster consists of creating the directories in
+ which the database data will live, generating the shared catalog
+ tables (tables that belong to the whole cluster rather than to any
+ particular database), and creating the <literal>template1</literal>
+ and <literal>postgres</literal> databases. When you later create a
+ new database, everything in the <literal>template1</literal> database is
+ copied. (Therefore, anything installed in <literal>template1</literal>
+ is automatically copied into each database created later.)
+ The <literal>postgres</literal> database is a default database meant
+ for use by users, utilities and third party applications.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Although <command>initdb</command> will attempt to create the
+ specified data directory, it might not have permission if the parent
+ directory of the desired data directory is root-owned. To initialize
+ in such a setup, create an empty data directory as root, then use
+ <command>chown</command> to assign ownership of that directory to the
+ database user account, then <command>su</command> to become the
+ database user to run <command>initdb</command>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>initdb</command> must be run as the user that will own the
+ server process, because the server needs to have access to the
+ files and directories that <command>initdb</command> creates.
+ Since the server cannot be run as root, you must not run
+ <command>initdb</command> as root either. (It will in fact refuse
+ to do so.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For security reasons the new cluster created by <command>initdb</command>
+ will only be accessible by the cluster owner by default. The
+ <option>--allow-group-access</option> option allows any user in the same
+ group as the cluster owner to read files in the cluster. This is useful
+ for performing backups as a non-privileged user.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>initdb</command> initializes the database cluster's default
+ locale and character set encoding. The character set encoding,
+ collation order (<literal>LC_COLLATE</literal>) and character set classes
+ (<literal>LC_CTYPE</literal>, e.g., upper, lower, digit) can be set separately
+ for a database when it is created. <command>initdb</command> determines
+ those settings for the <literal>template1</literal> database, which will
+ serve as the default for all other databases.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To alter the default collation order or character set classes, use the
+ <option>--lc-collate</option> and <option>--lc-ctype</option> options.
+ Collation orders other than <literal>C</literal> or <literal>POSIX</literal> also have
+ a performance penalty. For these reasons it is important to choose the
+ right locale when running <command>initdb</command>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The remaining locale categories can be changed later when the server
+ is started. You can also use <option>--locale</option> to set the
+ default for all locale categories, including collation order and
+ character set classes. All server locale values (<literal>lc_*</literal>) can
+ be displayed via <command>SHOW ALL</command>.
+ More details can be found in <xref linkend="locale"/>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To alter the default encoding, use the <option>--encoding</option>.
+ More details can be found in <xref linkend="multibyte"/>.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-A <replaceable class="parameter">authmethod</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--auth=<replaceable class="parameter">authmethod</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option specifies the default authentication method for local
+ users used in <filename>pg_hba.conf</filename> (<literal>host</literal>
+ and <literal>local</literal> lines). <command>initdb</command> will
+ prepopulate <filename>pg_hba.conf</filename> entries using the
+ specified authentication method for non-replication as well as
+ replication connections.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Do not use <literal>trust</literal> unless you trust all local users on your
+ system. <literal>trust</literal> is the default for ease of installation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--auth-host=<replaceable class="parameter">authmethod</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option specifies the authentication method for local users via
+ TCP/IP connections used in <filename>pg_hba.conf</filename>
+ (<literal>host</literal> lines).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--auth-local=<replaceable class="parameter">authmethod</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option specifies the authentication method for local users via
+ Unix-domain socket connections used in <filename>pg_hba.conf</filename>
+ (<literal>local</literal> lines).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-D <replaceable class="parameter">directory</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--pgdata=<replaceable class="parameter">directory</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option specifies the directory where the database cluster
+ should be stored. This is the only information required by
+ <command>initdb</command>, but you can avoid writing it by
+ setting the <envar>PGDATA</envar> environment variable, which
+ can be convenient since the database server
+ (<command>postgres</command>) can find the database
+ directory later by the same variable.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-E <replaceable class="parameter">encoding</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--encoding=<replaceable class="parameter">encoding</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Selects the encoding of the template database. This will also
+ be the default encoding of any database you create later,
+ unless you override it there. The default is derived from the locale, or
+ <literal>SQL_ASCII</literal> if that does not work. The character sets supported by
+ the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> server are described
+ in <xref linkend="multibyte-charset-supported"/>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="app-initdb-allow-group-access" xreflabel="group access">
+ <term><option>-g</option></term>
+ <term><option>--allow-group-access</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Allows users in the same group as the cluster owner to read all cluster
+ files created by <command>initdb</command>. This option is ignored
+ on <productname>Windows</productname> as it does not support
+ <acronym>POSIX</acronym>-style group permissions.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="app-initdb-data-checksums" xreflabel="data checksums">
+ <term><option>-k</option></term>
+ <term><option>--data-checksums</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Use checksums on data pages to help detect corruption by the
+ I/O system that would otherwise be silent. Enabling checksums
+ may incur a noticeable performance penalty. If set, checksums
+ are calculated for all objects, in all databases. All checksum
+ failures will be reported in the
+ <link linkend="monitoring-pg-stat-database-view">
+ <structname>pg_stat_database</structname></link> view.
+ See <xref linkend="checksums" /> for details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--locale=<replaceable>locale</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets the default locale for the database cluster. If this
+ option is not specified, the locale is inherited from the
+ environment that <command>initdb</command> runs in. Locale
+ support is described in <xref linkend="locale"/>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--lc-collate=<replaceable>locale</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--lc-ctype=<replaceable>locale</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--lc-messages=<replaceable>locale</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--lc-monetary=<replaceable>locale</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--lc-numeric=<replaceable>locale</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--lc-time=<replaceable>locale</replaceable></option></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Like <option>--locale</option>, but only sets the locale in
+ the specified category.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-locale</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Equivalent to <option>--locale=C</option>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-N</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-sync</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ By default, <command>initdb</command> will wait for all files to be
+ written safely to disk. This option causes <command>initdb</command>
+ to return without waiting, which is faster, but means that a
+ subsequent operating system crash can leave the data directory
+ corrupt. Generally, this option is useful for testing, but should not
+ be used when creating a production installation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-instructions</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ By default, <command>initdb</command> will write instructions for how
+ to start the cluster at the end of its output. This option causes
+ those instructions to be left out. This is primarily intended for use
+ by tools that wrap <command>initdb</command> in platform-specific
+ behavior, where those instructions are likely to be incorrect.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--pwfile=<replaceable>filename</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Makes <command>initdb</command> read the database superuser's password
+ from a file. The first line of the file is taken as the password.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-S</option></term>
+ <term><option>--sync-only</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Safely write all database files to disk and exit. This does not
+ perform any of the normal <application>initdb</application> operations.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-T <replaceable>config</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--text-search-config=<replaceable>config</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets the default text search configuration.
+ See <xref linkend="guc-default-text-search-config"/> for further information.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-U <replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--username=<replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Selects the user name of the database superuser. This defaults
+ to the name of the effective user running
+ <command>initdb</command>. It is really not important what the
+ superuser's name is, but one might choose to keep the
+ customary name <systemitem>postgres</systemitem>, even if the operating
+ system user's name is different.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-W</option></term>
+ <term><option>--pwprompt</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Makes <command>initdb</command> prompt for a password
+ to give the database superuser. If you don't plan on using password
+ authentication, this is not important. Otherwise you won't be
+ able to use password authentication until you have a password
+ set up.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-X <replaceable class="parameter">directory</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--waldir=<replaceable class="parameter">directory</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option specifies the directory where the write-ahead log
+ should be stored.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--wal-segsize=<replaceable>size</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Set the <firstterm>WAL segment size</firstterm>, in megabytes. This
+ is the size of each individual file in the WAL log. The default size
+ is 16 megabytes. The value must be a power of 2 between 1 and 1024
+ (megabytes). This option can only be set during initialization, and
+ cannot be changed later.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ It may be useful to adjust this size to control the granularity of
+ WAL log shipping or archiving. Also, in databases with a high volume
+ of WAL, the sheer number of WAL files per directory can become a
+ performance and management problem. Increasing the WAL file size
+ will reduce the number of WAL files.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Other, less commonly used, options are also available:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-d</option></term>
+ <term><option>--debug</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print debugging output from the bootstrap backend and a few other
+ messages of lesser interest for the general public.
+ The bootstrap backend is the program <command>initdb</command>
+ uses to create the catalog tables. This option generates a tremendous
+ amount of extremely boring output.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--discard-caches</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Run the bootstrap backend with the
+ <literal>debug_discard_caches=1</literal> option.
+ This takes a very long time and is only of use for deep debugging.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-L <replaceable class="parameter">directory</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies where <command>initdb</command> should find
+ its input files to initialize the database cluster. This is
+ normally not necessary. You will be told if you need to
+ specify their location explicitly.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-n</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-clean</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ By default, when <command>initdb</command>
+ determines that an error prevented it from completely creating the database
+ cluster, it removes any files it might have created before discovering
+ that it cannot finish the job. This option inhibits tidying-up and is
+ thus useful for debugging.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Other options:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-V</option></term>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the <application>initdb</application> version and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show help about <application>initdb</application> command line
+ arguments, and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Environment</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PGDATA</envar></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the directory where the database cluster is to be
+ stored; can be overridden using the <option>-D</option> option.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PG_COLOR</envar></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether to use color in diagnostic messages. Possible values
+ are <literal>always</literal>, <literal>auto</literal> and
+ <literal>never</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>TZ</envar></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the default time zone of the created database cluster. The
+ value should be a full time zone name
+ (see <xref linkend="datatype-timezones"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ This utility, like most other <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> utilities,
+ also uses the environment variables supported by <application>libpq</application>
+ (see <xref linkend="libpq-envars"/>).
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>initdb</command> can also be invoked via
+ <command>pg_ctl initdb</command>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="app-pg-ctl"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="app-postgres"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/insert.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/insert.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c3f49f7
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/insert.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,783 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/insert.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-insert">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-insert">
+ <primary>INSERT</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>INSERT</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>INSERT</refname>
+ <refpurpose>create new rows in a table</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+[ WITH [ RECURSIVE ] <replaceable class="parameter">with_query</replaceable> [, ...] ]
+INSERT INTO <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [ AS <replaceable class="parameter">alias</replaceable> ] [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ...] ) ]
+ [ OVERRIDING { SYSTEM | USER } VALUE ]
+ { DEFAULT VALUES | VALUES ( { <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> | DEFAULT } [, ...] ) [, ...] | <replaceable class="parameter">query</replaceable> }
+ [ ON CONFLICT [ <replaceable class="parameter">conflict_target</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">conflict_action</replaceable> ]
+ [ RETURNING * | <replaceable class="parameter">output_expression</replaceable> [ [ AS ] <replaceable class="parameter">output_name</replaceable> ] [, ...] ]
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">conflict_target</replaceable> can be one of:</phrase>
+
+ ( { <replaceable class="parameter">index_column_name</replaceable> | ( <replaceable class="parameter">index_expression</replaceable> ) } [ COLLATE <replaceable class="parameter">collation</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">opclass</replaceable> ] [, ...] ) [ WHERE <replaceable class="parameter">index_predicate</replaceable> ]
+ ON CONSTRAINT <replaceable class="parameter">constraint_name</replaceable>
+
+<phrase>and <replaceable class="parameter">conflict_action</replaceable> is one of:</phrase>
+
+ DO NOTHING
+ DO UPDATE SET { <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> = { <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> | DEFAULT } |
+ ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ...] ) = [ ROW ] ( { <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> | DEFAULT } [, ...] ) |
+ ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ...] ) = ( <replaceable class="parameter">sub-SELECT</replaceable> )
+ } [, ...]
+ [ WHERE <replaceable class="parameter">condition</replaceable> ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>INSERT</command> inserts new rows into a table.
+ One can insert one or more rows specified by value expressions,
+ or zero or more rows resulting from a query.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The target column names can be listed in any order. If no list of
+ column names is given at all, the default is all the columns of the
+ table in their declared order; or the first <replaceable>N</replaceable> column
+ names, if there are only <replaceable>N</replaceable> columns supplied by the
+ <literal>VALUES</literal> clause or <replaceable>query</replaceable>. The values
+ supplied by the <literal>VALUES</literal> clause or <replaceable>query</replaceable> are
+ associated with the explicit or implicit column list left-to-right.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Each column not present in the explicit or implicit column list will be
+ filled with a default value, either its declared default value
+ or null if there is none.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the expression for any column is not of the correct data type,
+ automatic type conversion will be attempted.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>INSERT</command> into tables that lack unique indexes will
+ not be blocked by concurrent activity. Tables with unique indexes
+ might block if concurrent sessions perform actions that lock or modify
+ rows matching the unique index values being inserted; the details
+ are covered in <xref linkend="index-unique-checks"/>.
+ <literal>ON CONFLICT</literal> can be used to specify an alternative
+ action to raising a unique constraint or exclusion constraint
+ violation error. (See <xref linkend="sql-on-conflict"/> below.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The optional <literal>RETURNING</literal> clause causes <command>INSERT</command>
+ to compute and return value(s) based on each row actually inserted
+ (or updated, if an <literal>ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE</literal> clause was
+ used). This is primarily useful for obtaining values that were
+ supplied by defaults, such as a serial sequence number. However,
+ any expression using the table's columns is allowed. The syntax of
+ the <literal>RETURNING</literal> list is identical to that of the output
+ list of <command>SELECT</command>. Only rows that were successfully
+ inserted or updated will be returned. For example, if a row was
+ locked but not updated because an <literal>ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE
+ ... WHERE</literal> clause <replaceable
+ class="parameter">condition</replaceable> was not satisfied, the
+ row will not be returned.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must have <literal>INSERT</literal> privilege on a table in
+ order to insert into it. If <literal>ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE</literal> is
+ present, <literal>UPDATE</literal> privilege on the table is also
+ required.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a column list is specified, you only need
+ <literal>INSERT</literal> privilege on the listed columns.
+ Similarly, when <literal>ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE</literal> is specified, you
+ only need <literal>UPDATE</literal> privilege on the column(s) that are
+ listed to be updated. However, <literal>ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE</literal>
+ also requires <literal>SELECT</literal> privilege on any column whose
+ values are read in the <literal>ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE</literal>
+ expressions or <replaceable>condition</replaceable>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Use of the <literal>RETURNING</literal> clause requires <literal>SELECT</literal>
+ privilege on all columns mentioned in <literal>RETURNING</literal>.
+ If you use the <replaceable
+ class="parameter">query</replaceable> clause to insert rows from a
+ query, you of course need to have <literal>SELECT</literal> privilege on
+ any table or column used in the query.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Inserting</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This section covers parameters that may be used when only
+ inserting new rows. Parameters <emphasis>exclusively</emphasis>
+ used with the <literal>ON CONFLICT</literal> clause are described
+ separately.
+ </para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">with_query</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>WITH</literal> clause allows you to specify one or more
+ subqueries that can be referenced by name in the <command>INSERT</command>
+ query. See <xref linkend="queries-with"/> and <xref linkend="sql-select"/>
+ for details.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ It is possible for the <replaceable class="parameter">query</replaceable>
+ (<command>SELECT</command> statement)
+ to also contain a <literal>WITH</literal> clause. In such a case both
+ sets of <replaceable>with_query</replaceable> can be referenced within
+ the <replaceable class="parameter">query</replaceable>, but the
+ second one takes precedence since it is more closely nested.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">alias</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A substitute name for <replaceable
+ class="parameter">table_name</replaceable>. When an alias is
+ provided, it completely hides the actual name of the table.
+ This is particularly useful when <literal>ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE</literal>
+ targets a table named <varname>excluded</varname>, since that will otherwise
+ be taken as the name of the special table representing the row proposed
+ for insertion.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a column in the table named by <replaceable
+ class="parameter">table_name</replaceable>. The column name
+ can be qualified with a subfield name or array subscript, if
+ needed. (Inserting into only some fields of a composite
+ column leaves the other fields null.) When referencing a
+ column with <literal>ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE</literal>, do not include
+ the table's name in the specification of a target column. For
+ example, <literal>INSERT INTO table_name ... ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE
+ SET table_name.col = 1</literal> is invalid (this follows the general
+ behavior for <command>UPDATE</command>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>OVERRIDING SYSTEM VALUE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If this clause is specified, then any values supplied for identity
+ columns will override the default sequence-generated values.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For an identity column defined as <literal>GENERATED ALWAYS</literal>,
+ it is an error to insert an explicit value (other than
+ <literal>DEFAULT</literal>) without specifying either
+ <literal>OVERRIDING SYSTEM VALUE</literal> or <literal>OVERRIDING USER
+ VALUE</literal>. (For an identity column defined as
+ <literal>GENERATED BY DEFAULT</literal>, <literal>OVERRIDING SYSTEM
+ VALUE</literal> is the normal behavior and specifying it does nothing,
+ but <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> allows it as an extension.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>OVERRIDING USER VALUE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If this clause is specified, then any values supplied for identity
+ columns are ignored and the default sequence-generated values are
+ applied.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This clause is useful for example when copying values between tables.
+ Writing <literal>INSERT INTO tbl2 OVERRIDING USER VALUE SELECT * FROM
+ tbl1</literal> will copy from <literal>tbl1</literal> all columns that
+ are not identity columns in <literal>tbl2</literal> while values for
+ the identity columns in <literal>tbl2</literal> will be generated by
+ the sequences associated with <literal>tbl2</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DEFAULT VALUES</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ All columns will be filled with their default values, as if
+ <literal>DEFAULT</literal> were explicitly specified for each column.
+ (An <literal>OVERRIDING</literal> clause is not permitted in this
+ form.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An expression or value to assign to the corresponding column.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DEFAULT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The corresponding column will be filled with its default value. An
+ identity column will be filled with a new value generated by the
+ associated sequence. For a generated column, specifying this is
+ permitted but merely specifies the normal behavior of computing the
+ column from its generation expression.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">query</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A query (<command>SELECT</command> statement) that supplies the
+ rows to be inserted. Refer to the
+ <xref linkend="sql-select"/>
+ statement for a description of the syntax.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">output_expression</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An expression to be computed and returned by the
+ <command>INSERT</command> command after each row is inserted or
+ updated. The expression can use any column names of the table
+ named by <replaceable
+ class="parameter">table_name</replaceable>. Write
+ <literal>*</literal> to return all columns of the inserted or updated
+ row(s).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">output_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A name to use for a returned column.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2 id="sql-on-conflict" xreflabel="ON CONFLICT Clause">
+ <title><literal>ON CONFLICT</literal> Clause</title>
+ <indexterm zone="sql-insert">
+ <primary>UPSERT</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+ <indexterm zone="sql-insert">
+ <primary>ON CONFLICT</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+ <para>
+ The optional <literal>ON CONFLICT</literal> clause specifies an
+ alternative action to raising a unique violation or exclusion
+ constraint violation error. For each individual row proposed for
+ insertion, either the insertion proceeds, or, if an
+ <emphasis>arbiter</emphasis> constraint or index specified by
+ <parameter>conflict_target</parameter> is violated, the
+ alternative <parameter>conflict_action</parameter> is taken.
+ <literal>ON CONFLICT DO NOTHING</literal> simply avoids inserting
+ a row as its alternative action. <literal>ON CONFLICT DO
+ UPDATE</literal> updates the existing row that conflicts with the
+ row proposed for insertion as its alternative action.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <parameter>conflict_target</parameter> can perform
+ <emphasis>unique index inference</emphasis>. When performing
+ inference, it consists of one or more <replaceable
+ class="parameter">index_column_name</replaceable> columns and/or
+ <replaceable class="parameter">index_expression</replaceable>
+ expressions, and an optional <replaceable class="parameter">index_predicate</replaceable>. All <replaceable
+ class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> unique indexes that,
+ without regard to order, contain exactly the
+ <parameter>conflict_target</parameter>-specified
+ columns/expressions are inferred (chosen) as arbiter indexes. If
+ an <replaceable class="parameter">index_predicate</replaceable> is
+ specified, it must, as a further requirement for inference,
+ satisfy arbiter indexes. Note that this means a non-partial
+ unique index (a unique index without a predicate) will be inferred
+ (and thus used by <literal>ON CONFLICT</literal>) if such an index
+ satisfying every other criteria is available. If an attempt at
+ inference is unsuccessful, an error is raised.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <literal>ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE</literal> guarantees an atomic
+ <command>INSERT</command> or <command>UPDATE</command> outcome;
+ provided there is no independent error, one of those two outcomes
+ is guaranteed, even under high concurrency. This is also known as
+ <firstterm>UPSERT</firstterm> &mdash; <quote>UPDATE or
+ INSERT</quote>.
+ </para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">conflict_target</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies which conflicts <literal>ON CONFLICT</literal> takes
+ the alternative action on by choosing <firstterm>arbiter
+ indexes</firstterm>. Either performs <emphasis>unique index
+ inference</emphasis>, or names a constraint explicitly. For
+ <literal>ON CONFLICT DO NOTHING</literal>, it is optional to
+ specify a <parameter>conflict_target</parameter>; when
+ omitted, conflicts with all usable constraints (and unique
+ indexes) are handled. For <literal>ON CONFLICT DO
+ UPDATE</literal>, a <parameter>conflict_target</parameter>
+ <emphasis>must</emphasis> be provided.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">conflict_action</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ <parameter>conflict_action</parameter> specifies an
+ alternative <literal>ON CONFLICT</literal> action. It can be
+ either <literal>DO NOTHING</literal>, or a <literal>DO
+ UPDATE</literal> clause specifying the exact details of the
+ <literal>UPDATE</literal> action to be performed in case of a
+ conflict. The <literal>SET</literal> and
+ <literal>WHERE</literal> clauses in <literal>ON CONFLICT DO
+ UPDATE</literal> have access to the existing row using the
+ table's name (or an alias), and to the row proposed for insertion
+ using the special <varname>excluded</varname> table.
+ <literal>SELECT</literal> privilege is required on any column in the
+ target table where corresponding <varname>excluded</varname>
+ columns are read.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Note that the effects of all per-row <literal>BEFORE
+ INSERT</literal> triggers are reflected in
+ <varname>excluded</varname> values, since those effects may
+ have contributed to the row being excluded from insertion.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">index_column_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a <replaceable
+ class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> column. Used to
+ infer arbiter indexes. Follows <command>CREATE
+ INDEX</command> format. <literal>SELECT</literal> privilege on
+ <replaceable class="parameter">index_column_name</replaceable>
+ is required.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">index_expression</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Similar to <replaceable
+ class="parameter">index_column_name</replaceable>, but used to
+ infer expressions on <replaceable
+ class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> columns appearing
+ within index definitions (not simple columns). Follows
+ <command>CREATE INDEX</command> format. <literal>SELECT</literal>
+ privilege on any column appearing within <replaceable
+ class="parameter">index_expression</replaceable> is required.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">collation</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ When specified, mandates that corresponding <replaceable
+ class="parameter">index_column_name</replaceable> or
+ <replaceable class="parameter">index_expression</replaceable>
+ use a particular collation in order to be matched during
+ inference. Typically this is omitted, as collations usually
+ do not affect whether or not a constraint violation occurs.
+ Follows <command>CREATE INDEX</command> format.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">opclass</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ When specified, mandates that corresponding <replaceable
+ class="parameter">index_column_name</replaceable> or
+ <replaceable class="parameter">index_expression</replaceable>
+ use particular operator class in order to be matched during
+ inference. Typically this is omitted, as the
+ <emphasis>equality</emphasis> semantics are often equivalent
+ across a type's operator classes anyway, or because it's
+ sufficient to trust that the defined unique indexes have the
+ pertinent definition of equality. Follows <command>CREATE
+ INDEX</command> format.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">index_predicate</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Used to allow inference of partial unique indexes. Any
+ indexes that satisfy the predicate (which need not actually be
+ partial indexes) can be inferred. Follows <command>CREATE
+ INDEX</command> format. <literal>SELECT</literal> privilege on any
+ column appearing within <replaceable
+ class="parameter">index_predicate</replaceable> is required.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">constraint_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Explicitly specifies an arbiter
+ <emphasis>constraint</emphasis> by name, rather than inferring
+ a constraint or index.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">condition</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An expression that returns a value of type
+ <type>boolean</type>. Only rows for which this expression
+ returns <literal>true</literal> will be updated, although all
+ rows will be locked when the <literal>ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE</literal>
+ action is taken. Note that
+ <replaceable>condition</replaceable> is evaluated last, after
+ a conflict has been identified as a candidate to update.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ <para>
+ Note that exclusion constraints are not supported as arbiters with
+ <literal>ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE</literal>. In all cases, only
+ <literal>NOT DEFERRABLE</literal> constraints and unique indexes
+ are supported as arbiters.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>INSERT</command> with an <literal>ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE</literal>
+ clause is a <quote>deterministic</quote> statement. This means
+ that the command will not be allowed to affect any single existing
+ row more than once; a cardinality violation error will be raised
+ when this situation arises. Rows proposed for insertion should
+ not duplicate each other in terms of attributes constrained by an
+ arbiter index or constraint.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Note that it is currently not supported for the
+ <literal>ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE</literal> clause of an
+ <command>INSERT</command> applied to a partitioned table to update the
+ partition key of a conflicting row such that it requires the row be moved
+ to a new partition.
+ </para>
+ <tip>
+ <para>
+ It is often preferable to use unique index inference rather than
+ naming a constraint directly using <literal>ON CONFLICT ON
+ CONSTRAINT</literal> <replaceable class="parameter">
+ constraint_name</replaceable>. Inference will continue to work
+ correctly when the underlying index is replaced by another more
+ or less equivalent index in an overlapping way, for example when
+ using <literal>CREATE UNIQUE INDEX ... CONCURRENTLY</literal>
+ before dropping the index being replaced.
+ </para>
+ </tip>
+
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Outputs</title>
+
+ <para>
+ On successful completion, an <command>INSERT</command> command returns a command
+ tag of the form
+<screen>
+INSERT <replaceable>oid</replaceable> <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable>
+</screen>
+ The <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable> is the number of
+ rows inserted or updated. <replaceable>oid</replaceable> is always 0 (it
+ used to be the <acronym>OID</acronym> assigned to the inserted row if
+ <replaceable>count</replaceable> was exactly one and the target table was
+ declared <literal>WITH OIDS</literal> and 0 otherwise, but creating a table
+ <literal>WITH OIDS</literal> is not supported anymore).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the <command>INSERT</command> command contains a <literal>RETURNING</literal>
+ clause, the result will be similar to that of a <command>SELECT</command>
+ statement containing the columns and values defined in the
+ <literal>RETURNING</literal> list, computed over the row(s) inserted or
+ updated by the command.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ If the specified table is a partitioned table, each row is routed to
+ the appropriate partition and inserted into it. If the specified table
+ is a partition, an error will occur if one of the input rows violates
+ the partition constraint.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Insert a single row into table <literal>films</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+INSERT INTO films VALUES
+ ('UA502', 'Bananas', 105, '1971-07-13', 'Comedy', '82 minutes');
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In this example, the <literal>len</literal> column is
+ omitted and therefore it will have the default value:
+
+<programlisting>
+INSERT INTO films (code, title, did, date_prod, kind)
+ VALUES ('T_601', 'Yojimbo', 106, '1961-06-16', 'Drama');
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This example uses the <literal>DEFAULT</literal> clause for
+ the date columns rather than specifying a value:
+
+<programlisting>
+INSERT INTO films VALUES
+ ('UA502', 'Bananas', 105, DEFAULT, 'Comedy', '82 minutes');
+INSERT INTO films (code, title, did, date_prod, kind)
+ VALUES ('T_601', 'Yojimbo', 106, DEFAULT, 'Drama');
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To insert a row consisting entirely of default values:
+
+<programlisting>
+INSERT INTO films DEFAULT VALUES;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To insert multiple rows using the multirow <command>VALUES</command> syntax:
+
+<programlisting>
+INSERT INTO films (code, title, did, date_prod, kind) VALUES
+ ('B6717', 'Tampopo', 110, '1985-02-10', 'Comedy'),
+ ('HG120', 'The Dinner Game', 140, DEFAULT, 'Comedy');
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This example inserts some rows into table
+ <literal>films</literal> from a table <literal>tmp_films</literal>
+ with the same column layout as <literal>films</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+INSERT INTO films SELECT * FROM tmp_films WHERE date_prod &lt; '2004-05-07';
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This example inserts into array columns:
+
+<programlisting>
+-- Create an empty 3x3 gameboard for noughts-and-crosses
+INSERT INTO tictactoe (game, board[1:3][1:3])
+ VALUES (1, '{{" "," "," "},{" "," "," "},{" "," "," "}}');
+-- The subscripts in the above example aren't really needed
+INSERT INTO tictactoe (game, board)
+ VALUES (2, '{{X," "," "},{" ",O," "},{" ",X," "}}');
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Insert a single row into table <literal>distributors</literal>, returning
+ the sequence number generated by the <literal>DEFAULT</literal> clause:
+
+<programlisting>
+INSERT INTO distributors (did, dname) VALUES (DEFAULT, 'XYZ Widgets')
+ RETURNING did;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Increment the sales count of the salesperson who manages the
+ account for Acme Corporation, and record the whole updated row
+ along with current time in a log table:
+<programlisting>
+WITH upd AS (
+ UPDATE employees SET sales_count = sales_count + 1 WHERE id =
+ (SELECT sales_person FROM accounts WHERE name = 'Acme Corporation')
+ RETURNING *
+)
+INSERT INTO employees_log SELECT *, current_timestamp FROM upd;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Insert or update new distributors as appropriate. Assumes a unique
+ index has been defined that constrains values appearing in the
+ <literal>did</literal> column. Note that the special
+ <varname>excluded</varname> table is used to reference values originally
+ proposed for insertion:
+<programlisting>
+INSERT INTO distributors (did, dname)
+ VALUES (5, 'Gizmo Transglobal'), (6, 'Associated Computing, Inc')
+ ON CONFLICT (did) DO UPDATE SET dname = EXCLUDED.dname;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Insert a distributor, or do nothing for rows proposed for insertion
+ when an existing, excluded row (a row with a matching constrained
+ column or columns after before row insert triggers fire) exists.
+ Example assumes a unique index has been defined that constrains
+ values appearing in the <literal>did</literal> column:
+<programlisting>
+INSERT INTO distributors (did, dname) VALUES (7, 'Redline GmbH')
+ ON CONFLICT (did) DO NOTHING;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Insert or update new distributors as appropriate. Example assumes
+ a unique index has been defined that constrains values appearing in
+ the <literal>did</literal> column. <literal>WHERE</literal> clause is
+ used to limit the rows actually updated (any existing row not
+ updated will still be locked, though):
+<programlisting>
+-- Don't update existing distributors based in a certain ZIP code
+INSERT INTO distributors AS d (did, dname) VALUES (8, 'Anvil Distribution')
+ ON CONFLICT (did) DO UPDATE
+ SET dname = EXCLUDED.dname || ' (formerly ' || d.dname || ')'
+ WHERE d.zipcode &lt;&gt; '21201';
+
+-- Name a constraint directly in the statement (uses associated
+-- index to arbitrate taking the DO NOTHING action)
+INSERT INTO distributors (did, dname) VALUES (9, 'Antwerp Design')
+ ON CONFLICT ON CONSTRAINT distributors_pkey DO NOTHING;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Insert new distributor if possible; otherwise
+ <literal>DO NOTHING</literal>. Example assumes a unique index has been
+ defined that constrains values appearing in the
+ <literal>did</literal> column on a subset of rows where the
+ <literal>is_active</literal> Boolean column evaluates to
+ <literal>true</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+-- This statement could infer a partial unique index on "did"
+-- with a predicate of "WHERE is_active", but it could also
+-- just use a regular unique constraint on "did"
+INSERT INTO distributors (did, dname) VALUES (10, 'Conrad International')
+ ON CONFLICT (did) WHERE is_active DO NOTHING;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>INSERT</command> conforms to the SQL standard, except that
+ the <literal>RETURNING</literal> clause is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension, as is the ability
+ to use <literal>WITH</literal> with <command>INSERT</command>, and the ability to
+ specify an alternative action with <literal>ON CONFLICT</literal>.
+ Also, the case in
+ which a column name list is omitted, but not all the columns are
+ filled from the <literal>VALUES</literal> clause or <replaceable>query</replaceable>,
+ is disallowed by the standard.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The SQL standard specifies that <literal>OVERRIDING SYSTEM VALUE</literal>
+ can only be specified if an identity column that is generated always
+ exists. PostgreSQL allows the clause in any case and ignores it if it is
+ not applicable.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Possible limitations of the <replaceable
+ class="parameter">query</replaceable> clause are documented under
+ <xref linkend="sql-select"/>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/listen.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/listen.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2fab9d6
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/listen.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,153 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/listen.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-listen">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-listen">
+ <primary>LISTEN</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>LISTEN</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>LISTEN</refname>
+ <refpurpose>listen for a notification</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+LISTEN <replaceable class="parameter">channel</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>LISTEN</command> registers the current session as a
+ listener on the notification channel named <replaceable
+ class="parameter">channel</replaceable>.
+ If the current session is already registered as a listener for
+ this notification channel, nothing is done.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Whenever the command <command>NOTIFY <replaceable
+ class="parameter">channel</replaceable></command> is invoked, either
+ by this session or another one connected to the same database, all
+ the sessions currently listening on that notification channel are
+ notified, and each will in turn notify its connected client
+ application.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A session can be unregistered for a given notification channel with the
+ <command>UNLISTEN</command> command. A session's listen
+ registrations are automatically cleared when the session ends.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The method a client application must use to detect notification events depends on
+ which <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> application programming interface it
+ uses. With the <application>libpq</application> library, the application issues
+ <command>LISTEN</command> as an ordinary SQL command, and then must
+ periodically call the function <function>PQnotifies</function> to find out
+ whether any notification events have been received. Other interfaces such as
+ <application>libpgtcl</application> provide higher-level methods for handling notify events; indeed,
+ with <application>libpgtcl</application> the application programmer should not even issue
+ <command>LISTEN</command> or <command>UNLISTEN</command> directly. See the
+ documentation for the interface you are using for more details.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">channel</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Name of a notification channel (any identifier).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>LISTEN</command> takes effect at transaction commit.
+ If <command>LISTEN</command> or <command>UNLISTEN</command> is executed
+ within a transaction that later rolls back, the set of notification
+ channels being listened to is unchanged.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A transaction that has executed <command>LISTEN</command> cannot be
+ prepared for two-phase commit.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ There is a race condition when first setting up a listening session:
+ if concurrently-committing transactions are sending notify events,
+ exactly which of those will the newly listening session receive?
+ The answer is that the session will receive all events committed after
+ an instant during the transaction's commit step. But that is slightly
+ later than any database state that the transaction could have observed
+ in queries. This leads to the following rule for
+ using <command>LISTEN</command>: first execute (and commit!) that
+ command, then in a new transaction inspect the database state as needed
+ by the application logic, then rely on notifications to find out about
+ subsequent changes to the database state. The first few received
+ notifications might refer to updates already observed in the initial
+ database inspection, but this is usually harmless.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <xref linkend="sql-notify"/>
+ contains a more extensive
+ discussion of the use of <command>LISTEN</command> and
+ <command>NOTIFY</command>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Configure and execute a listen/notify sequence from
+ <application>psql</application>:
+
+<programlisting>
+LISTEN virtual;
+NOTIFY virtual;
+Asynchronous notification "virtual" received from server process with PID 8448.
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>LISTEN</command> statement in the SQL
+ standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-notify"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-unlisten"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/load.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/load.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2c214dd
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/load.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,81 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/load.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-load">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-load">
+ <primary>LOAD</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>LOAD</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>LOAD</refname>
+ <refpurpose>load a shared library file</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+LOAD '<replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable>'
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-load-description">
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This command loads a shared library file into the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ server's address space. If the file has been loaded already,
+ the command does nothing. Shared library files that contain C functions
+ are automatically loaded whenever one of their functions is called.
+ Therefore, an explicit <command>LOAD</command> is usually only needed to
+ load a library that modifies the server's behavior through <quote>hooks</quote>
+ rather than providing a set of functions.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The library file name is typically given as just a bare file name,
+ which is sought in the server's library search path (set
+ by <xref linkend="guc-dynamic-library-path"/>). Alternatively it can be
+ given as a full path name. In either case the platform's standard shared
+ library file name extension may be omitted.
+ See <xref linkend="xfunc-c-dynload"/> for more information on this topic.
+ </para>
+
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary><filename>$libdir/plugins</filename></primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <para>
+ Non-superusers can only apply <command>LOAD</command> to library files
+ located in <filename>$libdir/plugins/</filename> &mdash; the specified
+ <replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable> must begin
+ with exactly that string. (It is the database administrator's
+ responsibility to ensure that only <quote>safe</quote> libraries
+ are installed there.)
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-load-compat">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>LOAD</command> is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <xref linkend="sql-createfunction"/>
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/lock.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/lock.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4cdfae2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/lock.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,261 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/lock.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-lock">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-lock">
+ <primary>LOCK</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>LOCK</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>LOCK</refname>
+ <refpurpose>lock a table</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+LOCK [ TABLE ] [ ONLY ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ * ] [, ...] [ IN <replaceable class="parameter">lockmode</replaceable> MODE ] [ NOWAIT ]
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">lockmode</replaceable> is one of:</phrase>
+
+ ACCESS SHARE | ROW SHARE | ROW EXCLUSIVE | SHARE UPDATE EXCLUSIVE
+ | SHARE | SHARE ROW EXCLUSIVE | EXCLUSIVE | ACCESS EXCLUSIVE
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>LOCK TABLE</command> obtains a table-level lock, waiting
+ if necessary for any conflicting locks to be released. If
+ <literal>NOWAIT</literal> is specified, <command>LOCK
+ TABLE</command> does not wait to acquire the desired lock: if it
+ cannot be acquired immediately, the command is aborted and an
+ error is emitted. Once obtained, the lock is held for the
+ remainder of the current transaction. (There is no <command>UNLOCK
+ TABLE</command> command; locks are always released at transaction
+ end.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When a view is locked, all relations appearing in the view definition
+ query are also locked recursively with the same lock mode.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When acquiring locks automatically for commands that reference
+ tables, <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> always uses the least
+ restrictive lock mode possible. <command>LOCK TABLE</command>
+ provides for cases when you might need more restrictive locking.
+ For example, suppose an application runs a transaction at the
+ <literal>READ COMMITTED</literal> isolation level and needs to ensure that
+ data in a table remains stable for the duration of the transaction.
+ To achieve this you could obtain <literal>SHARE</literal> lock mode over the
+ table before querying. This will prevent concurrent data changes
+ and ensure subsequent reads of the table see a stable view of
+ committed data, because <literal>SHARE</literal> lock mode conflicts with
+ the <literal>ROW EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock acquired by writers, and your
+ <command>LOCK TABLE <replaceable
+ class="parameter">name</replaceable> IN SHARE MODE</command>
+ statement will wait until any concurrent holders of <literal>ROW
+ EXCLUSIVE</literal> mode locks commit or roll back. Thus, once you
+ obtain the lock, there are no uncommitted writes outstanding;
+ furthermore none can begin until you release the lock.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To achieve a similar effect when running a transaction at the
+ <literal>REPEATABLE READ</literal> or <literal>SERIALIZABLE</literal>
+ isolation level, you have to execute the <command>LOCK TABLE</command> statement
+ before executing any <command>SELECT</command> or data modification statement.
+ A <literal>REPEATABLE READ</literal> or <literal>SERIALIZABLE</literal> transaction's
+ view of data will be frozen when its first
+ <command>SELECT</command> or data modification statement begins. A <command>LOCK
+ TABLE</command> later in the transaction will still prevent concurrent writes
+ &mdash; but it won't ensure that what the transaction reads corresponds to
+ the latest committed values.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a transaction of this sort is going to change the data in the
+ table, then it should use <literal>SHARE ROW EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock mode
+ instead of <literal>SHARE</literal> mode. This ensures that only one
+ transaction of this type runs at a time. Without this, a deadlock
+ is possible: two transactions might both acquire <literal>SHARE</literal>
+ mode, and then be unable to also acquire <literal>ROW EXCLUSIVE</literal>
+ mode to actually perform their updates. (Note that a transaction's
+ own locks never conflict, so a transaction can acquire <literal>ROW
+ EXCLUSIVE</literal> mode when it holds <literal>SHARE</literal> mode &mdash; but not
+ if anyone else holds <literal>SHARE</literal> mode.) To avoid deadlocks,
+ make sure all transactions acquire locks on the same objects in the
+ same order, and if multiple lock modes are involved for a single
+ object, then transactions should always acquire the most
+ restrictive mode first.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ More information about the lock modes and locking strategies can be
+ found in <xref linkend="explicit-locking"/>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing table to
+ lock. If <literal>ONLY</literal> is specified before the table name, only that
+ table is locked. If <literal>ONLY</literal> is not specified, the table and all
+ its descendant tables (if any) are locked. Optionally, <literal>*</literal>
+ can be specified after the table name to explicitly indicate that
+ descendant tables are included.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The command <literal>LOCK TABLE a, b;</literal> is equivalent to
+ <literal>LOCK TABLE a; LOCK TABLE b;</literal>. The tables are locked
+ one-by-one in the order specified in the <command>LOCK
+ TABLE</command> command.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">lockmode</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The lock mode specifies which locks this lock conflicts with.
+ Lock modes are described in <xref linkend="explicit-locking"/>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If no lock mode is specified, then <literal>ACCESS
+ EXCLUSIVE</literal>, the most restrictive mode, is used.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>NOWAIT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies that <command>LOCK TABLE</command> should not wait for
+ any conflicting locks to be released: if the specified lock(s)
+ cannot be acquired immediately without waiting, the transaction
+ is aborted.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <literal>LOCK TABLE ... IN ACCESS SHARE MODE</literal> requires <literal>SELECT</literal>
+ privileges on the target table. <literal>LOCK TABLE ... IN ROW EXCLUSIVE
+ MODE</literal> requires <literal>INSERT</literal>, <literal>UPDATE</literal>, <literal>DELETE</literal>,
+ or <literal>TRUNCATE</literal> privileges on the target table. All other forms of
+ <command>LOCK</command> require table-level <literal>UPDATE</literal>, <literal>DELETE</literal>,
+ or <literal>TRUNCATE</literal> privileges.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The user performing the lock on the view must have the corresponding privilege
+ on the view. In addition the view's owner must have the relevant privileges on
+ the underlying base relations, but the user performing the lock does
+ not need any permissions on the underlying base relations.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>LOCK TABLE</command> is useless outside a transaction block: the lock
+ would remain held only to the completion of the statement. Therefore
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> reports an error if <command>LOCK</command>
+ is used outside a transaction block.
+ Use
+ <link linkend="sql-begin"><command>BEGIN</command></link> and
+ <link linkend="sql-commit"><command>COMMIT</command></link>
+ (or <link linkend="sql-rollback"><command>ROLLBACK</command></link>)
+ to define a transaction block.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>LOCK TABLE</command> only deals with table-level locks, and so
+ the mode names involving <literal>ROW</literal> are all misnomers. These
+ mode names should generally be read as indicating the intention of
+ the user to acquire row-level locks within the locked table. Also,
+ <literal>ROW EXCLUSIVE</literal> mode is a shareable table lock. Keep in
+ mind that all the lock modes have identical semantics so far as
+ <command>LOCK TABLE</command> is concerned, differing only in the rules
+ about which modes conflict with which. For information on how to
+ acquire an actual row-level lock, see <xref linkend="locking-rows"/>
+ and <xref linkend="sql-for-update-share"/>
+ in the <xref linkend="sql-select"/> documentation.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Obtain a <literal>SHARE</literal> lock on a primary key table when going to perform
+ inserts into a foreign key table:
+
+<programlisting>
+BEGIN WORK;
+LOCK TABLE films IN SHARE MODE;
+SELECT id FROM films
+ WHERE name = 'Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace';
+-- Do ROLLBACK if record was not returned
+INSERT INTO films_user_comments VALUES
+ (_id_, 'GREAT! I was waiting for it for so long!');
+COMMIT WORK;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Take a <literal>SHARE ROW EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock on a primary key table when going to perform
+ a delete operation:
+
+<programlisting>
+BEGIN WORK;
+LOCK TABLE films IN SHARE ROW EXCLUSIVE MODE;
+DELETE FROM films_user_comments WHERE id IN
+ (SELECT id FROM films WHERE rating &lt; 5);
+DELETE FROM films WHERE rating &lt; 5;
+COMMIT WORK;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>LOCK TABLE</command> in the SQL standard,
+ which instead uses <command>SET TRANSACTION</command> to specify
+ concurrency levels on transactions. <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> supports that too;
+ see <xref linkend="sql-set-transaction"/> for details.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Except for <literal>ACCESS SHARE</literal>, <literal>ACCESS EXCLUSIVE</literal>,
+ and <literal>SHARE UPDATE EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock modes, the
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> lock modes and the
+ <command>LOCK TABLE</command> syntax are compatible with those
+ present in <productname>Oracle</productname>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/move.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/move.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4c7d1dc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/move.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,124 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/move.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-move">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-move">
+ <primary>MOVE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <indexterm zone="sql-move">
+ <primary>cursor</primary>
+ <secondary>MOVE</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>MOVE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>MOVE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>position a cursor</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<!-- Note the "direction" bit is also in ref/fetch.sgml -->
+<synopsis>
+MOVE [ <replaceable class="parameter">direction</replaceable> [ FROM | IN ] ] <replaceable class="parameter">cursor_name</replaceable>
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">direction</replaceable> can be empty or one of:</phrase>
+
+ NEXT
+ PRIOR
+ FIRST
+ LAST
+ ABSOLUTE <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable>
+ RELATIVE <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable>
+ <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable>
+ ALL
+ FORWARD
+ FORWARD <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable>
+ FORWARD ALL
+ BACKWARD
+ BACKWARD <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable>
+ BACKWARD ALL
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>MOVE</command> repositions a cursor without retrieving any data.
+ <command>MOVE</command> works exactly like the <command>FETCH</command>
+ command, except it only positions the cursor and does not return rows.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The parameters for the <command>MOVE</command> command are identical to
+ those of the <command>FETCH</command> command; refer to
+ <xref linkend="sql-fetch"/>
+ for details on syntax and usage.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Outputs</title>
+
+ <para>
+ On successful completion, a <command>MOVE</command> command returns a command
+ tag of the form
+<screen>
+MOVE <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable>
+</screen>
+ The <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable> is the number
+ of rows that a <command>FETCH</command> command with the same parameters
+ would have returned (possibly zero).
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+<programlisting>
+BEGIN WORK;
+DECLARE liahona CURSOR FOR SELECT * FROM films;
+
+-- Skip the first 5 rows:
+MOVE FORWARD 5 IN liahona;
+MOVE 5
+
+-- Fetch the 6th row from the cursor liahona:
+FETCH 1 FROM liahona;
+ code | title | did | date_prod | kind | len
+-------+--------+-----+------------+--------+-------
+ P_303 | 48 Hrs | 103 | 1982-10-22 | Action | 01:37
+(1 row)
+
+-- Close the cursor liahona and end the transaction:
+CLOSE liahona;
+COMMIT WORK;
+</programlisting>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>MOVE</command> statement in the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-close"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-declare"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-fetch"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/notify.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/notify.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7dcbea
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/notify.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,233 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/notify.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-notify">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-notify">
+ <primary>NOTIFY</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>NOTIFY</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>NOTIFY</refname>
+ <refpurpose>generate a notification</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+NOTIFY <replaceable class="parameter">channel</replaceable> [ , <replaceable class="parameter">payload</replaceable> ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>NOTIFY</command> command sends a notification event together
+ with an optional <quote>payload</quote> string to each client application that
+ has previously executed
+ <command>LISTEN <replaceable class="parameter">channel</replaceable></command>
+ for the specified channel name in the current database.
+ Notifications are visible to all users.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>NOTIFY</command> provides a simple
+ interprocess communication mechanism for a collection of processes
+ accessing the same <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database.
+ A payload string can be sent along with the notification, and
+ higher-level mechanisms for passing structured data can be built by using
+ tables in the database to pass additional data from notifier to listener(s).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The information passed to the client for a notification event includes the
+ notification channel
+ name, the notifying session's server process <acronym>PID</acronym>, and the
+ payload string, which is an empty string if it has not been specified.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ It is up to the database designer to define the channel names that will
+ be used in a given database and what each one means.
+ Commonly, the channel name is the same as the name of some table in
+ the database, and the notify event essentially means, <quote>I changed this table,
+ take a look at it to see what's new</quote>. But no such association is enforced by
+ the <command>NOTIFY</command> and <command>LISTEN</command> commands. For
+ example, a database designer could use several different channel names
+ to signal different sorts of changes to a single table. Alternatively,
+ the payload string could be used to differentiate various cases.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When <command>NOTIFY</command> is used to signal the occurrence of changes
+ to a particular table, a useful programming technique is to put the
+ <command>NOTIFY</command> in a statement trigger that is triggered by table updates.
+ In this way, notification happens automatically when the table is changed,
+ and the application programmer cannot accidentally forget to do it.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>NOTIFY</command> interacts with SQL transactions in some important
+ ways. Firstly, if a <command>NOTIFY</command> is executed inside a
+ transaction, the notify events are not delivered until and unless the
+ transaction is committed. This is appropriate, since if the transaction
+ is aborted, all the commands within it have had no
+ effect, including <command>NOTIFY</command>. But it can be disconcerting if one
+ is expecting the notification events to be delivered immediately. Secondly, if
+ a listening session receives a notification signal while it is within a transaction,
+ the notification event will not be delivered to its connected client until just
+ after the transaction is completed (either committed or aborted). Again, the
+ reasoning is that if a notification were delivered within a transaction that was
+ later aborted, one would want the notification to be undone somehow &mdash;
+ but
+ the server cannot <quote>take back</quote> a notification once it has sent it to the client.
+ So notification events are only delivered between transactions. The upshot of this
+ is that applications using <command>NOTIFY</command> for real-time signaling
+ should try to keep their transactions short.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the same channel name is signaled multiple times with identical
+ payload strings within the same transaction, only one instance of the
+ notification event is delivered to listeners.
+ On the other hand, notifications with distinct payload strings will
+ always be delivered as distinct notifications. Similarly, notifications from
+ different transactions will never get folded into one notification.
+ Except for dropping later instances of duplicate notifications,
+ <command>NOTIFY</command> guarantees that notifications from the same
+ transaction get delivered in the order they were sent. It is also
+ guaranteed that messages from different transactions are delivered in
+ the order in which the transactions committed.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ It is common for a client that executes <command>NOTIFY</command>
+ to be listening on the same notification channel itself. In that case
+ it will get back a notification event, just like all the other
+ listening sessions. Depending on the application logic, this could
+ result in useless work, for example, reading a database table to
+ find the same updates that that session just wrote out. It is
+ possible to avoid such extra work by noticing whether the notifying
+ session's server process <acronym>PID</acronym> (supplied in the
+ notification event message) is the same as one's own session's
+ <acronym>PID</acronym> (available from <application>libpq</application>). When they
+ are the same, the notification event is one's own work bouncing
+ back, and can be ignored.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">channel</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Name of the notification channel to be signaled (any identifier).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">payload</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <quote>payload</quote> string to be communicated along with the
+ notification. This must be specified as a simple string literal.
+ In the default configuration it must be shorter than 8000 bytes.
+ (If binary data or large amounts of information need to be communicated,
+ it's best to put it in a database table and send the key of the record.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is a queue that holds notifications that have been sent but not
+ yet processed by all listening sessions. If this queue becomes full,
+ transactions calling <command>NOTIFY</command> will fail at commit.
+ The queue is quite large (8GB in a standard installation) and should be
+ sufficiently sized for almost every use case. However, no cleanup can take
+ place if a session executes <command>LISTEN</command> and then enters a
+ transaction for a very long time. Once the queue is half full you will see
+ warnings in the log file pointing you to the session that is preventing
+ cleanup. In this case you should make sure that this session ends its
+ current transaction so that cleanup can proceed.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The function <function>pg_notification_queue_usage</function> returns the
+ fraction of the queue that is currently occupied by pending notifications.
+ See <xref linkend="functions-info"/> for more information.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ A transaction that has executed <command>NOTIFY</command> cannot be
+ prepared for two-phase commit.
+ </para>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>pg_notify</title>
+
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary>pg_notify</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <para>
+ To send a notification you can also use the function
+ <literal><function>pg_notify</function>(<type>text</type>,
+ <type>text</type>)</literal>. The function takes the channel name as the
+ first argument and the payload as the second. The function is much easier
+ to use than the <command>NOTIFY</command> command if you need to work with
+ non-constant channel names and payloads.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Configure and execute a listen/notify sequence from
+ <application>psql</application>:
+
+<programlisting>
+LISTEN virtual;
+NOTIFY virtual;
+Asynchronous notification "virtual" received from server process with PID 8448.
+NOTIFY virtual, 'This is the payload';
+Asynchronous notification "virtual" with payload "This is the payload" received from server process with PID 8448.
+
+LISTEN foo;
+SELECT pg_notify('fo' || 'o', 'pay' || 'load');
+Asynchronous notification "foo" with payload "payload" received from server process with PID 14728.
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>NOTIFY</command> statement in the SQL
+ standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-listen"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-unlisten"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_amcheck.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_amcheck.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..43ee73a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_amcheck.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,649 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_amcheck.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="app-pgamcheck">
+ <indexterm zone="app-pgamcheck">
+ <primary>pg_amcheck</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>pg_amcheck</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>pg_amcheck</refname>
+ <refpurpose>checks for corruption in one or more
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> databases</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_amcheck</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg><replaceable>dbname</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_amcheck</application> supports running
+ <xref linkend="amcheck"/>'s corruption checking functions against one or
+ more databases, with options to select which schemas, tables and indexes to
+ check, which kinds of checking to perform, and whether to perform the checks
+ in parallel, and if so, the number of parallel connections to establish and
+ use.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Only table relations and btree indexes are currently supported. Other
+ relation types are silently skipped.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If <literal>dbname</literal> is specified, it should be the name of a
+ single database to check, and no other database selection options should
+ be present. Otherwise, if any database selection options are present,
+ all matching databases will be checked. If no such options are present,
+ the default database will be checked. Database selection options include
+ <option>--all</option>, <option>--database</option> and
+ <option>--exclude-database</option>. They also include
+ <option>--relation</option>, <option>--exclude-relation</option>,
+ <option>--table</option>, <option>--exclude-table</option>,
+ <option>--index</option>, and <option>--exclude-index</option>,
+ but only when such options are used with a three-part pattern
+ (e.g. <option>mydb*.myschema*.myrel*</option>). Finally, they include
+ <option>--schema</option> and <option>--exclude-schema</option>
+ when such options are used with a two-part pattern
+ (e.g. <option>mydb*.myschema*</option>).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <replaceable>dbname</replaceable> can also be a
+ <link linkend="libpq-connstring">connection string</link>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The following command-line options control what is checked:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-a</option></term>
+ <term><option>--all</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Check all databases, except for any excluded via
+ <option>--exclude-database</option>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-d <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--database=<replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Check databases matching the specified
+ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link>,
+ except for any excluded by <option>--exclude-database</option>.
+ This option can be specified more than once.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-D <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--exclude-database=<replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Exclude databases matching the given
+ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link>.
+ This option can be specified more than once.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-i <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--index=<replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Check indexes matching the specified
+ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link>,
+ unless they are otherwise excluded.
+ This option can be specified more than once.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ This is similar to the <option>--relation</option> option, except that
+ it applies only to indexes, not tables.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-I <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--exclude-index=<replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Exclude indexes matching the specified
+ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link>.
+ This option can be specified more than once.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ This is similar to the <option>--exclude-relation</option> option,
+ except that it applies only to indexes, not tables.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-r <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--relation=<replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Check relations matching the specified
+ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link>,
+ unless they are otherwise excluded.
+ This option can be specified more than once.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Patterns may be unqualified, e.g. <literal>myrel*</literal>, or they
+ may be schema-qualified, e.g. <literal>myschema*.myrel*</literal> or
+ database-qualified and schema-qualified, e.g.
+ <literal>mydb*.myscheam*.myrel*</literal>. A database-qualified
+ pattern will add matching databases to the list of databases to be
+ checked.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-R <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--exclude-relation=<replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Exclude relations matching the specified
+ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link>.
+ This option can be specified more than once.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ As with <option>--relation</option>, the
+ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> may be unqualified, schema-qualified,
+ or database- and schema-qualified.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-s <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--schema=<replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Check tables and indexes in schemas matching the specified
+ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link>, unless they are otherwise excluded.
+ This option can be specified more than once.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ To select only tables in schemas matching a particular pattern,
+ consider using something like
+ <literal>--table=SCHEMAPAT.* --no-dependent-indexes</literal>.
+ To select only indexes, consider using something like
+ <literal>--index=SCHEMAPAT.*</literal>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ A schema pattern may be database-qualified. For example, you may
+ write <literal>--schema=mydb*.myschema*</literal> to select
+ schemas matching <literal>myschema*</literal> in databases matching
+ <literal>mydb*</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-S <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--exclude-schema=<replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Exclude tables and indexes in schemas matching the specified
+ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link>.
+ This option can be specified more than once.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ As with <option>--schema</option>, the pattern may be
+ database-qualified.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-t <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--table=<replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Check tables matching the specified
+ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link>,
+ unless they are otherwise excluded.
+ This option can be specified more than once.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ This is similar to the <option>--relation</option> option, except that
+ it applies only to tables, not indexes.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-T <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--exclude-table=<replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Exclude tables matching the specified
+ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link>.
+ This option can be specified more than once.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ This is similar to the <option>--exclude-relation</option> option,
+ except that it applies only to tables, not indexes.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-dependent-indexes</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ By default, if a table is checked, any btree indexes of that table
+ will also be checked, even if they are not explicitly selected by
+ an option such as <literal>--index</literal> or
+ <literal>--relation</literal>. This option suppresses that behavior.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-dependent-toast</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ By default, if a table is checked, its toast table, if any, will also
+ be checked, even if it is not explicitly selected by an option
+ such as <literal>--table</literal> or <literal>--relation</literal>.
+ This option suppresses that behavior.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-strict-names</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ By default, if an argument to <literal>--database</literal>,
+ <literal>--table</literal>, <literal>--index</literal>,
+ or <literal>--relation</literal> matches no objects, it is a fatal
+ error. This option downgrades that error to a warning.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The following command-line options control checking of tables:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--exclude-toast-pointers</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ By default, whenever a toast pointer is encountered in a table,
+ a lookup is performed to ensure that it references apparently-valid
+ entries in the toast table. These checks can be quite slow, and this
+ option can be used to skip them.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--on-error-stop</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ After reporting all corruptions on the first page of a table where
+ corruption is found, stop processing that table relation and move on
+ to the next table or index.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Note that index checking always stops after the first corrupt page.
+ This option only has meaning relative to table relations.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--skip=<replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If <literal>all-frozen</literal> is given, table corruption checks
+ will skip over pages in all tables that are marked as all frozen.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ If <literal>all-visible</literal> is given, table corruption checks
+ will skip over pages in all tables that are marked as all visible.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ By default, no pages are skipped. This can be specified as
+ <literal>none</literal>, but since this is the default, it need not be
+ mentioned.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--startblock=<replaceable class="parameter">block</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Start checking at the specified block number. An error will occur if
+ the table relation being checked has fewer than this number of blocks.
+ This option does not apply to indexes, and is probably only useful
+ when checking a single table relation. See <literal>--endblock</literal>
+ for further caveats.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--endblock=<replaceable class="parameter">block</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ End checking at the specified block number. An error will occur if the
+ table relation being checked has fewer than this number of blocks.
+ This option does not apply to indexes, and is probably only useful when
+ checking a single table relation. If both a regular table and a toast
+ table are checked, this option will apply to both, but higher-numbered
+ toast blocks may still be accessed while validating toast pointers,
+ unless that is suppressed using
+ <option>--exclude-toast-pointers</option>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The following command-line options control checking of B-tree indexes:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--heapallindexed</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ For each index checked, verify the presence of all heap tuples as index
+ tuples in the index using <xref linkend="amcheck"/>'s
+ <option>heapallindexed</option> option.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--parent-check</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ For each btree index checked, use <xref linkend="amcheck"/>'s
+ <function>bt_index_parent_check</function> function, which performs
+ additional checks of parent/child relationships during index checking.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The default is to use <application>amcheck</application>'s
+ <function>bt_index_check</function> function, but note that use of the
+ <option>--rootdescend</option> option implicitly selects
+ <function>bt_index_parent_check</function>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--rootdescend</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ For each index checked, re-find tuples on the leaf level by performing a
+ new search from the root page for each tuple using
+ <xref linkend="amcheck"/>'s <option>rootdescend</option> option.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Use of this option implicitly also selects the
+ <option>--parent-check</option> option.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ This form of verification was originally written to help in the
+ development of btree index features. It may be of limited use or even
+ of no use in helping detect the kinds of corruption that occur in
+ practice. It may also cause corruption checking to take considerably
+ longer and consume considerably more resources on the server.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <warning>
+ <para>
+ The extra checks performed against B-tree indexes when the
+ <option>--parent-check</option> option or the
+ <option>--rootdescend</option> option is specified require
+ relatively strong relation-level locks. These checks are the only
+ checks that will block concurrent data modification from
+ <command>INSERT</command>, <command>UPDATE</command>, and
+ <command>DELETE</command> commands.
+ </para>
+ </warning>
+
+ <para>
+ The following command-line options control the connection to the server:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-h <replaceable class="parameter">hostname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--host=<replaceable class="parameter">hostname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the host name of the machine on which the server is running.
+ If the value begins with a slash, it is used as the directory for the
+ Unix domain socket.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-p <replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--port=<replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the TCP port or local Unix domain socket file extension on
+ which the server is listening for connections.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-U</option></term>
+ <term><option>--username=<replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ User name to connect as.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-w</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Never issue a password prompt. If the server requires password
+ authentication and a password is not available by other means such as
+ a <filename>.pgpass</filename> file, the connection attempt will fail.
+ This option can be useful in batch jobs and scripts where no user is
+ present to enter a password.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-W</option></term>
+ <term><option>--password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Force <application>pg_amcheck</application> to prompt for a password
+ before connecting to a database.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ This option is never essential, since
+ <application>pg_amcheck</application> will automatically prompt for a
+ password if the server demands password authentication. However,
+ <application>pg_amcheck</application> will waste a connection attempt
+ finding out that the server wants a password. In some cases it is
+ worth typing <option>-W</option> to avoid the extra connection attempt.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--maintenance-db=<replaceable class="parameter">dbname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies a database or
+ <link linkend="libpq-connstring">connection string</link> to be
+ used to discover the list of databases to be checked. If neither
+ <option>--all</option> nor any option including a database pattern is
+ used, no such connection is required and this option does nothing.
+ Otherwise, any connection string parameters other than
+ the database name which are included in the value for this option
+ will also be used when connecting to the databases
+ being checked. If this option is omitted, the default is
+ <literal>postgres</literal> or, if that fails,
+ <literal>template1</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Other options are also available:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-e</option></term>
+ <term><option>--echo</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Echo to stdout all SQL sent to the server.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-j <replaceable class="parameter">num</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--jobs=<replaceable class="parameter">num</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Use <replaceable>num</replaceable> concurrent connections to the server,
+ or one per object to be checked, whichever is less.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The default is to use a single connection.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-P</option></term>
+ <term><option>--progress</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show progress information. Progress information includes the number
+ of relations for which checking has been completed, and the total
+ size of those relations. It also includes the total number of relations
+ that will eventually be checked, and the estimated size of those
+ relations.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-v</option></term>
+ <term><option>--verbose</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print more messages. In particular, this will print a message for
+ each relation being checked, and will increase the level of detail
+ shown for server errors.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-V</option></term>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the <application>pg_amcheck</application> version and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--install-missing</option></term>
+ <term><option>--install-missing=<replaceable class="parameter">schema</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Install any missing extensions that are required to check the
+ database(s). If not yet installed, each extension's objects will be
+ installed into the given
+ <replaceable class="parameter">schema</replaceable>, or if not specified
+ into schema <literal>pg_catalog</literal>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ At present, the only required extension is <xref linkend="amcheck"/>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show help about <application>pg_amcheck</application> command line
+ arguments, and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_amcheck</application> is designed to work with
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 14.0 and later.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="amcheck"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_basebackup.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_basebackup.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9e6807b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_basebackup.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,926 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_basebackup.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="app-pgbasebackup">
+ <indexterm zone="app-pgbasebackup">
+ <primary>pg_basebackup</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>pg_basebackup</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>pg_basebackup</refname>
+ <refpurpose>take a base backup of a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> cluster</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_basebackup</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_basebackup</application> is used to take a base backup of
+ a running <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database cluster. The backup
+ is taken without affecting other clients of the database, and can be used
+ both for point-in-time recovery (see <xref linkend="continuous-archiving"/>)
+ and as the starting point for a log-shipping or streaming-replication standby
+ server (see <xref linkend="warm-standby"/>).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_basebackup</application> makes an exact copy of the database
+ cluster's files, while making sure the server is put into and
+ out of backup mode automatically. Backups are always taken of the entire
+ database cluster; it is not possible to back up individual databases or
+ database objects. For selective backups, another tool such as
+ <xref linkend="app-pgdump"/> must be used.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The backup is made over a regular <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ connection that uses the replication protocol. The connection must be made
+ with a user ID that has <literal>REPLICATION</literal> permissions
+ (see <xref linkend="role-attributes"/>) or is a superuser,
+ and <link linkend="auth-pg-hba-conf"><filename>pg_hba.conf</filename></link>
+ must permit the replication connection. The server must also be configured
+ with <xref linkend="guc-max-wal-senders"/> set high enough to provide at
+ least one walsender for the backup plus one for WAL streaming (if used).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ There can be multiple <command>pg_basebackup</command>s running at the same time, but it is usually
+ better from a performance point of view to take only one backup, and copy
+ the result.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_basebackup</application> can make a base backup from
+ not only a primary server but also a standby. To take a backup from a standby,
+ set up the standby so that it can accept replication connections (that is, set
+ <varname>max_wal_senders</varname> and <xref linkend="guc-hot-standby"/>,
+ and configure its <filename>pg_hba.conf</filename> appropriately).
+ You will also need to enable <xref linkend="guc-full-page-writes"/> on the primary.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Note that there are some limitations in taking a backup from a standby:
+
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The backup history file is not created in the database cluster backed up.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_basebackup</application> cannot force the standby
+ to switch to a new WAL file at the end of backup.
+ When you are using <literal>-X none</literal>, if write activity on
+ the primary is low, <application>pg_basebackup</application> may
+ need to wait a long time for the last WAL file required for the backup
+ to be switched and archived. In this case, it may be useful to run
+ <function>pg_switch_wal</function> on the primary in order to
+ trigger an immediate WAL file switch.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If the standby is promoted to be primary during backup, the backup fails.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ All WAL records required for the backup must contain sufficient full-page writes,
+ which requires you to enable <varname>full_page_writes</varname> on the primary and
+ not to use a tool like <application>pg_compresslog</application> as
+ <varname>archive_command</varname> to remove full-page writes from WAL files.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Whenever <application>pg_basebackup</application> is taking a base
+ backup, the server's <structname>pg_stat_progress_basebackup</structname>
+ view will report the progress of the backup.
+ See <xref linkend="basebackup-progress-reporting"/> for details.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The following command-line options control the location and format of the
+ output:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-D <replaceable class="parameter">directory</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--pgdata=<replaceable class="parameter">directory</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets the target directory to write the output to.
+ <application>pg_basebackup</application> will create this directory
+ (and any missing parent directories) if it does not exist. If it
+ already exists, it must be empty.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ When the backup is in tar format, the target directory may be
+ specified as <literal>-</literal> (dash), causing the tar file to be
+ written to <literal>stdout</literal>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ This option is required.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-F <replaceable class="parameter">format</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--format=<replaceable class="parameter">format</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Selects the format for the output. <replaceable>format</replaceable>
+ can be one of the following:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>p</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>plain</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Write the output as plain files, with the same layout as the
+ source server's data directory and tablespaces. When the cluster has
+ no additional tablespaces, the whole database will be placed in
+ the target directory. If the cluster contains additional
+ tablespaces, the main data directory will be placed in the
+ target directory, but all other tablespaces will be placed
+ in the same absolute path as they have on the source server.
+ (See <option>--tablespace-mapping</option> to change that.)
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ This is the default format.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>t</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>tar</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Write the output as tar files in the target directory. The main
+ data directory's contents will be written to a file named
+ <filename>base.tar</filename>, and each other tablespace will be
+ written to a separate tar file named after that tablespace's OID.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ If the target directory is specified as <literal>-</literal>
+ (dash), the tar contents will be written to
+ standard output, suitable for piping to (for example)
+ <productname>gzip</productname>. This is only allowed if
+ the cluster has no additional tablespaces and WAL
+ streaming is not used.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist></para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-R</option></term>
+ <term><option>--write-recovery-conf</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+
+ <para>
+ Creates a
+ <link linkend="file-standby-signal"><filename>standby.signal</filename></link>
+ <indexterm><primary><filename>standby.signal</filename></primary><secondary>pg_basebackup --write-recovery-conf</secondary></indexterm>
+ file and appends
+ connection settings to the <filename>postgresql.auto.conf</filename>
+ file in the target directory (or within the base archive file when
+ using tar format). This eases setting up a standby server using the
+ results of the backup.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The <filename>postgresql.auto.conf</filename> file will record the connection
+ settings and, if specified, the replication slot
+ that <application>pg_basebackup</application> is using, so that
+ streaming replication will use the same settings later on.
+ </para>
+
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-T <replaceable class="parameter">olddir</replaceable>=<replaceable class="parameter">newdir</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--tablespace-mapping=<replaceable class="parameter">olddir</replaceable>=<replaceable class="parameter">newdir</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Relocates the tablespace in directory <replaceable>olddir</replaceable>
+ to <replaceable>newdir</replaceable> during the backup. To be
+ effective, <replaceable>olddir</replaceable> must exactly match the
+ path specification of the tablespace as it is defined on the source
+ server. (But it is not an error if there is no tablespace
+ in <replaceable>olddir</replaceable> on the source server.)
+ Meanwhile <replaceable>newdir</replaceable> is a directory in the
+ receiving host's filesystem. As with the main target directory,
+ <replaceable>newdir</replaceable> need not exist already, but if
+ it does exist it must be empty.
+ Both <replaceable>olddir</replaceable>
+ and <replaceable>newdir</replaceable> must be absolute paths. If
+ either path needs to contain an equal sign (<literal>=</literal>),
+ precede that with a backslash. This option can be specified multiple
+ times for multiple tablespaces.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a tablespace is relocated in this way, the symbolic links inside
+ the main data directory are updated to point to the new location. So
+ the new data directory is ready to be used for a new server instance
+ with all tablespaces in the updated locations.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Currently, this option only works with plain output format; it is
+ ignored if tar format is selected.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--waldir=<replaceable class="parameter">waldir</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets the directory to write WAL (write-ahead log) files to.
+ By default WAL files will be placed in
+ the <filename>pg_wal</filename> subdirectory of the target
+ directory, but this option can be used to place them elsewhere.
+ <replaceable>waldir</replaceable> must be an absolute path.
+ As with the main target directory,
+ <replaceable>waldir</replaceable> need not exist already, but if
+ it does exist it must be empty.
+ This option can only be specified when
+ the backup is in plain format.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-X <replaceable class="parameter">method</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--wal-method=<replaceable class="parameter">method</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Includes the required WAL (write-ahead log) files in the
+ backup. This will include all write-ahead logs generated during
+ the backup. Unless the method <literal>none</literal> is specified,
+ it is possible to start a postmaster in the target
+ directory without the need to consult the log archive, thus
+ making the output a completely standalone backup.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The following <replaceable>method</replaceable>s for collecting the
+ write-ahead logs are supported:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>n</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>none</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Don't include write-ahead logs in the backup.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>f</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>fetch</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The write-ahead log files are collected at the end of the backup.
+ Therefore, it is necessary for the source server's
+ <xref linkend="guc-wal-keep-size"/> parameter to be set high
+ enough that the required log data is not removed before the end
+ of the backup. If the required log data has been recycled
+ before it's time to transfer it, the backup will fail and be
+ unusable.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ When tar format is used, the write-ahead log files will be
+ included in the <filename>base.tar</filename> file.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>s</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>stream</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Stream write-ahead log data while the backup is being taken.
+ This method will open a second connection to the server and
+ start streaming the write-ahead log in parallel while running
+ the backup. Therefore, it will require two replication
+ connections not just one. As long as the client can keep up
+ with the write-ahead log data, using this method requires no
+ extra write-ahead logs to be saved on the source server.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ When tar format is used, the write-ahead log files will be
+ written to a separate file named <filename>pg_wal.tar</filename>
+ (if the server is a version earlier than 10, the file will be named
+ <filename>pg_xlog.tar</filename>).
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ This value is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist></para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-z</option></term>
+ <term><option>--gzip</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Enables gzip compression of tar file output, with the default
+ compression level. Compression is only available when using
+ the tar format, and the suffix <filename>.gz</filename> will
+ automatically be added to all tar filenames.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-Z <replaceable class="parameter">level</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--compress=<replaceable class="parameter">level</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Enables gzip compression of tar file output, and specifies the
+ compression level (0 through 9, 0 being no compression and 9 being best
+ compression). Compression is only available when using the tar
+ format, and the suffix <filename>.gz</filename> will
+ automatically be added to all tar filenames.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The following command-line options control the generation of the
+ backup and the invocation of the program:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-c <replaceable class="parameter">fast|spread</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--checkpoint=<replaceable class="parameter">fast|spread</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets checkpoint mode to fast (immediate) or spread (the default)
+ (see <xref linkend="backup-lowlevel-base-backup"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-C</option></term>
+ <term><option>--create-slot</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies that the replication slot named by the
+ <literal>--slot</literal> option should be created before starting
+ the backup. An error is raised if the slot already exists.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-l <replaceable class="parameter">label</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--label=<replaceable class="parameter">label</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets the label for the backup. If none is specified, a default value of
+ <quote><literal>pg_basebackup base backup</literal></quote> will be used.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-n</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-clean</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ By default, when <command>pg_basebackup</command> aborts with an
+ error, it removes any directories it might have created before
+ discovering that it cannot finish the job (for example, the target
+ directory and write-ahead log directory). This option inhibits
+ tidying-up and is thus useful for debugging.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Note that tablespace directories are not cleaned up either way.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-N</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-sync</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ By default, <command>pg_basebackup</command> will wait for all files
+ to be written safely to disk. This option causes
+ <command>pg_basebackup</command> to return without waiting, which is
+ faster, but means that a subsequent operating system crash can leave
+ the base backup corrupt. Generally, this option is useful for testing
+ but should not be used when creating a production installation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-P</option></term>
+ <term><option>--progress</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Enables progress reporting. Turning this on will deliver an approximate
+ progress report during the backup. Since the database may change during
+ the backup, this is only an approximation and may not end at exactly
+ <literal>100%</literal>. In particular, when WAL log is included in the
+ backup, the total amount of data cannot be estimated in advance, and
+ in this case the estimated target size will increase once it passes the
+ total estimate without WAL.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-r <replaceable class="parameter">rate</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--max-rate=<replaceable class="parameter">rate</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets the maximum transfer rate at which data is collected from the
+ source server. This can be useful to limit the impact
+ of <application>pg_basebackup</application> on the server. Values
+ are in kilobytes per second. Use a suffix of <literal>M</literal>
+ to indicate megabytes per second. A suffix of <literal>k</literal>
+ is also accepted, and has no effect. Valid values are between 32
+ kilobytes per second and 1024 megabytes per second.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ This option always affects transfer of the data directory. Transfer of
+ WAL files is only affected if the collection method
+ is <literal>fetch</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-S <replaceable>slotname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--slot=<replaceable class="parameter">slotname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option can only be used together with <literal>-X
+ stream</literal>. It causes WAL streaming to use the specified
+ replication slot. If the base backup is intended to be used as a
+ streaming-replication standby using a replication slot, the standby
+ should then use the same replication slot name as
+ <xref linkend="guc-primary-slot-name"/>. This ensures that the
+ primary server does not remove any necessary WAL data in the time
+ between the end of the base backup and the start of streaming
+ replication on the new standby.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The specified replication slot has to exist unless the
+ option <option>-C</option> is also used.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ If this option is not specified and the server supports temporary
+ replication slots (version 10 and later), then a temporary replication
+ slot is automatically used for WAL streaming.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-v</option></term>
+ <term><option>--verbose</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Enables verbose mode. Will output some extra steps during startup and
+ shutdown, as well as show the exact file name that is currently being
+ processed if progress reporting is also enabled.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--manifest-checksums=<replaceable class="parameter">algorithm</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the checksum algorithm that should be applied to each file
+ included in the backup manifest. Currently, the available
+ algorithms are <literal>NONE</literal>, <literal>CRC32C</literal>,
+ <literal>SHA224</literal>, <literal>SHA256</literal>,
+ <literal>SHA384</literal>, and <literal>SHA512</literal>.
+ The default is <literal>CRC32C</literal>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ If <literal>NONE</literal> is selected, the backup manifest will
+ not contain any checksums. Otherwise, it will contain a checksum
+ of each file in the backup using the specified algorithm. In addition,
+ the manifest will always contain a <literal>SHA256</literal>
+ checksum of its own contents. The <literal>SHA</literal> algorithms
+ are significantly more CPU-intensive than <literal>CRC32C</literal>,
+ so selecting one of them may increase the time required to complete
+ the backup.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Using a SHA hash function provides a cryptographically secure digest
+ of each file for users who wish to verify that the backup has not been
+ tampered with, while the CRC32C algorithm provides a checksum that is
+ much faster to calculate; it is good at catching errors due to accidental
+ changes but is not resistant to malicious modifications. Note that, to
+ be useful against an adversary who has access to the backup, the backup
+ manifest would need to be stored securely elsewhere or otherwise
+ verified not to have been modified since the backup was taken.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <xref linkend="app-pgverifybackup"/> can be used to check the
+ integrity of a backup against the backup manifest.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--manifest-force-encode</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Forces all filenames in the backup manifest to be hex-encoded.
+ If this option is not specified, only non-UTF8 filenames are
+ hex-encoded. This option is mostly intended to test that tools which
+ read a backup manifest file properly handle this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-estimate-size</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Prevents the server from estimating the total
+ amount of backup data that will be streamed, resulting in the
+ <structfield>backup_total</structfield> column in the
+ <structname>pg_stat_progress_basebackup</structname> view
+ always being <literal>NULL</literal>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Without this option, the backup will start by enumerating
+ the size of the entire database, and then go back and send
+ the actual contents. This may make the backup take slightly
+ longer, and in particular it will take longer before the first
+ data is sent. This option is useful to avoid such estimation
+ time if it's too long.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ This option is not allowed when using <option>--progress</option>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-manifest</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Disables generation of a backup manifest. If this option is not
+ specified, the server will generate and send a backup manifest
+ which can be verified using <xref linkend="app-pgverifybackup"/>.
+ The manifest is a list of every file present in the backup with the
+ exception of any WAL files that may be included. It also stores the
+ size, last modification time, and an optional checksum for each file.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-slot</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Prevents the creation of a temporary replication slot
+ for the backup.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ By default, if log streaming is selected but no slot name is given
+ with the <option>-S</option> option, then a temporary replication
+ slot is created (if supported by the source server).
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The main purpose of this option is to allow taking a base backup when
+ the server has no free replication slots. Using a replication slot
+ is almost always preferred, because it prevents needed WAL from being
+ removed by the server during the backup.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-verify-checksums</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Disables verification of checksums, if they are enabled on the server
+ the base backup is taken from.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ By default, checksums are verified and checksum failures will result
+ in a non-zero exit status. However, the base backup will not be
+ removed in such a case, as if the <option>--no-clean</option> option
+ had been used. Checksum verification failures will also be reported
+ in the <link linkend="monitoring-pg-stat-database-view">
+ <structname>pg_stat_database</structname></link> view.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The following command-line options control the connection to the source
+ server:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-d <replaceable class="parameter">connstr</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--dbname=<replaceable class="parameter">connstr</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies parameters used to connect to the server, as a <link
+ linkend="libpq-connstring">connection string</link>; these
+ will override any conflicting command line options.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The option is called <literal>--dbname</literal> for consistency with other
+ client applications, but because <application>pg_basebackup</application>
+ doesn't connect to any particular database in the cluster, any database
+ name in the connection string will be ignored.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-h <replaceable class="parameter">host</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--host=<replaceable class="parameter">host</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the host name of the machine on which the server is
+ running. If the value begins with a slash, it is used as the
+ directory for a Unix domain socket. The default is taken
+ from the <envar>PGHOST</envar> environment variable, if set,
+ else a Unix domain socket connection is attempted.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-p <replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--port=<replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the TCP port or local Unix domain socket file
+ extension on which the server is listening for connections.
+ Defaults to the <envar>PGPORT</envar> environment variable, if
+ set, or a compiled-in default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-s <replaceable class="parameter">interval</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--status-interval=<replaceable class="parameter">interval</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the number of seconds between status packets sent back to
+ the source server. Smaller values allow more accurate monitoring of
+ backup progress from the server.
+ A value of zero disables periodic status updates completely,
+ although an update will still be sent when requested by the server, to
+ avoid timeout-based disconnects. The default value is 10 seconds.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-U <replaceable>username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--username=<replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the user name to connect as.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-w</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Prevents issuing a password prompt. If the server requires
+ password authentication and a password is not available by
+ other means such as a <filename>.pgpass</filename> file, the
+ connection attempt will fail. This option can be useful in
+ batch jobs and scripts where no user is present to enter a
+ password.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-W</option></term>
+ <term><option>--password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Forces <application>pg_basebackup</application> to prompt for a
+ password before connecting to the source server.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This option is never essential, since
+ <application>pg_basebackup</application> will automatically prompt
+ for a password if the server demands password authentication.
+ However, <application>pg_basebackup</application> will waste a
+ connection attempt finding out that the server wants a password.
+ In some cases it is worth typing <option>-W</option> to avoid the extra
+ connection attempt.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Other options are also available:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-V</option></term>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Prints the <application>pg_basebackup</application> version and exits.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Shows help about <application>pg_basebackup</application> command line
+ arguments, and exits.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Environment</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This utility, like most other <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> utilities,
+ uses the environment variables supported by <application>libpq</application>
+ (see <xref linkend="libpq-envars"/>).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The environment variable <envar>PG_COLOR</envar> specifies whether to use
+ color in diagnostic messages. Possible values are
+ <literal>always</literal>, <literal>auto</literal> and
+ <literal>never</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ At the beginning of the backup, a checkpoint needs to be performed on the
+ source server. This can take some time (especially if the option
+ <literal>--checkpoint=fast</literal> is not used), during
+ which <application>pg_basebackup</application> will appear to be idle.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The backup will include all files in the data directory and tablespaces,
+ including the configuration files and any additional files placed in the
+ directory by third parties, except certain temporary files managed by
+ PostgreSQL. But only regular files and directories are copied, except that
+ symbolic links used for tablespaces are preserved. Symbolic links pointing
+ to certain directories known to PostgreSQL are copied as empty directories.
+ Other symbolic links and special device files are skipped.
+ See <xref linkend="protocol-replication"/> for the precise details.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In plain format, tablespaces will be backed up to the same path
+ they have on the source server, unless the
+ option <literal>--tablespace-mapping</literal> is used. Without
+ this option, running a plain format base backup on the same host as the
+ server will not work if tablespaces are in use, because the backup would
+ have to be written to the same directory locations as the original
+ tablespaces.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When tar format is used, it is the user's responsibility to unpack each
+ tar file before starting a PostgreSQL server that uses the data. If there
+ are additional tablespaces, the
+ tar files for them need to be unpacked in the correct locations. In this
+ case the symbolic links for those tablespaces will be created by the server
+ according to the contents of the <filename>tablespace_map</filename> file that is
+ included in the <filename>base.tar</filename> file.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_basebackup</application> works with servers of the same
+ or an older major version, down to 9.1. However, WAL streaming mode (<literal>-X
+ stream</literal>) only works with server version 9.3 and later, and tar format
+ (<literal>--format=tar</literal>) only works with server version 9.5
+ and later.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_basebackup</application> will preserve group permissions
+ for data files if group permissions are enabled on the source cluster.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To create a base backup of the server at <literal>mydbserver</literal>
+ and store it in the local directory
+ <filename>/usr/local/pgsql/data</filename>:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_basebackup -h mydbserver -D /usr/local/pgsql/data</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To create a backup of the local server with one compressed
+ tar file for each tablespace, and store it in the directory
+ <filename>backup</filename>, showing a progress report while running:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_basebackup -D backup -Ft -z -P</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To create a backup of a single-tablespace local database and compress
+ this with <productname>bzip2</productname>:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_basebackup -D - -Ft -X fetch | bzip2 &gt; backup.tar.bz2</userinput>
+</screen>
+ (This command will fail if there are multiple tablespaces in the
+ database.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To create a backup of a local database where the tablespace in
+ <filename>/opt/ts</filename> is relocated
+ to <filename>./backup/ts</filename>:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_basebackup -D backup/data -T /opt/ts=$(pwd)/backup/ts</userinput>
+</screen></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="app-pgdump"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="basebackup-progress-reporting"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_checksums.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_checksums.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c84bc5c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_checksums.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,228 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_checksums.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="app-pgchecksums">
+ <indexterm zone="app-pgchecksums">
+ <primary>pg_checksums</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>pg_checksums</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>pg_checksums</refname>
+ <refpurpose>enable, disable or check data checksums in a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database cluster</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_checksums</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat" choice="opt"><replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable></arg>
+ <group choice="opt">
+ <group choice="opt">
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>-D</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>--pgdata</option></arg>
+ </group>
+ <replaceable class="parameter">datadir</replaceable>
+ </group>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1 id="r1-app-pg_checksums-1">
+ <title>Description</title>
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_checksums</application> checks, enables or disables data
+ checksums in a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> cluster. The server
+ must be shut down cleanly before running
+ <application>pg_checksums</application>. When verifying checksums, the exit
+ status is zero if there are no checksum errors, and nonzero if at least one
+ checksum failure is detected. When enabling or disabling checksums, the
+ exit status is nonzero if the operation failed.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When verifying checksums, every file in the cluster is scanned. When
+ enabling checksums, every file in the cluster is rewritten in-place.
+ Disabling checksums only updates the file <filename>pg_control</filename>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The following command-line options are available:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-D <replaceable>directory</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--pgdata=<replaceable>directory</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the directory where the database cluster is stored.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-c</option></term>
+ <term><option>--check</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Checks checksums. This is the default mode if nothing else is
+ specified.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-d</option></term>
+ <term><option>--disable</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Disables checksums.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-e</option></term>
+ <term><option>--enable</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Enables checksums.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-f <replaceable>filenode</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--filenode=<replaceable>filenode</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Only validate checksums in the relation with filenode
+ <replaceable>filenode</replaceable>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-N</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-sync</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ By default, <command>pg_checksums</command> will wait for all files
+ to be written safely to disk. This option causes
+ <command>pg_checksums</command> to return without waiting, which is
+ faster, but means that a subsequent operating system crash can leave
+ the updated data directory corrupt. Generally, this option is useful
+ for testing but should not be used on a production installation.
+ This option has no effect when using <literal>--check</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-P</option></term>
+ <term><option>--progress</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Enable progress reporting. Turning this on will deliver a progress
+ report while checking or enabling checksums.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-v</option></term>
+ <term><option>--verbose</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Enable verbose output. Lists all checked files.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-V</option></term>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the <application>pg_checksums</application> version and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show help about <application>pg_checksums</application> command line
+ arguments, and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Environment</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PGDATA</envar></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the directory where the database cluster is
+ stored; can be overridden using the <option>-D</option> option.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PG_COLOR</envar></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether to use color in diagnostic messages. Possible values
+ are <literal>always</literal>, <literal>auto</literal> and
+ <literal>never</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+ <para>
+ Enabling checksums in a large cluster can potentially take a long time.
+ During this operation, the cluster or other programs that write to the
+ data directory must not be started or else data loss may occur.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ When using a replication setup with tools which perform direct copies
+ of relation file blocks (for example <xref linkend="app-pgrewind"/>),
+ enabling or disabling checksums can lead to page corruptions in the
+ shape of incorrect checksums if the operation is not done consistently
+ across all nodes. When enabling or disabling checksums in a replication
+ setup, it is thus recommended to stop all the clusters before switching
+ them all consistently. Destroying all standbys, performing the operation
+ on the primary and finally recreating the standbys from scratch is also
+ safe.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ If <application>pg_checksums</application> is aborted or killed while
+ enabling or disabling checksums, the cluster's data checksum configuration
+ remains unchanged, and <application>pg_checksums</application> can be
+ re-run to perform the same operation.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_config-ref.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_config-ref.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e177769
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_config-ref.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,332 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_config-ref.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="app-pgconfig">
+ <indexterm zone="app-pgconfig">
+ <primary>pg_config</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>pg_config</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>pg_config</refname>
+ <refpurpose>retrieve information about the installed version of <productname>PostgreSQL</productname></refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_config</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+ <para>
+ The <application>pg_config</application> utility prints configuration parameters
+ of the currently installed version of <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>. It is
+ intended, for example, to be used by software packages that want to interface
+ to <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> to facilitate finding the required header files
+ and libraries.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To use <application>pg_config</application>, supply one or more of the following
+ options:
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--bindir</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the location of user executables. Use this, for example, to find
+ the <command>psql</command> program. This is normally also the location
+ where the <filename>pg_config</filename> program resides.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--docdir</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the location of documentation files.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--htmldir</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the location of HTML documentation files.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--includedir</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the location of C header files of the client interfaces.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--pkgincludedir</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the location of other C header files.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--includedir-server</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the location of C header files for server programming.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--libdir</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the location of object code libraries.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--pkglibdir</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the location of dynamically loadable modules, or where
+ the server would search for them. (Other
+ architecture-dependent data files might also be installed in this
+ directory.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--localedir</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the location of locale support files. (This will be an empty
+ string if locale support was not configured when
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> was built.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--mandir</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the location of manual pages.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--sharedir</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the location of architecture-independent support files.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--sysconfdir</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the location of system-wide configuration files.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--pgxs</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the location of extension makefiles.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--configure</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the options that were given to the <filename>configure</filename>
+ script when <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> was configured for building.
+ This can be used to reproduce the identical configuration, or
+ to find out with what options a binary package was built. (Note
+ however that binary packages often contain vendor-specific custom
+ patches.) See also the examples below.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--cc</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the value of the <varname>CC</varname> variable that was used for building
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>. This shows the C compiler used.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--cppflags</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the value of the <varname>CPPFLAGS</varname> variable that was used for building
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>. This shows C compiler switches needed
+ at preprocessing time (typically, <literal>-I</literal> switches).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--cflags</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the value of the <varname>CFLAGS</varname> variable that was used for building
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>. This shows C compiler switches.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--cflags_sl</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the value of the <varname>CFLAGS_SL</varname> variable that was used for building
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>. This shows extra C compiler switches
+ used for building shared libraries.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--ldflags</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the value of the <varname>LDFLAGS</varname> variable that was used for building
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>. This shows linker switches.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--ldflags_ex</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the value of the <varname>LDFLAGS_EX</varname> variable that was used for building
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>. This shows linker switches
+ used for building executables only.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--ldflags_sl</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the value of the <varname>LDFLAGS_SL</varname> variable that was used for building
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>. This shows linker switches
+ used for building shared libraries only.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--libs</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the value of the <varname>LIBS</varname> variable that was used for building
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>. This normally contains <literal>-l</literal>
+ switches for external libraries linked into <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the version of <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show help about <application>pg_config</application> command line
+ arguments, and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ If more than one option is given, the information is printed in that order,
+ one item per line. If no options are given, all available information
+ is printed, with labels.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The options <option>--docdir</option>, <option>--pkgincludedir</option>,
+ <option>--localedir</option>, <option>--mandir</option>,
+ <option>--sharedir</option>, <option>--sysconfdir</option>,
+ <option>--cc</option>, <option>--cppflags</option>,
+ <option>--cflags</option>, <option>--cflags_sl</option>,
+ <option>--ldflags</option>, <option>--ldflags_sl</option>,
+ and <option>--libs</option> were added in <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 8.1.
+ The option <option>--htmldir</option> was added in <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 8.4.
+ The option <option>--ldflags_ex</option> was added in <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 9.0.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Example</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To reproduce the build configuration of the current PostgreSQL
+ installation, run the following command:
+<programlisting>
+eval ./configure `pg_config --configure`
+</programlisting>
+ The output of <literal>pg_config --configure</literal> contains
+ shell quotation marks so arguments with spaces are represented
+ correctly. Therefore, using <literal>eval</literal> is required
+ for proper results.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_controldata.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_controldata.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b47fdca
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_controldata.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,84 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_controldata.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="app-pgcontroldata">
+ <indexterm zone="app-pgcontroldata">
+ <primary>pg_controldata</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>pg_controldata</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>pg_controldata</refname>
+ <refpurpose>display control information of a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database cluster</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_controldata</command>
+ <arg choice="opt"><replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable></arg>
+ <group choice="opt">
+ <group choice="opt">
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>-D</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>--pgdata</option></arg>
+ </group>
+ <replaceable class="parameter">datadir</replaceable>
+ </group>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1 id="r1-app-pgcontroldata-1">
+ <title>Description</title>
+ <para>
+ <command>pg_controldata</command> prints information initialized during
+ <command>initdb</command>, such as the catalog version.
+ It also shows information about write-ahead logging and checkpoint
+ processing. This information is cluster-wide, and not specific to any one
+ database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This utility can only be run by the user who initialized the cluster because
+ it requires read access to the data directory.
+ You can specify the data directory on the command line, or use
+ the environment variable <envar>PGDATA</envar>. This utility supports the options
+ <option>-V</option> and <option>--version</option>, which print the
+ <application>pg_controldata</application> version and exit. It also
+ supports options <option>-?</option> and <option>--help</option>, which output the
+ supported arguments.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Environment</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PGDATA</envar></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Default data directory location
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PG_COLOR</envar></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether to use color in diagnostic messages. Possible values
+ are <literal>always</literal>, <literal>auto</literal> and
+ <literal>never</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_ctl-ref.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_ctl-ref.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3946fa5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_ctl-ref.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,713 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_ctl-ref.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="app-pg-ctl">
+ <indexterm zone="app-pg-ctl">
+ <primary>pg_ctl</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>pg_ctl</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>pg_ctl</refname>
+ <refpurpose>initialize, start, stop, or control a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> server</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_ctl</command>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>init[db]</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-D</option> <replaceable>datadir</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-s</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-o</option> <replaceable>initdb-options</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_ctl</command>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>start</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-D</option> <replaceable>datadir</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-l</option> <replaceable>filename</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-W</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-t</option> <replaceable>seconds</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-s</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-o</option> <replaceable>options</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-p</option> <replaceable>path</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-c</option></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_ctl</command>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>stop</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-D</option> <replaceable>datadir</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-m</option>
+ <group choice="plain">
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>s[mart]</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>f[ast]</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>i[mmediate]</option></arg>
+ </group>
+ </arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-W</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-t</option> <replaceable>seconds</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-s</option></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_ctl</command>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>restart</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-D</option> <replaceable>datadir</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-m</option>
+ <group choice="plain">
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>s[mart]</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>f[ast]</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>i[mmediate]</option></arg>
+ </group>
+ </arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-W</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-t</option> <replaceable>seconds</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-s</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-o</option> <replaceable>options</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-c</option></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_ctl</command>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>reload</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-D</option> <replaceable>datadir</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-s</option></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_ctl</command>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>status</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-D</option> <replaceable>datadir</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_ctl</command>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>promote</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-D</option> <replaceable>datadir</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-W</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-t</option> <replaceable>seconds</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-s</option></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_ctl</command>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>logrotate</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-D</option> <replaceable>datadir</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-s</option></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_ctl</command>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>kill</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><replaceable>signal_name</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><replaceable>process_id</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+
+ <para>On Microsoft Windows, also:</para>
+
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_ctl</command>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>register</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-D</option> <replaceable>datadir</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-N</option> <replaceable>servicename</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-U</option> <replaceable>username</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-P</option> <replaceable>password</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-S</option>
+ <group choice="plain">
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>a[uto]</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>d[emand]</option></arg>
+ </group>
+ </arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-e</option> <replaceable>source</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-W</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-t</option> <replaceable>seconds</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-s</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-o</option> <replaceable>options</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_ctl</command>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>unregister</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-N</option> <replaceable>servicename</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+
+ <refsect1 id="app-pg-ctl-description">
+ <title>Description</title>
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_ctl</application> is a utility for initializing a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database cluster, starting,
+ stopping, or restarting the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ database server (<xref linkend="app-postgres"/>), or displaying the
+ status of a running server. Although the server can be started
+ manually, <application>pg_ctl</application> encapsulates tasks such
+ as redirecting log output and properly detaching from the terminal
+ and process group. It also provides convenient options for
+ controlled shutdown.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <option>init</option> or <option>initdb</option> mode creates a new
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database cluster, that is,
+ a collection of databases that will be managed by a single
+ server instance. This mode invokes the <command>initdb</command>
+ command. See <xref linkend="app-initdb"/> for details.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <option>start</option> mode launches a new server. The
+ server is started in the background, and its standard input is attached
+ to <filename>/dev/null</filename> (or <literal>nul</literal> on Windows).
+ On Unix-like systems, by default, the server's standard output and
+ standard error are sent to <application>pg_ctl</application>'s
+ standard output (not standard error). The standard output of
+ <application>pg_ctl</application> should then be redirected to a
+ file or piped to another process such as a log rotating program
+ like <application>rotatelogs</application>; otherwise <command>postgres</command>
+ will write its output to the controlling terminal (from the
+ background) and will not leave the shell's process group. On
+ Windows, by default the server's standard output and standard error
+ are sent to the terminal. These default behaviors can be changed
+ by using <option>-l</option> to append the server's output to a log file.
+ Use of either <option>-l</option> or output redirection is recommended.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <option>stop</option> mode shuts down the server that is running in
+ the specified data directory. Three different
+ shutdown methods can be selected with the <option>-m</option>
+ option. <quote>Smart</quote> mode disallows new connections, then waits
+ for all existing clients to disconnect and any online backup to finish.
+ If the server is in hot standby, recovery and streaming replication
+ will be terminated once all clients have disconnected.
+ <quote>Fast</quote> mode (the default) does not wait for clients to disconnect and
+ will terminate an online backup in progress. All active transactions are
+ rolled back and clients are forcibly disconnected, then the
+ server is shut down. <quote>Immediate</quote> mode will abort
+ all server processes immediately, without a clean shutdown. This choice
+ will lead to a crash-recovery cycle during the next server start.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <option>restart</option> mode effectively executes a stop followed
+ by a start. This allows changing the <command>postgres</command>
+ command-line options, or changing configuration-file options that
+ cannot be changed without restarting the server.
+ If relative paths were used on the command line during server
+ start, <option>restart</option> might fail unless
+ <application>pg_ctl</application> is executed in the same current
+ directory as it was during server start.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <option>reload</option> mode simply sends the
+ <command>postgres</command> server process a <systemitem>SIGHUP</systemitem>
+ signal, causing it to reread its configuration files
+ (<filename>postgresql.conf</filename>,
+ <filename>pg_hba.conf</filename>, etc.). This allows changing
+ configuration-file options that do not require a full server restart
+ to take effect.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <option>status</option> mode checks whether a server is running in
+ the specified data directory. If it is, the server's <acronym>PID</acronym>
+ and the command line options that were used to invoke it are displayed.
+ If the server is not running, <application>pg_ctl</application> returns
+ an exit status of 3. If an accessible data directory is not
+ specified, <application>pg_ctl</application> returns an exit status of 4.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <option>promote</option> mode commands the standby server that is
+ running in the specified data directory to end standby mode
+ and begin read-write operations.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <option>logrotate</option> mode rotates the server log file.
+ For details on how to use this mode with external log rotation tools, see
+ <xref linkend="logfile-maintenance"/>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <option>kill</option> mode sends a signal to a specified process.
+ This is primarily valuable on <productname>Microsoft Windows</productname>
+ which does not have a built-in <application>kill</application> command. Use
+ <literal>--help</literal> to see a list of supported signal names.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <option>register</option> mode registers the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ server as a system service on <productname>Microsoft Windows</productname>.
+ The <option>-S</option> option allows selection of service start type,
+ either <quote>auto</quote> (start service automatically on system startup)
+ or <quote>demand</quote> (start service on demand).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <option>unregister</option> mode unregisters a system service
+ on <productname>Microsoft Windows</productname>. This undoes the effects of the
+ <option>register</option> command.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="app-pg-ctl-options">
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-c</option></term>
+ <term><option>--core-files</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Attempt to allow server crashes to produce core files, on platforms
+ where this is possible, by lifting any soft resource limit placed on
+ core files.
+ This is useful in debugging or diagnosing problems by allowing a
+ stack trace to be obtained from a failed server process.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-D <replaceable class="parameter">datadir</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--pgdata=<replaceable class="parameter">datadir</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the file system location of the database configuration files. If
+ this option is omitted, the environment variable
+ <envar>PGDATA</envar> is used.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-l <replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--log=<replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Append the server log output to
+ <replaceable>filename</replaceable>. If the file does not
+ exist, it is created. The <systemitem>umask</systemitem> is set to 077,
+ so access to the log file is disallowed to other users by default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-m <replaceable class="parameter">mode</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--mode=<replaceable class="parameter">mode</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the shutdown mode. <replaceable>mode</replaceable>
+ can be <literal>smart</literal>, <literal>fast</literal>, or
+ <literal>immediate</literal>, or the first letter of one of
+ these three. If this option is omitted, <literal>fast</literal> is
+ the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-o <replaceable class="parameter">options</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--options=<replaceable class="parameter">options</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies options to be passed directly to the
+ <command>postgres</command> command.
+ <option>-o</option> can be specified multiple times, with all the given
+ options being passed through.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The <replaceable>options</replaceable> should usually be surrounded by single or
+ double quotes to ensure that they are passed through as a group.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-o <replaceable class="parameter">initdb-options</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--options=<replaceable class="parameter">initdb-options</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies options to be passed directly to the
+ <command>initdb</command> command.
+ <option>-o</option> can be specified multiple times, with all the given
+ options being passed through.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The <replaceable>initdb-options</replaceable> should usually be surrounded by single or
+ double quotes to ensure that they are passed through as a group.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-p <replaceable class="parameter">path</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the location of the <filename>postgres</filename>
+ executable. By default the <filename>postgres</filename> executable is taken from the same
+ directory as <command>pg_ctl</command>, or failing that, the hard-wired
+ installation directory. It is not necessary to use this
+ option unless you are doing something unusual and get errors
+ that the <filename>postgres</filename> executable was not found.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In <literal>init</literal> mode, this option analogously
+ specifies the location of the <filename>initdb</filename>
+ executable.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-s</option></term>
+ <term><option>--silent</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print only errors, no informational messages.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-t <replaceable class="parameter">seconds</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--timeout=<replaceable class="parameter">seconds</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the maximum number of seconds to wait when waiting for an
+ operation to complete (see option <option>-w</option>). Defaults to
+ the value of the <envar>PGCTLTIMEOUT</envar> environment variable or, if
+ not set, to 60 seconds.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-V</option></term>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the <application>pg_ctl</application> version and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-w</option></term>
+ <term><option>--wait</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Wait for the operation to complete. This is supported for the
+ modes <literal>start</literal>, <literal>stop</literal>,
+ <literal>restart</literal>, <literal>promote</literal>,
+ and <literal>register</literal>, and is the default for those modes.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When waiting, <command>pg_ctl</command> repeatedly checks the
+ server's <acronym>PID</acronym> file, sleeping for a short amount
+ of time between checks. Startup is considered complete when
+ the <acronym>PID</acronym> file indicates that the server is ready to
+ accept connections. Shutdown is considered complete when the server
+ removes the <acronym>PID</acronym> file.
+ <command>pg_ctl</command> returns an exit code based on the
+ success of the startup or shutdown.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the operation does not complete within the timeout (see
+ option <option>-t</option>), then <command>pg_ctl</command> exits with
+ a nonzero exit status. But note that the operation might continue in
+ the background and eventually succeed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-W</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-wait</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not wait for the operation to complete. This is the opposite of
+ the option <option>-w</option>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If waiting is disabled, the requested action is triggered, but there
+ is no feedback about its success. In that case, the server log file
+ or an external monitoring system would have to be used to check the
+ progress and success of the operation.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In prior releases of PostgreSQL, this was the default except for
+ the <literal>stop</literal> mode.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show help about <application>pg_ctl</application> command line
+ arguments, and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ If an option is specified that is valid, but not relevant to the selected
+ operating mode, <application>pg_ctl</application> ignores it.
+ </para>
+
+ <refsect2 id="app-pg-ctl-windows-options">
+ <title>Options for Windows</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-e <replaceable class="parameter">source</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Name of the event source for <application>pg_ctl</application> to use
+ for logging to the event log when running as a Windows service. The
+ default is <literal>PostgreSQL</literal>. Note that this only controls
+ messages sent from <application>pg_ctl</application> itself; once
+ started, the server will use the event source specified
+ by its <xref linkend="guc-event-source"/> parameter. Should the server
+ fail very early in startup, before that parameter has been set,
+ it might also log using the default event
+ source name <literal>PostgreSQL</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-N <replaceable class="parameter">servicename</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Name of the system service to register. This name will be used
+ as both the service name and the display name.
+ The default is <literal>PostgreSQL</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-P <replaceable class="parameter">password</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Password for the user to run the service as.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-S <replaceable class="parameter">start-type</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Start type of the system service. <replaceable>start-type</replaceable> can
+ be <literal>auto</literal>, or <literal>demand</literal>, or
+ the first letter of one of these two. If this option is omitted,
+ <literal>auto</literal> is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-U <replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ User name for the user to run the service as. For domain users, use the
+ format <literal>DOMAIN\username</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Environment</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PGCTLTIMEOUT</envar></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Default limit on the number of seconds to wait when waiting for startup
+ or shutdown to complete. If not set, the default is 60 seconds.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PGDATA</envar></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Default data directory location.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ Most <command>pg_ctl</command> modes require knowing the data directory
+ location; therefore, the <option>-D</option> option is required
+ unless <envar>PGDATA</envar> is set.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>pg_ctl</command>, like most other <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ utilities,
+ also uses the environment variables supported by <application>libpq</application>
+ (see <xref linkend="libpq-envars"/>).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For additional variables that affect the server,
+ see <xref linkend="app-postgres"/>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Files</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><filename>postmaster.pid</filename></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_ctl</application> examines this file in the data
+ directory to determine whether the server is currently running.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><filename>postmaster.opts</filename></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>If this file exists in the data directory,
+ <application>pg_ctl</application> (in <option>restart</option> mode)
+ will pass the contents of the file as options to
+ <application>postgres</application>, unless overridden
+ by the <option>-o</option> option. The contents of this file
+ are also displayed in <option>status</option> mode.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1 id="r1-app-pgctl-2">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <refsect2 id="r2-app-pgctl-3">
+ <title>Starting the Server</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To start the server, waiting until the server is
+ accepting connections:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_ctl start</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To start the server using port 5433, and
+ running without <function>fsync</function>, use:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_ctl -o "-F -p 5433" start</userinput>
+</screen></para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2 id="r2-app-pgctl-4">
+ <title>Stopping the Server</title>
+ <para>
+ To stop the server, use:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_ctl stop</userinput>
+</screen>
+ The <option>-m</option> option allows control over
+ <emphasis>how</emphasis> the server shuts down:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_ctl stop -m smart</userinput>
+</screen></para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2 id="r2-app-pgctl-5">
+ <title>Restarting the Server</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Restarting the server is almost equivalent to stopping the
+ server and starting it again, except that by default,
+ <command>pg_ctl</command> saves and reuses the command line options that
+ were passed to the previously-running instance. To restart
+ the server using the same options as before, use:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_ctl restart</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ But if <option>-o</option> is specified, that replaces any previous options.
+ To restart using port 5433, disabling <function>fsync</function> upon restart:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_ctl -o "-F -p 5433" restart</userinput>
+</screen></para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2 id="r2-app-pgctl-6">
+ <title>Showing the Server Status</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Here is sample status output from
+ <application>pg_ctl</application>:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_ctl status</userinput>
+<computeroutput>
+pg_ctl: server is running (PID: 13718)
+/usr/local/pgsql/bin/postgres "-D" "/usr/local/pgsql/data" "-p" "5433" "-B" "128"
+</computeroutput></screen>
+ The second line is the command that would be invoked in restart mode.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="app-initdb"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="app-postgres"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9f70a88
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,1543 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="app-pgdump">
+ <indexterm zone="app-pgdump">
+ <primary>pg_dump</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>pg_dump</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>pg_dump</refname>
+
+ <refpurpose>
+ extract a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database into a script file or other archive file
+ </refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_dump</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>connection-option</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><replaceable>dbname</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+
+ <refsect1 id="pg-dump-description">
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_dump</application> is a utility for backing up a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database. It makes consistent
+ backups even if the database is being used concurrently.
+ <application>pg_dump</application> does not block other users
+ accessing the database (readers or writers).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_dump</application> only dumps a single database.
+ To back up an entire cluster, or to back up global objects that are
+ common to all databases in a cluster (such as roles and tablespaces),
+ use <xref linkend="app-pg-dumpall"/>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Dumps can be output in script or archive file formats. Script
+ dumps are plain-text files containing the SQL commands required
+ to reconstruct the database to the state it was in at the time it was
+ saved. To restore from such a script, feed it to <xref
+ linkend="app-psql"/>. Script files
+ can be used to reconstruct the database even on other machines and
+ other architectures; with some modifications, even on other SQL
+ database products.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The alternative archive file formats must be used with
+ <xref linkend="app-pgrestore"/> to rebuild the database. They
+ allow <application>pg_restore</application> to be selective about
+ what is restored, or even to reorder the items prior to being
+ restored.
+ The archive file formats are designed to be portable across
+ architectures.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When used with one of the archive file formats and combined with
+ <application>pg_restore</application>,
+ <application>pg_dump</application> provides a flexible archival and
+ transfer mechanism. <application>pg_dump</application> can be used to
+ backup an entire database, then <application>pg_restore</application>
+ can be used to examine the archive and/or select which parts of the
+ database are to be restored. The most flexible output file formats are
+ the <quote>custom</quote> format (<option>-Fc</option>) and the
+ <quote>directory</quote> format (<option>-Fd</option>). They allow
+ for selection and reordering of all archived items, support parallel
+ restoration, and are compressed by default. The <quote>directory</quote>
+ format is the only format that supports parallel dumps.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ While running <application>pg_dump</application>, one should examine the
+ output for any warnings (printed on standard error), especially in
+ light of the limitations listed below.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="pg-dump-options">
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The following command-line options control the content and
+ format of the output.
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">dbname</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the name of the database to be dumped. If this is
+ not specified, the environment variable
+ <envar>PGDATABASE</envar> is used. If that is not set, the
+ user name specified for the connection is used.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-a</option></term>
+ <term><option>--data-only</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Dump only the data, not the schema (data definitions).
+ Table data, large objects, and sequence values are dumped.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This option is similar to, but for historical reasons not identical
+ to, specifying <option>--section=data</option>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-b</option></term>
+ <term><option>--blobs</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Include large objects in the dump. This is the default behavior
+ except when <option>--schema</option>, <option>--table</option>, or
+ <option>--schema-only</option> is specified. The <option>-b</option>
+ switch is therefore only useful to add large objects to dumps
+ where a specific schema or table has been requested. Note that
+ blobs are considered data and therefore will be included when
+ <option>--data-only</option> is used, but not
+ when <option>--schema-only</option> is.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-B</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-blobs</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Exclude large objects in the dump.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When both <option>-b</option> and <option>-B</option> are given, the behavior
+ is to output large objects, when data is being dumped, see the
+ <option>-b</option> documentation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-c</option></term>
+ <term><option>--clean</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Output commands to clean (drop)
+ database objects prior to outputting the commands for creating them.
+ (Unless <option>--if-exists</option> is also specified,
+ restore might generate some harmless error messages, if any objects
+ were not present in the destination database.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This option is ignored when emitting an archive (non-text) output
+ file. For the archive formats, you can specify the option when you
+ call <command>pg_restore</command>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-C</option></term>
+ <term><option>--create</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Begin the output with a command to create the
+ database itself and reconnect to the created database. (With a
+ script of this form, it doesn't matter which database in the
+ destination installation you connect to before running the script.)
+ If <option>--clean</option> is also specified, the script drops and
+ recreates the target database before reconnecting to it.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ With <option>--create</option>, the output also includes the
+ database's comment if any, and any configuration variable settings
+ that are specific to this database, that is,
+ any <command>ALTER DATABASE ... SET ...</command>
+ and <command>ALTER ROLE ... IN DATABASE ... SET ...</command>
+ commands that mention this database.
+ Access privileges for the database itself are also dumped,
+ unless <option>--no-acl</option> is specified.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This option is ignored when emitting an archive (non-text) output
+ file. For the archive formats, you can specify the option when you
+ call <command>pg_restore</command>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-e <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--extension=<replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Dump only extensions matching <replaceable
+ class="parameter">pattern</replaceable>. When this option is not
+ specified, all non-system extensions in the target database will be
+ dumped. Multiple extensions can be selected by writing multiple
+ <option>-e</option> switches. The <replaceable
+ class="parameter">pattern</replaceable> parameter is interpreted as a
+ pattern according to the same rules used by
+ <application>psql</application>'s <literal>\d</literal> commands (see
+ <xref linkend="app-psql-patterns"/>), so multiple extensions can also
+ be selected by writing wildcard characters in the pattern. When using
+ wildcards, be careful to quote the pattern if needed to prevent the
+ shell from expanding the wildcards.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Any configuration relation registered by
+ <function>pg_extension_config_dump</function> is included in the
+ dump if its extension is specified by <option>--extension</option>.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ When <option>-e</option> is specified,
+ <application>pg_dump</application> makes no attempt to dump any other
+ database objects that the selected extension(s) might depend upon.
+ Therefore, there is no guarantee that the results of a
+ specific-extension dump can be successfully restored by themselves
+ into a clean database.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-E <replaceable class="parameter">encoding</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--encoding=<replaceable class="parameter">encoding</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Create the dump in the specified character set encoding. By default,
+ the dump is created in the database encoding. (Another way to get the
+ same result is to set the <envar>PGCLIENTENCODING</envar> environment
+ variable to the desired dump encoding.) The supported encodings are
+ described in <xref linkend="multibyte-charset-supported"/>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-f <replaceable class="parameter">file</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--file=<replaceable class="parameter">file</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Send output to the specified file. This parameter can be omitted for
+ file based output formats, in which case the standard output is used.
+ It must be given for the directory output format however, where it
+ specifies the target directory instead of a file. In this case the
+ directory is created by <command>pg_dump</command> and must not exist
+ before.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-F <replaceable class="parameter">format</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--format=<replaceable class="parameter">format</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Selects the format of the output.
+ <replaceable>format</replaceable> can be one of the following:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>p</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>plain</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Output a plain-text <acronym>SQL</acronym> script file (the default).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>c</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>custom</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Output a custom-format archive suitable for input into
+ <application>pg_restore</application>.
+ Together with the directory output format, this is the most flexible
+ output format in that it allows manual selection and reordering of
+ archived items during restore. This format is also compressed by
+ default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>d</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>directory</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Output a directory-format archive suitable for input into
+ <application>pg_restore</application>. This will create a directory
+ with one file for each table and blob being dumped, plus a
+ so-called Table of Contents file describing the dumped objects in a
+ machine-readable format that <application>pg_restore</application>
+ can read. A directory format archive can be manipulated with
+ standard Unix tools; for example, files in an uncompressed archive
+ can be compressed with the <application>gzip</application> tool.
+ This format is compressed by default and also supports parallel
+ dumps.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>t</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>tar</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Output a <command>tar</command>-format archive suitable for input
+ into <application>pg_restore</application>. The tar format is
+ compatible with the directory format: extracting a tar-format
+ archive produces a valid directory-format archive.
+ However, the tar format does not support compression. Also, when
+ using tar format the relative order of table data items cannot be
+ changed during restore.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist></para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-j <replaceable class="parameter">njobs</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--jobs=<replaceable class="parameter">njobs</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Run the dump in parallel by dumping <replaceable class="parameter">njobs</replaceable>
+ tables simultaneously. This option may reduce the time needed to perform the dump but it also
+ increases the load on the database server. You can only use this option with the
+ directory output format because this is the only output format where multiple processes
+ can write their data at the same time.
+ </para>
+ <para><application>pg_dump</application> will open <replaceable class="parameter">njobs</replaceable>
+ + 1 connections to the database, so make sure your <xref linkend="guc-max-connections"/>
+ setting is high enough to accommodate all connections.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Requesting exclusive locks on database objects while running a parallel dump could
+ cause the dump to fail. The reason is that the <application>pg_dump</application> leader process
+ requests shared locks (<link linkend="locking-tables">ACCESS SHARE</link>) on the
+ objects that the worker processes are going to dump later in order to
+ make sure that nobody deletes them and makes them go away while the dump is running.
+ If another client then requests an exclusive lock on a table, that lock will not be
+ granted but will be queued waiting for the shared lock of the leader process to be
+ released. Consequently any other access to the table will not be granted either and
+ will queue after the exclusive lock request. This includes the worker process trying
+ to dump the table. Without any precautions this would be a classic deadlock situation.
+ To detect this conflict, the <application>pg_dump</application> worker process requests another
+ shared lock using the <literal>NOWAIT</literal> option. If the worker process is not granted
+ this shared lock, somebody else must have requested an exclusive lock in the meantime
+ and there is no way to continue with the dump, so <application>pg_dump</application> has no choice
+ but to abort the dump.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ For a consistent backup, the database server needs to support
+ synchronized snapshots, a feature that was introduced in
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 9.2 for primary servers and 10
+ for standbys. With this feature, database clients can ensure they see
+ the same data set even though they use different connections.
+ <command>pg_dump -j</command> uses multiple database connections; it
+ connects to the database once with the leader process and once again
+ for each worker job. Without the synchronized snapshot feature, the
+ different worker jobs wouldn't be guaranteed to see the same data in
+ each connection, which could lead to an inconsistent backup.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ If you want to run a parallel dump of a pre-9.2 server, you need to make sure that the
+ database content doesn't change from between the time the leader connects to the
+ database until the last worker job has connected to the database. The easiest way to
+ do this is to halt any data modifying processes (DDL and DML) accessing the database
+ before starting the backup. You also need to specify the
+ <option>--no-synchronized-snapshots</option> parameter when running
+ <command>pg_dump -j</command> against a pre-9.2 <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ server.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-n <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--schema=<replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Dump only schemas matching <replaceable
+ class="parameter">pattern</replaceable>; this selects both the
+ schema itself, and all its contained objects. When this option is
+ not specified, all non-system schemas in the target database will be
+ dumped. Multiple schemas can be
+ selected by writing multiple <option>-n</option> switches. The
+ <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable> parameter is
+ interpreted as a pattern according to the same rules used by
+ <application>psql</application>'s <literal>\d</literal> commands
+ (see <xref linkend="app-psql-patterns"/> below),
+ so multiple schemas can also be selected by writing wildcard characters
+ in the pattern. When using wildcards, be careful to quote the pattern
+ if needed to prevent the shell from expanding the wildcards; see
+ <xref linkend="pg-dump-examples"/> below.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ When <option>-n</option> is specified, <application>pg_dump</application>
+ makes no attempt to dump any other database objects that the selected
+ schema(s) might depend upon. Therefore, there is no guarantee
+ that the results of a specific-schema dump can be successfully
+ restored by themselves into a clean database.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ Non-schema objects such as blobs are not dumped when <option>-n</option> is
+ specified. You can add blobs back to the dump with the
+ <option>--blobs</option> switch.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-N <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--exclude-schema=<replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not dump any schemas matching <replaceable
+ class="parameter">pattern</replaceable>. The pattern is
+ interpreted according to the same rules as for <option>-n</option>.
+ <option>-N</option> can be given more than once to exclude schemas
+ matching any of several patterns.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When both <option>-n</option> and <option>-N</option> are given, the behavior
+ is to dump just the schemas that match at least one <option>-n</option>
+ switch but no <option>-N</option> switches. If <option>-N</option> appears
+ without <option>-n</option>, then schemas matching <option>-N</option> are
+ excluded from what is otherwise a normal dump.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-O</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-owner</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not output commands to set
+ ownership of objects to match the original database.
+ By default, <application>pg_dump</application> issues
+ <command>ALTER OWNER</command> or
+ <command>SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION</command>
+ statements to set ownership of created database objects.
+ These statements
+ will fail when the script is run unless it is started by a superuser
+ (or the same user that owns all of the objects in the script).
+ To make a script that can be restored by any user, but will give
+ that user ownership of all the objects, specify <option>-O</option>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This option is ignored when emitting an archive (non-text) output
+ file. For the archive formats, you can specify the option when you
+ call <command>pg_restore</command>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-R</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-reconnect</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option is obsolete but still accepted for backwards
+ compatibility.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-s</option></term>
+ <term><option>--schema-only</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Dump only the object definitions (schema), not data.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ This option is the inverse of <option>--data-only</option>.
+ It is similar to, but for historical reasons not identical to,
+ specifying
+ <option>--section=pre-data --section=post-data</option>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ (Do not confuse this with the <option>--schema</option> option, which
+ uses the word <quote>schema</quote> in a different meaning.)
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ To exclude table data for only a subset of tables in the database,
+ see <option>--exclude-table-data</option>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-S <replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--superuser=<replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specify the superuser user name to use when disabling triggers.
+ This is relevant only if <option>--disable-triggers</option> is used.
+ (Usually, it's better to leave this out, and instead start the
+ resulting script as superuser.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-t <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--table=<replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Dump only tables with names matching
+ <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable>. Multiple tables
+ can be selected by writing multiple <option>-t</option> switches. The
+ <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable> parameter is
+ interpreted as a pattern according to the same rules used by
+ <application>psql</application>'s <literal>\d</literal> commands
+ (see <xref linkend="app-psql-patterns"/> below),
+ so multiple tables can also be selected by writing wildcard characters
+ in the pattern. When using wildcards, be careful to quote the pattern
+ if needed to prevent the shell from expanding the wildcards; see
+ <xref linkend="pg-dump-examples"/> below.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ As well as tables, this option can be used to dump the definition of matching
+ views, materialized views, foreign tables, and sequences. It will not dump the
+ contents of views or materialized views, and the contents of foreign tables will
+ only be dumped if the corresponding foreign server is specified with
+ <option>--include-foreign-data</option>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <option>-n</option> and <option>-N</option> switches have no effect when
+ <option>-t</option> is used, because tables selected by <option>-t</option> will
+ be dumped regardless of those switches, and non-table objects will not
+ be dumped.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ When <option>-t</option> is specified, <application>pg_dump</application>
+ makes no attempt to dump any other database objects that the selected
+ table(s) might depend upon. Therefore, there is no guarantee
+ that the results of a specific-table dump can be successfully
+ restored by themselves into a clean database.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-T <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--exclude-table=<replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not dump any tables matching <replaceable
+ class="parameter">pattern</replaceable>. The pattern is
+ interpreted according to the same rules as for <option>-t</option>.
+ <option>-T</option> can be given more than once to exclude tables
+ matching any of several patterns.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When both <option>-t</option> and <option>-T</option> are given, the behavior
+ is to dump just the tables that match at least one <option>-t</option>
+ switch but no <option>-T</option> switches. If <option>-T</option> appears
+ without <option>-t</option>, then tables matching <option>-T</option> are
+ excluded from what is otherwise a normal dump.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-v</option></term>
+ <term><option>--verbose</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies verbose mode. This will cause
+ <application>pg_dump</application> to output detailed object
+ comments and start/stop times to the dump file, and progress
+ messages to standard error.
+ Repeating the option causes additional debug-level messages
+ to appear on standard error.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-V</option></term>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the <application>pg_dump</application> version and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-x</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-privileges</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-acl</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Prevent dumping of access privileges (grant/revoke commands).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-Z <replaceable class="parameter">0..9</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--compress=<replaceable class="parameter">0..9</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specify the compression level to use. Zero means no compression.
+ For the custom and directory archive formats, this specifies compression of
+ individual table-data segments, and the default is to compress
+ at a moderate level.
+ For plain text output, setting a nonzero compression level causes
+ the entire output file to be compressed, as though it had been
+ fed through <application>gzip</application>; but the default is not to compress.
+ The tar archive format currently does not support compression at all.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--binary-upgrade</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option is for use by in-place upgrade utilities. Its use
+ for other purposes is not recommended or supported. The
+ behavior of the option may change in future releases without
+ notice.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--column-inserts</option></term>
+ <term><option>--attribute-inserts</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Dump data as <command>INSERT</command> commands with explicit
+ column names (<literal>INSERT INTO
+ <replaceable>table</replaceable>
+ (<replaceable>column</replaceable>, ...) VALUES
+ ...</literal>). This will make restoration very slow; it is mainly
+ useful for making dumps that can be loaded into
+ non-<productname>PostgreSQL</productname> databases.
+ Any error during restoring will cause only rows that are part of the
+ problematic <command>INSERT</command> to be lost, rather than the
+ entire table contents.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--disable-dollar-quoting</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option disables the use of dollar quoting for function bodies,
+ and forces them to be quoted using SQL standard string syntax.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--disable-triggers</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option is relevant only when creating a data-only dump.
+ It instructs <application>pg_dump</application> to include commands
+ to temporarily disable triggers on the target tables while
+ the data is restored. Use this if you have referential
+ integrity checks or other triggers on the tables that you
+ do not want to invoke during data restore.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Presently, the commands emitted for <option>--disable-triggers</option>
+ must be done as superuser. So, you should also specify
+ a superuser name with <option>-S</option>, or preferably be careful to
+ start the resulting script as a superuser.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This option is ignored when emitting an archive (non-text) output
+ file. For the archive formats, you can specify the option when you
+ call <command>pg_restore</command>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--enable-row-security</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option is relevant only when dumping the contents of a table
+ which has row security. By default, <application>pg_dump</application> will set
+ <xref linkend="guc-row-security"/> to off, to ensure
+ that all data is dumped from the table. If the user does not have
+ sufficient privileges to bypass row security, then an error is thrown.
+ This parameter instructs <application>pg_dump</application> to set
+ <xref linkend="guc-row-security"/> to on instead, allowing the user
+ to dump the parts of the contents of the table that they have access to.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Note that if you use this option currently, you probably also want
+ the dump be in <command>INSERT</command> format, as the
+ <command>COPY FROM</command> during restore does not support row security.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--exclude-table-data=<replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not dump data for any tables matching <replaceable
+ class="parameter">pattern</replaceable>. The pattern is
+ interpreted according to the same rules as for <option>-t</option>.
+ <option>--exclude-table-data</option> can be given more than once to
+ exclude tables matching any of several patterns. This option is
+ useful when you need the definition of a particular table even
+ though you do not need the data in it.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ To exclude data for all tables in the database, see <option>--schema-only</option>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--extra-float-digits=<replaceable class="parameter">ndigits</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Use the specified value of <option>extra_float_digits</option> when dumping
+ floating-point data, instead of the maximum available precision.
+ Routine dumps made for backup purposes should not use this option.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--if-exists</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Use conditional commands (i.e., add an <literal>IF EXISTS</literal>
+ clause) when cleaning database objects. This option is not valid
+ unless <option>--clean</option> is also specified.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--include-foreign-data=<replaceable class="parameter">foreignserver</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Dump the data for any foreign table with a foreign server
+ matching <replaceable class="parameter">foreignserver</replaceable>
+ pattern. Multiple foreign servers can be selected by writing multiple
+ <option>--include-foreign-data</option> switches.
+ Also, the <replaceable class="parameter">foreignserver</replaceable> parameter is
+ interpreted as a pattern according to the same rules used by
+ <application>psql</application>'s <literal>\d</literal> commands
+ (see <xref linkend="app-psql-patterns"/> below),
+ so multiple foreign servers can also be selected by writing wildcard characters
+ in the pattern. When using wildcards, be careful to quote the pattern
+ if needed to prevent the shell from expanding the wildcards; see
+ <xref linkend="pg-dump-examples"/> below.
+ The only exception is that an empty pattern is disallowed.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ When <option>--include-foreign-data</option> is specified,
+ <application>pg_dump</application> does not check that the foreign
+ table is writable. Therefore, there is no guarantee that the
+ results of a foreign table dump can be successfully restored.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--inserts</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Dump data as <command>INSERT</command> commands (rather
+ than <command>COPY</command>). This will make restoration very slow;
+ it is mainly useful for making dumps that can be loaded into
+ non-<productname>PostgreSQL</productname> databases.
+ Any error during restoring will cause only rows that are part of the
+ problematic <command>INSERT</command> to be lost, rather than the
+ entire table contents. Note that the restore might fail altogether if
+ you have rearranged column order. The
+ <option>--column-inserts</option> option is safe against column order
+ changes, though even slower.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--load-via-partition-root</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ When dumping data for a table partition, make
+ the <command>COPY</command> or <command>INSERT</command> statements
+ target the root of the partitioning hierarchy that contains it, rather
+ than the partition itself. This causes the appropriate partition to
+ be re-determined for each row when the data is loaded. This may be
+ useful when restoring data on a server where rows do not always fall
+ into the same partitions as they did on the original server. That
+ could happen, for example, if the partitioning column is of type text
+ and the two systems have different definitions of the collation used
+ to sort the partitioning column.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ It is best not to use parallelism when restoring from an archive made
+ with this option, because <application>pg_restore</application> will
+ not know exactly which partition(s) a given archive data item will
+ load data into. This could result in inefficiency due to lock
+ conflicts between parallel jobs, or perhaps even restore failures due
+ to foreign key constraints being set up before all the relevant data
+ is loaded.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--lock-wait-timeout=<replaceable class="parameter">timeout</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not wait forever to acquire shared table locks at the beginning of
+ the dump. Instead fail if unable to lock a table within the specified
+ <replaceable class="parameter">timeout</replaceable>. The timeout may be
+ specified in any of the formats accepted by <command>SET
+ statement_timeout</command>. (Allowed formats vary depending on the server
+ version you are dumping from, but an integer number of milliseconds
+ is accepted by all versions.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-comments</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not dump comments.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-publications</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not dump publications.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-security-labels</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not dump security labels.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-subscriptions</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not dump subscriptions.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-sync</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ By default, <command>pg_dump</command> will wait for all files
+ to be written safely to disk. This option causes
+ <command>pg_dump</command> to return without waiting, which is
+ faster, but means that a subsequent operating system crash can leave
+ the dump corrupt. Generally, this option is useful for testing
+ but should not be used when dumping data from production installation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-synchronized-snapshots</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option allows running <command>pg_dump -j</command> against a pre-9.2
+ server, see the documentation of the <option>-j</option> parameter
+ for more details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-tablespaces</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not output commands to select tablespaces.
+ With this option, all objects will be created in whichever
+ tablespace is the default during restore.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This option is ignored when emitting an archive (non-text) output
+ file. For the archive formats, you can specify the option when you
+ call <command>pg_restore</command>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-toast-compression</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not output commands to set <acronym>TOAST</acronym> compression
+ methods.
+ With this option, all columns will be restored with the default
+ compression setting.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-unlogged-table-data</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not dump the contents of unlogged tables. This option has no
+ effect on whether or not the table definitions (schema) are dumped;
+ it only suppresses dumping the table data. Data in unlogged tables
+ is always excluded when dumping from a standby server.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--on-conflict-do-nothing</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Add <literal>ON CONFLICT DO NOTHING</literal> to
+ <command>INSERT</command> commands.
+ This option is not valid unless <option>--inserts</option>,
+ <option>--column-inserts</option> or
+ <option>--rows-per-insert</option> is also specified.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--quote-all-identifiers</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Force quoting of all identifiers. This option is recommended when
+ dumping a database from a server whose <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ major version is different from <application>pg_dump</application>'s, or when
+ the output is intended to be loaded into a server of a different
+ major version. By default, <application>pg_dump</application> quotes only
+ identifiers that are reserved words in its own major version.
+ This sometimes results in compatibility issues when dealing with
+ servers of other versions that may have slightly different sets
+ of reserved words. Using <option>--quote-all-identifiers</option> prevents
+ such issues, at the price of a harder-to-read dump script.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--rows-per-insert=<replaceable class="parameter">nrows</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Dump data as <command>INSERT</command> commands (rather than
+ <command>COPY</command>). Controls the maximum number of rows per
+ <command>INSERT</command> command. The value specified must be a
+ number greater than zero. Any error during restoring will cause only
+ rows that are part of the problematic <command>INSERT</command> to be
+ lost, rather than the entire table contents.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--section=<replaceable class="parameter">sectionname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Only dump the named section. The section name can be
+ <option>pre-data</option>, <option>data</option>, or <option>post-data</option>.
+ This option can be specified more than once to select multiple
+ sections. The default is to dump all sections.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The data section contains actual table data, large-object
+ contents, and sequence values.
+ Post-data items include definitions of indexes, triggers, rules,
+ and constraints other than validated check constraints.
+ Pre-data items include all other data definition items.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--serializable-deferrable</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Use a <literal>serializable</literal> transaction for the dump, to
+ ensure that the snapshot used is consistent with later database
+ states; but do this by waiting for a point in the transaction stream
+ at which no anomalies can be present, so that there isn't a risk of
+ the dump failing or causing other transactions to roll back with a
+ <literal>serialization_failure</literal>. See <xref linkend="mvcc"/>
+ for more information about transaction isolation and concurrency
+ control.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This option is not beneficial for a dump which is intended only for
+ disaster recovery. It could be useful for a dump used to load a
+ copy of the database for reporting or other read-only load sharing
+ while the original database continues to be updated. Without it the
+ dump may reflect a state which is not consistent with any serial
+ execution of the transactions eventually committed. For example, if
+ batch processing techniques are used, a batch may show as closed in
+ the dump without all of the items which are in the batch appearing.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This option will make no difference if there are no read-write
+ transactions active when pg_dump is started. If read-write
+ transactions are active, the start of the dump may be delayed for an
+ indeterminate length of time. Once running, performance with or
+ without the switch is the same.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--snapshot=<replaceable class="parameter">snapshotname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Use the specified synchronized snapshot when making a dump of the
+ database (see
+ <xref linkend="functions-snapshot-synchronization-table"/> for more
+ details).
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ This option is useful when needing to synchronize the dump with
+ a logical replication slot (see <xref linkend="logicaldecoding"/>)
+ or with a concurrent session.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ In the case of a parallel dump, the snapshot name defined by this
+ option is used rather than taking a new snapshot.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--strict-names</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Require that each
+ extension (<option>-e</option>/<option>--extension</option>),
+ schema (<option>-n</option>/<option>--schema</option>) and
+ table (<option>-t</option>/<option>--table</option>) qualifier
+ match at least one extension/schema/table in the database to be dumped.
+ Note that if none of the extension/schema/table qualifiers find
+ matches, <application>pg_dump</application> will generate an error
+ even without <option>--strict-names</option>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ This option has no effect
+ on <option>-N</option>/<option>--exclude-schema</option>,
+ <option>-T</option>/<option>--exclude-table</option>,
+ or <option>--exclude-table-data</option>. An exclude pattern failing
+ to match any objects is not considered an error.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--use-set-session-authorization</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Output SQL-standard <command>SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION</command> commands
+ instead of <command>ALTER OWNER</command> commands to determine object
+ ownership. This makes the dump more standards-compatible, but
+ depending on the history of the objects in the dump, might not restore
+ properly. Also, a dump using <command>SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION</command>
+ will certainly require superuser privileges to restore correctly,
+ whereas <command>ALTER OWNER</command> requires lesser privileges.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show help about <application>pg_dump</application> command line
+ arguments, and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The following command-line options control the database connection parameters.
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-d <replaceable class="parameter">dbname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--dbname=<replaceable class="parameter">dbname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the name of the database to connect to. This is
+ equivalent to specifying <replaceable
+ class="parameter">dbname</replaceable> as the first non-option
+ argument on the command line. The <replaceable>dbname</replaceable>
+ can be a <link linkend="libpq-connstring">connection string</link>.
+ If so, connection string parameters will override any conflicting
+ command line options.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-h <replaceable class="parameter">host</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--host=<replaceable class="parameter">host</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the host name of the machine on which the server is
+ running. If the value begins with a slash, it is used as the
+ directory for the Unix domain socket. The default is taken
+ from the <envar>PGHOST</envar> environment variable, if set,
+ else a Unix domain socket connection is attempted.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-p <replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--port=<replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the TCP port or local Unix domain socket file
+ extension on which the server is listening for connections.
+ Defaults to the <envar>PGPORT</envar> environment variable, if
+ set, or a compiled-in default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-U <replaceable>username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--username=<replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ User name to connect as.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-w</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Never issue a password prompt. If the server requires
+ password authentication and a password is not available by
+ other means such as a <filename>.pgpass</filename> file, the
+ connection attempt will fail. This option can be useful in
+ batch jobs and scripts where no user is present to enter a
+ password.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-W</option></term>
+ <term><option>--password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Force <application>pg_dump</application> to prompt for a
+ password before connecting to a database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This option is never essential, since
+ <application>pg_dump</application> will automatically prompt
+ for a password if the server demands password authentication.
+ However, <application>pg_dump</application> will waste a
+ connection attempt finding out that the server wants a password.
+ In some cases it is worth typing <option>-W</option> to avoid the extra
+ connection attempt.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--role=<replaceable class="parameter">rolename</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies a role name to be used to create the dump.
+ This option causes <application>pg_dump</application> to issue a
+ <command>SET ROLE</command> <replaceable class="parameter">rolename</replaceable>
+ command after connecting to the database. It is useful when the
+ authenticated user (specified by <option>-U</option>) lacks privileges
+ needed by <application>pg_dump</application>, but can switch to a role with
+ the required rights. Some installations have a policy against
+ logging in directly as a superuser, and use of this option allows
+ dumps to be made without violating the policy.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Environment</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PGDATABASE</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGHOST</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGOPTIONS</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGPORT</envar></term>
+
+ <term><envar>PGUSER</envar></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Default connection parameters.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PG_COLOR</envar></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether to use color in diagnostic messages. Possible values
+ are <literal>always</literal>, <literal>auto</literal> and
+ <literal>never</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ This utility, like most other <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> utilities,
+ also uses the environment variables supported by <application>libpq</application>
+ (see <xref linkend="libpq-envars"/>).
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="app-pgdump-diagnostics">
+ <title>Diagnostics</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_dump</application> internally executes
+ <command>SELECT</command> statements. If you have problems running
+ <application>pg_dump</application>, make sure you are able to
+ select information from the database using, for example, <xref
+ linkend="app-psql"/>. Also, any default connection settings and environment
+ variables used by the <application>libpq</application> front-end
+ library will apply.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
+ normally collected by the statistics collector. If this is
+ undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
+ to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
+ USER</literal> command.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1 id="pg-dump-notes">
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ If your database cluster has any local additions to the <literal>template1</literal> database,
+ be careful to restore the output of <application>pg_dump</application> into a
+ truly empty database; otherwise you are likely to get errors due to
+ duplicate definitions of the added objects. To make an empty database
+ without any local additions, copy from <literal>template0</literal> not <literal>template1</literal>,
+ for example:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE DATABASE foo WITH TEMPLATE template0;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When a data-only dump is chosen and the option <option>--disable-triggers</option>
+ is used, <application>pg_dump</application> emits commands
+ to disable triggers on user tables before inserting the data,
+ and then commands to re-enable them after the data has been
+ inserted. If the restore is stopped in the middle, the system
+ catalogs might be left in the wrong state.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The dump file produced by <application>pg_dump</application>
+ does not contain the statistics used by the optimizer to make
+ query planning decisions. Therefore, it is wise to run
+ <command>ANALYZE</command> after restoring from a dump file
+ to ensure optimal performance; see <xref linkend="vacuum-for-statistics"/>
+ and <xref linkend="autovacuum"/> for more information.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Because <application>pg_dump</application> is used to transfer data
+ to newer versions of <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>, the output of
+ <application>pg_dump</application> can be expected to load into
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> server versions newer than
+ <application>pg_dump</application>'s version. <application>pg_dump</application> can also
+ dump from <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> servers older than its own version.
+ (Currently, servers back to version 8.0 are supported.)
+ However, <application>pg_dump</application> cannot dump from
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> servers newer than its own major version;
+ it will refuse to even try, rather than risk making an invalid dump.
+ Also, it is not guaranteed that <application>pg_dump</application>'s output can
+ be loaded into a server of an older major version &mdash; not even if the
+ dump was taken from a server of that version. Loading a dump file
+ into an older server may require manual editing of the dump file
+ to remove syntax not understood by the older server.
+ Use of the <option>--quote-all-identifiers</option> option is recommended
+ in cross-version cases, as it can prevent problems arising from varying
+ reserved-word lists in different <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> versions.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When dumping logical replication subscriptions,
+ <application>pg_dump</application> will generate <command>CREATE
+ SUBSCRIPTION</command> commands that use the <literal>connect = false</literal>
+ option, so that restoring the subscription does not make remote connections
+ for creating a replication slot or for initial table copy. That way, the
+ dump can be restored without requiring network access to the remote
+ servers. It is then up to the user to reactivate the subscriptions in a
+ suitable way. If the involved hosts have changed, the connection
+ information might have to be changed. It might also be appropriate to
+ truncate the target tables before initiating a new full table copy.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="pg-dump-examples" xreflabel="Examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To dump a database called <literal>mydb</literal> into an SQL-script file:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_dump mydb &gt; db.sql</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To reload such a script into a (freshly created) database named
+ <literal>newdb</literal>:
+
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>psql -d newdb -f db.sql</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To dump a database into a custom-format archive file:
+
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_dump -Fc mydb &gt; db.dump</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To dump a database into a directory-format archive:
+
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_dump -Fd mydb -f dumpdir</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To dump a database into a directory-format archive in parallel with
+ 5 worker jobs:
+
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_dump -Fd mydb -j 5 -f dumpdir</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To reload an archive file into a (freshly created) database named
+ <literal>newdb</literal>:
+
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_restore -d newdb db.dump</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To reload an archive file into the same database it was dumped from,
+ discarding the current contents of that database:
+
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_restore -d postgres --clean --create db.dump</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To dump a single table named <literal>mytab</literal>:
+
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_dump -t mytab mydb &gt; db.sql</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To dump all tables whose names start with <literal>emp</literal> in the
+ <literal>detroit</literal> schema, except for the table named
+ <literal>employee_log</literal>:
+
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_dump -t 'detroit.emp*' -T detroit.employee_log mydb &gt; db.sql</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To dump all schemas whose names start with <literal>east</literal> or
+ <literal>west</literal> and end in <literal>gsm</literal>, excluding any schemas whose
+ names contain the word <literal>test</literal>:
+
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_dump -n 'east*gsm' -n 'west*gsm' -N '*test*' mydb &gt; db.sql</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The same, using regular expression notation to consolidate the switches:
+
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_dump -n '(east|west)*gsm' -N '*test*' mydb &gt; db.sql</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To dump all database objects except for tables whose names begin with
+ <literal>ts_</literal>:
+
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_dump -T 'ts_*' mydb &gt; db.sql</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To specify an upper-case or mixed-case name in <option>-t</option> and related
+ switches, you need to double-quote the name; else it will be folded to
+ lower case (see <xref linkend="app-psql-patterns"/> below). But
+ double quotes are special to the shell, so in turn they must be quoted.
+ Thus, to dump a single table with a mixed-case name, you need something
+ like
+
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_dump -t "\"MixedCaseName\"" mydb &gt; mytab.sql</userinput>
+</screen></para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="app-pg-dumpall"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="app-pgrestore"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="app-psql"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dumpall.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dumpall.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..bedc5a1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dumpall.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,813 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dumpall.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="app-pg-dumpall">
+ <indexterm zone="app-pg-dumpall">
+ <primary>pg_dumpall</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>pg_dumpall</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>pg_dumpall</refname>
+ <refpurpose>extract a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database cluster into a script file</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_dumpall</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>connection-option</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1 id="app-pg-dumpall-description">
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_dumpall</application> is a utility for writing out
+ (<quote>dumping</quote>) all <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> databases
+ of a cluster into one script file. The script file contains
+ <acronym>SQL</acronym> commands that can be used as input to <xref
+ linkend="app-psql"/> to restore the databases. It does this by
+ calling <xref linkend="app-pgdump"/> for each database in the cluster.
+ <application>pg_dumpall</application> also dumps global objects
+ that are common to all databases, that is, database roles and tablespaces.
+ (<application>pg_dump</application> does not save these objects.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Since <application>pg_dumpall</application> reads tables from all
+ databases you will most likely have to connect as a database
+ superuser in order to produce a complete dump. Also you will need
+ superuser privileges to execute the saved script in order to be
+ allowed to add roles and create databases.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The SQL script will be written to the standard output. Use the
+ <option>-f</option>/<option>--file</option> option or shell operators to
+ redirect it into a file.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_dumpall</application> needs to connect several
+ times to the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> server (once per
+ database). If you use password authentication it will ask for
+ a password each time. It is convenient to have a
+ <filename>~/.pgpass</filename> file in such cases. See <xref
+ linkend="libpq-pgpass"/> for more information.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The following command-line options control the content and
+ format of the output.
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-a</option></term>
+ <term><option>--data-only</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Dump only the data, not the schema (data definitions).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-c</option></term>
+ <term><option>--clean</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Include SQL commands to clean (drop) databases before
+ recreating them. <command>DROP</command> commands for roles and
+ tablespaces are added as well.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-E <replaceable class="parameter">encoding</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--encoding=<replaceable class="parameter">encoding</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Create the dump in the specified character set encoding. By default,
+ the dump is created in the database encoding. (Another way to get the
+ same result is to set the <envar>PGCLIENTENCODING</envar> environment
+ variable to the desired dump encoding.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-f <replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--file=<replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Send output to the specified file. If this is omitted, the
+ standard output is used.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-g</option></term>
+ <term><option>--globals-only</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Dump only global objects (roles and tablespaces), no databases.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-O</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-owner</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not output commands to set
+ ownership of objects to match the original database.
+ By default, <application>pg_dumpall</application> issues
+ <command>ALTER OWNER</command> or
+ <command>SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION</command>
+ statements to set ownership of created schema elements.
+ These statements
+ will fail when the script is run unless it is started by a superuser
+ (or the same user that owns all of the objects in the script).
+ To make a script that can be restored by any user, but will give
+ that user ownership of all the objects, specify <option>-O</option>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-r</option></term>
+ <term><option>--roles-only</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Dump only roles, no databases or tablespaces.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-s</option></term>
+ <term><option>--schema-only</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Dump only the object definitions (schema), not data.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-S <replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--superuser=<replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specify the superuser user name to use when disabling triggers.
+ This is relevant only if <option>--disable-triggers</option> is used.
+ (Usually, it's better to leave this out, and instead start the
+ resulting script as superuser.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-t</option></term>
+ <term><option>--tablespaces-only</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Dump only tablespaces, no databases or roles.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-v</option></term>
+ <term><option>--verbose</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies verbose mode. This will cause
+ <application>pg_dumpall</application> to output start/stop
+ times to the dump file, and progress messages to standard error.
+ Repeating the option causes additional debug-level messages
+ to appear on standard error.
+ The option is also passed down to <application>pg_dump</application>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-V</option></term>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the <application>pg_dumpall</application> version and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-x</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-privileges</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-acl</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Prevent dumping of access privileges (grant/revoke commands).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--binary-upgrade</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option is for use by in-place upgrade utilities. Its use
+ for other purposes is not recommended or supported. The
+ behavior of the option may change in future releases without
+ notice.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--column-inserts</option></term>
+ <term><option>--attribute-inserts</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Dump data as <command>INSERT</command> commands with explicit
+ column names (<literal>INSERT INTO
+ <replaceable>table</replaceable>
+ (<replaceable>column</replaceable>, ...) VALUES
+ ...</literal>). This will make restoration very slow; it is mainly
+ useful for making dumps that can be loaded into
+ non-<productname>PostgreSQL</productname> databases.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--disable-dollar-quoting</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option disables the use of dollar quoting for function bodies,
+ and forces them to be quoted using SQL standard string syntax.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--disable-triggers</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option is relevant only when creating a data-only dump.
+ It instructs <application>pg_dumpall</application> to include commands
+ to temporarily disable triggers on the target tables while
+ the data is restored. Use this if you have referential
+ integrity checks or other triggers on the tables that you
+ do not want to invoke during data restore.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Presently, the commands emitted for <option>--disable-triggers</option>
+ must be done as superuser. So, you should also specify
+ a superuser name with <option>-S</option>, or preferably be careful to
+ start the resulting script as a superuser.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--exclude-database=<replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not dump databases whose name matches
+ <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable>.
+ Multiple patterns can be excluded by writing multiple
+ <option>--exclude-database</option> switches. The
+ <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable> parameter is
+ interpreted as a pattern according to the same rules used by
+ <application>psql</application>'s <literal>\d</literal>
+ commands (see <xref linkend="app-psql-patterns"/> below),
+ so multiple databases can also be excluded by writing wildcard
+ characters in the pattern. When using wildcards, be careful to
+ quote the pattern if needed to prevent shell wildcard expansion.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--extra-float-digits=<replaceable class="parameter">ndigits</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Use the specified value of extra_float_digits when dumping
+ floating-point data, instead of the maximum available precision.
+ Routine dumps made for backup purposes should not use this option.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--if-exists</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Use conditional commands (i.e., add an <literal>IF EXISTS</literal>
+ clause) to drop databases and other objects. This option is not valid
+ unless <option>--clean</option> is also specified.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--inserts</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Dump data as <command>INSERT</command> commands (rather
+ than <command>COPY</command>). This will make restoration very slow;
+ it is mainly useful for making dumps that can be loaded into
+ non-<productname>PostgreSQL</productname> databases. Note that
+ the restore might fail altogether if you have rearranged column order.
+ The <option>--column-inserts</option> option is safer, though even
+ slower.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--load-via-partition-root</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ When dumping data for a table partition, make
+ the <command>COPY</command> or <command>INSERT</command> statements
+ target the root of the partitioning hierarchy that contains it, rather
+ than the partition itself. This causes the appropriate partition to
+ be re-determined for each row when the data is loaded. This may be
+ useful when restoring data on a server where rows do not always fall
+ into the same partitions as they did on the original server. That
+ could happen, for example, if the partitioning column is of type text
+ and the two systems have different definitions of the collation used
+ to sort the partitioning column.
+ </para>
+
+ <!-- Currently, we don't need pg_dump's warning about parallelism here,
+ since parallel restore from a pg_dumpall script is impossible.
+ -->
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--lock-wait-timeout=<replaceable class="parameter">timeout</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not wait forever to acquire shared table locks at the beginning of
+ the dump. Instead, fail if unable to lock a table within the specified
+ <replaceable class="parameter">timeout</replaceable>. The timeout may be
+ specified in any of the formats accepted by <command>SET
+ statement_timeout</command>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-comments</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not dump comments.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-publications</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not dump publications.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-role-passwords</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not dump passwords for roles. When restored, roles will have a
+ null password, and password authentication will always fail until the
+ password is set. Since password values aren't needed when this option
+ is specified, the role information is read from the catalog
+ view <structname>pg_roles</structname> instead
+ of <structname>pg_authid</structname>. Therefore, this option also
+ helps if access to <structname>pg_authid</structname> is restricted by
+ some security policy.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-security-labels</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not dump security labels.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-subscriptions</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not dump subscriptions.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-sync</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ By default, <command>pg_dumpall</command> will wait for all files
+ to be written safely to disk. This option causes
+ <command>pg_dumpall</command> to return without waiting, which is
+ faster, but means that a subsequent operating system crash can leave
+ the dump corrupt. Generally, this option is useful for testing
+ but should not be used when dumping data from production installation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-tablespaces</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not output commands to create tablespaces nor select tablespaces
+ for objects.
+ With this option, all objects will be created in whichever
+ tablespace is the default during restore.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-toast-compression</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not output commands to set <acronym>TOAST</acronym> compression
+ methods.
+ With this option, all columns will be restored with the default
+ compression setting.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-unlogged-table-data</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not dump the contents of unlogged tables. This option has no
+ effect on whether or not the table definitions (schema) are dumped;
+ it only suppresses dumping the table data.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--on-conflict-do-nothing</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Add <literal>ON CONFLICT DO NOTHING</literal> to
+ <command>INSERT</command> commands.
+ This option is not valid unless <option>--inserts</option> or
+ <option>--column-inserts</option> is also specified.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--quote-all-identifiers</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Force quoting of all identifiers. This option is recommended when
+ dumping a database from a server whose <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ major version is different from <application>pg_dumpall</application>'s, or when
+ the output is intended to be loaded into a server of a different
+ major version. By default, <application>pg_dumpall</application> quotes only
+ identifiers that are reserved words in its own major version.
+ This sometimes results in compatibility issues when dealing with
+ servers of other versions that may have slightly different sets
+ of reserved words. Using <option>--quote-all-identifiers</option> prevents
+ such issues, at the price of a harder-to-read dump script.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--rows-per-insert=<replaceable class="parameter">nrows</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Dump data as <command>INSERT</command> commands (rather than
+ <command>COPY</command>). Controls the maximum number of rows per
+ <command>INSERT</command> command. The value specified must be a
+ number greater than zero. Any error during restoring will cause only
+ rows that are part of the problematic <command>INSERT</command> to be
+ lost, rather than the entire table contents.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--use-set-session-authorization</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Output SQL-standard <command>SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION</command> commands
+ instead of <command>ALTER OWNER</command> commands to determine object
+ ownership. This makes the dump more standards compatible, but
+ depending on the history of the objects in the dump, might not restore
+ properly.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show help about <application>pg_dumpall</application> command line
+ arguments, and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The following command-line options control the database connection parameters.
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-d <replaceable class="parameter">connstr</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--dbname=<replaceable class="parameter">connstr</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies parameters used to connect to the server, as a <link
+ linkend="libpq-connstring">connection string</link>; these
+ will override any conflicting command line options.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The option is called <literal>--dbname</literal> for consistency with other
+ client applications, but because <application>pg_dumpall</application>
+ needs to connect to many databases, the database name in the
+ connection string will be ignored. Use the <literal>-l</literal>
+ option to specify the name of the database used for the initial
+ connection, which will dump global objects and discover what other
+ databases should be dumped.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-h <replaceable>host</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--host=<replaceable>host</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the host name of the machine on which the database
+ server is running. If the value begins with a slash, it is
+ used as the directory for the Unix domain socket. The default
+ is taken from the <envar>PGHOST</envar> environment variable,
+ if set, else a Unix domain socket connection is attempted.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-l <replaceable>dbname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--database=<replaceable>dbname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the name of the database to connect to for dumping global
+ objects and discovering what other databases should be dumped. If
+ not specified, the <literal>postgres</literal> database will be used,
+ and if that does not exist, <literal>template1</literal> will be used.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-p <replaceable>port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--port=<replaceable>port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the TCP port or local Unix domain socket file
+ extension on which the server is listening for connections.
+ Defaults to the <envar>PGPORT</envar> environment variable, if
+ set, or a compiled-in default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-U <replaceable>username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--username=<replaceable>username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ User name to connect as.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-w</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Never issue a password prompt. If the server requires
+ password authentication and a password is not available by
+ other means such as a <filename>.pgpass</filename> file, the
+ connection attempt will fail. This option can be useful in
+ batch jobs and scripts where no user is present to enter a
+ password.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-W</option></term>
+ <term><option>--password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Force <application>pg_dumpall</application> to prompt for a
+ password before connecting to a database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This option is never essential, since
+ <application>pg_dumpall</application> will automatically prompt
+ for a password if the server demands password authentication.
+ However, <application>pg_dumpall</application> will waste a
+ connection attempt finding out that the server wants a password.
+ In some cases it is worth typing <option>-W</option> to avoid the extra
+ connection attempt.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Note that the password prompt will occur again for each database
+ to be dumped. Usually, it's better to set up a
+ <filename>~/.pgpass</filename> file than to rely on manual password entry.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--role=<replaceable class="parameter">rolename</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies a role name to be used to create the dump.
+ This option causes <application>pg_dumpall</application> to issue a
+ <command>SET ROLE</command> <replaceable class="parameter">rolename</replaceable>
+ command after connecting to the database. It is useful when the
+ authenticated user (specified by <option>-U</option>) lacks privileges
+ needed by <application>pg_dumpall</application>, but can switch to a role with
+ the required rights. Some installations have a policy against
+ logging in directly as a superuser, and use of this option allows
+ dumps to be made without violating the policy.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Environment</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PGHOST</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGOPTIONS</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGPORT</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGUSER</envar></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Default connection parameters
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PG_COLOR</envar></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether to use color in diagnostic messages. Possible values
+ are <literal>always</literal>, <literal>auto</literal> and
+ <literal>never</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ This utility, like most other <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> utilities,
+ also uses the environment variables supported by <application>libpq</application>
+ (see <xref linkend="libpq-envars"/>).
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Since <application>pg_dumpall</application> calls
+ <application>pg_dump</application> internally, some diagnostic
+ messages will refer to <application>pg_dump</application>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <option>--clean</option> option can be useful even when your
+ intention is to restore the dump script into a fresh cluster. Use of
+ <option>--clean</option> authorizes the script to drop and re-create the
+ built-in <literal>postgres</literal> and <literal>template1</literal>
+ databases, ensuring that those databases will retain the same properties
+ (for instance, locale and encoding) that they had in the source cluster.
+ Without the option, those databases will retain their existing
+ database-level properties, as well as any pre-existing contents.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Once restored, it is wise to run <command>ANALYZE</command> on each
+ database so the optimizer has useful statistics. You
+ can also run <command>vacuumdb -a -z</command> to analyze all
+ databases.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The dump script should not be expected to run completely without errors.
+ In particular, because the script will issue <command>CREATE ROLE</command>
+ for every role existing in the source cluster, it is certain to get a
+ <quote>role already exists</quote> error for the bootstrap superuser,
+ unless the destination cluster was initialized with a different bootstrap
+ superuser name. This error is harmless and should be ignored. Use of
+ the <option>--clean</option> option is likely to produce additional
+ harmless error messages about non-existent objects, although you can
+ minimize those by adding <option>--if-exists</option>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_dumpall</application> requires all needed
+ tablespace directories to exist before the restore; otherwise,
+ database creation will fail for databases in non-default
+ locations.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1 id="app-pg-dumpall-ex">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+ <para>
+ To dump all databases:
+
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_dumpall &gt; db.out</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To restore database(s) from this file, you can use:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>psql -f db.out postgres</userinput>
+</screen>
+ It is not important to which database you connect here since the
+ script file created by <application>pg_dumpall</application> will
+ contain the appropriate commands to create and connect to the saved
+ databases. An exception is that if you specified <option>--clean</option>,
+ you must connect to the <literal>postgres</literal> database initially;
+ the script will attempt to drop other databases immediately, and that
+ will fail for the database you are connected to.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Check <xref linkend="app-pgdump"/> for details on possible
+ error conditions.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_isready.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_isready.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ba25ca6
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_isready.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,217 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_isready.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="app-pg-isready">
+ <indexterm zone="app-pg-isready">
+ <primary>pg_isready</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>pg_isready</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>pg_isready</refname>
+ <refpurpose>check the connection status of a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> server</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_isready</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>connection-option</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+
+ <refsect1 id="app-pg-isready-description">
+ <title>Description</title>
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_isready</application> is a utility for checking the connection
+ status of a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database server. The exit
+ status specifies the result of the connection check.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="app-pg-isready-options">
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-d <replaceable class="parameter">dbname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--dbname=<replaceable class="parameter">dbname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the name of the database to connect to. The
+ <replaceable>dbname</replaceable> can be a <link
+ linkend="libpq-connstring">connection string</link>. If so,
+ connection string parameters will override any conflicting command
+ line options.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-h <replaceable class="parameter">hostname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--host=<replaceable class="parameter">hostname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the host name of the machine on which the
+ server is running. If the value begins
+ with a slash, it is used as the directory for the Unix-domain
+ socket.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-p <replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--port=<replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the TCP port or the local Unix-domain
+ socket file extension on which the server is listening for
+ connections. Defaults to the value of the <envar>PGPORT</envar>
+ environment variable or, if not set, to the port specified at
+ compile time, usually 5432.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-q</option></term>
+ <term><option>--quiet</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not display status message. This is useful when scripting.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-t <replaceable class="parameter">seconds</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--timeout=<replaceable class="parameter">seconds</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The maximum number of seconds to wait when attempting connection before
+ returning that the server is not responding. Setting to 0 disables. The
+ default is 3 seconds.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-U <replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--username=<replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Connect to the database as the user <replaceable
+ class="parameter">username</replaceable> instead of the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-V</option></term>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the <application>pg_isready</application> version and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show help about <application>pg_isready</application> command line
+ arguments, and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Exit Status</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_isready</application> returns <literal>0</literal> to the shell if the server
+ is accepting connections normally, <literal>1</literal> if the server is rejecting
+ connections (for example during startup), <literal>2</literal> if there was no response to the
+ connection attempt, and <literal>3</literal> if no attempt was made (for example due to invalid
+ parameters).
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Environment</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>pg_isready</command>, like most other <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ utilities,
+ also uses the environment variables supported by <application>libpq</application>
+ (see <xref linkend="libpq-envars"/>).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The environment variable <envar>PG_COLOR</envar> specifies whether to use
+ color in diagnostic messages. Possible values are
+ <literal>always</literal>, <literal>auto</literal> and
+ <literal>never</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="app-pg-isready-notes">
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ It is not necessary to supply correct user name, password, or database
+ name values to obtain the server status; however, if incorrect values
+ are provided, the server will log a failed connection attempt.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="app-pg-isready-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Standard Usage:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_isready</userinput>
+<computeroutput>/tmp:5432 - accepting connections</computeroutput>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>echo $?</userinput>
+<computeroutput>0</computeroutput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Running with connection parameters to a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> cluster in startup:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$ </prompt><userinput>pg_isready -h localhost -p 5433</userinput>
+<computeroutput>localhost:5433 - rejecting connections</computeroutput>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>echo $?</userinput>
+<computeroutput>1</computeroutput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Running with connection parameters to a non-responsive <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> cluster:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$ </prompt><userinput>pg_isready -h someremotehost</userinput>
+<computeroutput>someremotehost:5432 - no response</computeroutput>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>echo $?</userinput>
+<computeroutput>2</computeroutput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_receivewal.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_receivewal.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..96cc409
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_receivewal.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,494 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_receivewal.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="app-pgreceivewal">
+ <indexterm zone="app-pgreceivewal">
+ <primary>pg_receivewal</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>pg_receivewal</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>pg_receivewal</refname>
+ <refpurpose>stream write-ahead logs from a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> server</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_receivewal</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_receivewal</application> is used to stream the write-ahead log
+ from a running <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> cluster. The write-ahead
+ log is streamed using the streaming replication protocol, and is written
+ to a local directory of files. This directory can be used as the archive
+ location for doing a restore using point-in-time recovery (see
+ <xref linkend="continuous-archiving"/>).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_receivewal</application> streams the write-ahead
+ log in real time as it's being generated on the server, and does not wait
+ for segments to complete like <xref linkend="guc-archive-command"/> does.
+ For this reason, it is not necessary to set
+ <xref linkend="guc-archive-timeout"/> when using
+ <application>pg_receivewal</application>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Unlike the WAL receiver of a PostgreSQL standby server, <application>pg_receivewal</application>
+ by default flushes WAL data only when a WAL file is closed.
+ The option <option>--synchronous</option> must be specified to flush WAL data
+ in real time. Since <application>pg_receivewal</application> does not
+ apply WAL, you should not allow it to become a synchronous standby when
+ <xref linkend="guc-synchronous-commit"/> equals
+ <literal>remote_apply</literal>. If it does, it will appear to be a
+ standby that never catches up, and will cause transaction commits to
+ block. To avoid this, you should either configure an appropriate value
+ for <xref linkend="guc-synchronous-standby-names"/>, or specify
+ <varname>application_name</varname> for
+ <application>pg_receivewal</application> that does not match it, or
+ change the value of <varname>synchronous_commit</varname> to
+ something other than <literal>remote_apply</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The write-ahead log is streamed over a regular
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> connection and uses the replication
+ protocol. The connection must be made with a user having
+ <literal>REPLICATION</literal> permissions (see
+ <xref linkend="role-attributes"/>) or a superuser, and
+ <filename>pg_hba.conf</filename> must permit the replication connection.
+ The server must also be configured with
+ <xref linkend="guc-max-wal-senders"/> set high enough to leave at least
+ one session available for the stream.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The starting point of the write-ahead log streaming is calculated when
+ <application>pg_receivewal</application> starts:
+ <orderedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ First, scan the directory where the WAL segment files are written and
+ find the newest completed segment file, using as the starting point the
+ beginning of the next WAL segment file.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If a starting point cannot be calculated with the previous method,
+ the latest WAL flush location is used as reported by the server from
+ an <literal>IDENTIFY_SYSTEM</literal> command.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </orderedlist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the connection is lost, or if it cannot be initially established,
+ with a non-fatal error, <application>pg_receivewal</application> will
+ retry the connection indefinitely, and reestablish streaming as soon
+ as possible. To avoid this behavior, use the <literal>-n</literal>
+ parameter.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In the absence of fatal errors, <application>pg_receivewal</application>
+ will run until terminated by the <systemitem>SIGINT</systemitem> signal
+ (<keycombo action="simul"><keycap>Control</keycap><keycap>C</keycap></keycombo>).
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-D <replaceable class="parameter">directory</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--directory=<replaceable class="parameter">directory</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Directory to write the output to.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ This parameter is required.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-E <replaceable>lsn</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--endpos=<replaceable>lsn</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically stop replication and exit with normal exit status 0 when
+ receiving reaches the specified LSN.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If there is a record with LSN exactly equal to <replaceable>lsn</replaceable>,
+ the record will be processed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--if-not-exists</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not error out when <option>--create-slot</option> is specified
+ and a slot with the specified name already exists.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-n</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-loop</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Don't loop on connection errors. Instead, exit right away with
+ an error.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-sync</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option causes <command>pg_receivewal</command> to not force WAL
+ data to be flushed to disk. This is faster, but means that a
+ subsequent operating system crash can leave the WAL segments corrupt.
+ Generally, this option is useful for testing but should not be used
+ when doing WAL archiving on a production deployment.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This option is incompatible with <literal>--synchronous</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-s <replaceable class="parameter">interval</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--status-interval=<replaceable class="parameter">interval</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the number of seconds between status packets sent back to the
+ server. This allows for easier monitoring of the progress from server.
+ A value of zero disables the periodic status updates completely,
+ although an update will still be sent when requested by the server, to
+ avoid timeout disconnect. The default value is 10 seconds.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-S <replaceable>slotname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--slot=<replaceable class="parameter">slotname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Require <application>pg_receivewal</application> to use an existing
+ replication slot (see <xref linkend="streaming-replication-slots"/>).
+ When this option is used, <application>pg_receivewal</application> will report
+ a flush position to the server, indicating when each segment has been
+ synchronized to disk so that the server can remove that segment if it
+ is not otherwise needed.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When the replication client
+ of <application>pg_receivewal</application> is configured on the
+ server as a synchronous standby, then using a replication slot will
+ report the flush position to the server, but only when a WAL file is
+ closed. Therefore, that configuration will cause transactions on the
+ primary to wait for a long time and effectively not work
+ satisfactorily. The option <literal>--synchronous</literal> (see
+ below) must be specified in addition to make this work correctly.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--synchronous</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Flush the WAL data to disk immediately after it has been received. Also
+ send a status packet back to the server immediately after flushing,
+ regardless of <literal>--status-interval</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This option should be specified if the replication client
+ of <application>pg_receivewal</application> is configured on the
+ server as a synchronous standby, to ensure that timely feedback is
+ sent to the server.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-v</option></term>
+ <term><option>--verbose</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Enables verbose mode.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-Z <replaceable class="parameter">level</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--compress=<replaceable class="parameter">level</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Enables gzip compression of write-ahead logs, and specifies the
+ compression level (0 through 9, 0 being no compression and 9 being best
+ compression). The suffix <filename>.gz</filename> will
+ automatically be added to all filenames.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ The following command-line options control the database connection parameters.
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-d <replaceable class="parameter">connstr</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--dbname=<replaceable class="parameter">connstr</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies parameters used to connect to the server, as a <link
+ linkend="libpq-connstring">connection string</link>; these
+ will override any conflicting command line options.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The option is called <literal>--dbname</literal> for consistency with other
+ client applications, but because <application>pg_receivewal</application>
+ doesn't connect to any particular database in the cluster, database
+ name in the connection string will be ignored.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-h <replaceable class="parameter">host</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--host=<replaceable class="parameter">host</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the host name of the machine on which the server is
+ running. If the value begins with a slash, it is used as the
+ directory for the Unix domain socket. The default is taken
+ from the <envar>PGHOST</envar> environment variable, if set,
+ else a Unix domain socket connection is attempted.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-p <replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--port=<replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the TCP port or local Unix domain socket file
+ extension on which the server is listening for connections.
+ Defaults to the <envar>PGPORT</envar> environment variable, if
+ set, or a compiled-in default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-U <replaceable>username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--username=<replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ User name to connect as.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-w</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Never issue a password prompt. If the server requires
+ password authentication and a password is not available by
+ other means such as a <filename>.pgpass</filename> file, the
+ connection attempt will fail. This option can be useful in
+ batch jobs and scripts where no user is present to enter a
+ password.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-W</option></term>
+ <term><option>--password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Force <application>pg_receivewal</application> to prompt for a
+ password before connecting to a database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This option is never essential, since
+ <application>pg_receivewal</application> will automatically prompt
+ for a password if the server demands password authentication.
+ However, <application>pg_receivewal</application> will waste a
+ connection attempt finding out that the server wants a password.
+ In some cases it is worth typing <option>-W</option> to avoid the extra
+ connection attempt.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_receivewal</application> can perform one of the two
+ following actions in order to control physical replication slots:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--create-slot</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Create a new physical replication slot with the name specified in
+ <option>--slot</option>, then exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--drop-slot</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Drop the replication slot with the name specified in
+ <option>--slot</option>, then exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Other options are also available:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-V</option></term>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the <application>pg_receivewal</application> version and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show help about <application>pg_receivewal</application> command line
+ arguments, and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Exit Status</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_receivewal</application> will exit with status 0 when
+ terminated by the <systemitem>SIGINT</systemitem> signal. (That is the
+ normal way to end it. Hence it is not an error.) For fatal errors or
+ other signals, the exit status will be nonzero.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Environment</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This utility, like most other <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> utilities,
+ uses the environment variables supported by <application>libpq</application>
+ (see <xref linkend="libpq-envars"/>).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The environment variable <envar>PG_COLOR</envar> specifies whether to use
+ color in diagnostic messages. Possible values are
+ <literal>always</literal>, <literal>auto</literal> and
+ <literal>never</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ When using <application>pg_receivewal</application> instead of
+ <xref linkend="guc-archive-command"/> as the main WAL backup method, it is
+ strongly recommended to use replication slots. Otherwise, the server is
+ free to recycle or remove write-ahead log files before they are backed up,
+ because it does not have any information, either
+ from <xref linkend="guc-archive-command"/> or the replication slots, about
+ how far the WAL stream has been archived. Note, however, that a
+ replication slot will fill up the server's disk space if the receiver does
+ not keep up with fetching the WAL data.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_receivewal</application> will preserve group permissions on
+ the received WAL files if group permissions are enabled on the source
+ cluster.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To stream the write-ahead log from the server at
+ <literal>mydbserver</literal> and store it in the local directory
+ <filename>/usr/local/pgsql/archive</filename>:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_receivewal -h mydbserver -D /usr/local/pgsql/archive</userinput>
+</screen></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="app-pgbasebackup"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_recvlogical.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_recvlogical.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6b1d98d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_recvlogical.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,437 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_recvlogical.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="app-pgrecvlogical">
+ <indexterm zone="app-pgrecvlogical">
+ <primary>pg_recvlogical</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>pg_recvlogical</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>pg_recvlogical</refname>
+ <refpurpose>control <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> logical decoding streams</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_recvlogical</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat" choice="opt"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+ <para>
+ <command>pg_recvlogical</command> controls logical decoding replication
+ slots and streams data from such replication slots.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ It creates a replication-mode connection, so it is subject to the same
+ constraints as <xref linkend="app-pgreceivewal"/>, plus those for logical
+ replication (see <xref linkend="logicaldecoding"/>).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>pg_recvlogical</command> has no equivalent to the logical decoding
+ SQL interface's peek and get modes. It sends replay confirmations for
+ data lazily as it receives it and on clean exit. To examine pending data on
+ a slot without consuming it, use
+ <link linkend="functions-replication"><function>pg_logical_slot_peek_changes</function></link>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ At least one of the following options must be specified to select an action:
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--create-slot</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Create a new logical replication slot with the name specified by
+ <option>--slot</option>, using the output plugin specified by
+ <option>--plugin</option>, for the database specified
+ by <option>--dbname</option>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--drop-slot</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Drop the replication slot with the name specified
+ by <option>--slot</option>, then exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--start</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Begin streaming changes from the logical replication slot specified
+ by <option>--slot</option>, continuing until terminated by a
+ signal. If the server side change stream ends with a server shutdown
+ or disconnect, retry in a loop unless
+ <option>--no-loop</option> is specified.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The stream format is determined by the output plugin specified when
+ the slot was created.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The connection must be to the same database used to create the slot.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <option>--create-slot</option> and <option>--start</option> can be
+ specified together. <option>--drop-slot</option> cannot be combined with
+ another action.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The following command-line options control the location and format of the
+ output and other replication behavior:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-E <replaceable>lsn</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--endpos=<replaceable>lsn</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ In <option>--start</option> mode, automatically stop replication
+ and exit with normal exit status 0 when receiving reaches the
+ specified LSN. If specified when not in <option>--start</option>
+ mode, an error is raised.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If there's a record with LSN exactly equal to <replaceable>lsn</replaceable>,
+ the record will be output.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <option>--endpos</option> option is not aware of transaction
+ boundaries and may truncate output partway through a transaction.
+ Any partially output transaction will not be consumed and will be
+ replayed again when the slot is next read from. Individual messages
+ are never truncated.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-f <replaceable>filename</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--file=<replaceable>filename</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Write received and decoded transaction data into this
+ file. Use <literal>-</literal> for <systemitem>stdout</systemitem>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-F <replaceable>interval_seconds</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--fsync-interval=<replaceable>interval_seconds</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies how often <application>pg_recvlogical</application> should
+ issue <function>fsync()</function> calls to ensure the output file is
+ safely flushed to disk.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The server will occasionally request the client to perform a flush and
+ report the flush position to the server. This setting is in addition
+ to that, to perform flushes more frequently.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Specifying an interval of <literal>0</literal> disables
+ issuing <function>fsync()</function> calls altogether, while still
+ reporting progress to the server. In this case, data could be lost in
+ the event of a crash.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-I <replaceable>lsn</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--startpos=<replaceable>lsn</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ In <option>--start</option> mode, start replication from the given
+ LSN. For details on the effect of this, see the documentation
+ in <xref linkend="logicaldecoding"/>
+ and <xref linkend="protocol-replication"/>. Ignored in other modes.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--if-not-exists</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not error out when <option>--create-slot</option> is specified
+ and a slot with the specified name already exists.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-n</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-loop</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ When the connection to the server is lost, do not retry in a loop, just exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-o <replaceable>name</replaceable>[=<replaceable>value</replaceable>]</option></term>
+ <term><option>--option=<replaceable>name</replaceable>[=<replaceable>value</replaceable>]</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Pass the option <replaceable>name</replaceable> to the output plugin with,
+ if specified, the option value <replaceable>value</replaceable>. Which
+ options exist and their effects depends on the used output plugin.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-P <replaceable>plugin</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--plugin=<replaceable>plugin</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ When creating a slot, use the specified logical decoding output
+ plugin. See <xref linkend="logicaldecoding"/>. This option has no
+ effect if the slot already exists.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-s <replaceable>interval_seconds</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--status-interval=<replaceable>interval_seconds</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option has the same effect as the option of the same name
+ in <xref linkend="app-pgreceivewal"/>. See the description there.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-S <replaceable>slot_name</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--slot=<replaceable>slot_name</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ In <option>--start</option> mode, use the existing logical replication slot named
+ <replaceable>slot_name</replaceable>. In <option>--create-slot</option>
+ mode, create the slot with this name. In <option>--drop-slot</option>
+ mode, delete the slot with this name.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-v</option></term>
+ <term><option>--verbose</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Enables verbose mode.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The following command-line options control the database connection parameters.
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-d <replaceable>dbname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--dbname=<replaceable>dbname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The database to connect to. See the description
+ of the actions for what this means in detail.
+ The <replaceable>dbname</replaceable> can be a <link
+ linkend="libpq-connstring">connection string</link>. If so,
+ connection string parameters will override any conflicting
+ command line options. Defaults to the user name.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-h <replaceable>hostname-or-ip</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--host=<replaceable>hostname-or-ip</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the host name of the machine on which the server is
+ running. If the value begins with a slash, it is used as the
+ directory for the Unix domain socket. The default is taken
+ from the <envar>PGHOST</envar> environment variable, if set,
+ else a Unix domain socket connection is attempted.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-p <replaceable>port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--port=<replaceable>port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the TCP port or local Unix domain socket file
+ extension on which the server is listening for connections.
+ Defaults to the <envar>PGPORT</envar> environment variable, if
+ set, or a compiled-in default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-U <replaceable>user</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--username=<replaceable>user</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ User name to connect as. Defaults to current operating system user
+ name.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-w</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Never issue a password prompt. If the server requires
+ password authentication and a password is not available by
+ other means such as a <filename>.pgpass</filename> file, the
+ connection attempt will fail. This option can be useful in
+ batch jobs and scripts where no user is present to enter a
+ password.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-W</option></term>
+ <term><option>--password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Force <application>pg_recvlogical</application> to prompt for a
+ password before connecting to a database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This option is never essential, since
+ <application>pg_recvlogical</application> will automatically prompt
+ for a password if the server demands password authentication.
+ However, <application>pg_recvlogical</application> will waste a
+ connection attempt finding out that the server wants a password.
+ In some cases it is worth typing <option>-W</option> to avoid the extra
+ connection attempt.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The following additional options are available:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-V</option></term>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the <application>pg_recvlogical</application> version and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show help about <application>pg_recvlogical</application> command line
+ arguments, and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Environment</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This utility, like most other <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> utilities,
+ uses the environment variables supported by <application>libpq</application>
+ (see <xref linkend="libpq-envars"/>).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The environment variable <envar>PG_COLOR</envar> specifies whether to use
+ color in diagnostic messages. Possible values are
+ <literal>always</literal>, <literal>auto</literal> and
+ <literal>never</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_recvlogical</application> will preserve group permissions on
+ the received WAL files if group permissions are enabled on the source
+ cluster.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ See <xref linkend="logicaldecoding-example"/> for an example.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="app-pgreceivewal"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_resetwal.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_resetwal.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..fd539f5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_resetwal.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,386 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_resetwal.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="app-pgresetwal">
+ <indexterm zone="app-pgresetwal">
+ <primary>pg_resetwal</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>pg_resetwal</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>pg_resetwal</refname>
+ <refpurpose>reset the write-ahead log and other control information of a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database cluster</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_resetwal</command>
+ <group choice="opt">
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>-f</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>--force</option></arg>
+ </group>
+ <group choice="opt">
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>-n</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>--dry-run</option></arg>
+ </group>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+ <group choice="plain">
+ <group choice="opt">
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>-D</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>--pgdata</option></arg>
+ </group>
+ <replaceable class="parameter">datadir</replaceable>
+ </group>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1 id="r1-app-pgresetwal-1">
+ <title>Description</title>
+ <para>
+ <command>pg_resetwal</command> clears the write-ahead log (WAL) and
+ optionally resets some other control information stored in the
+ <filename>pg_control</filename> file. This function is sometimes needed
+ if these files have become corrupted. It should be used only as a
+ last resort, when the server will not start due to such corruption.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ After running this command, it should be possible to start the server,
+ but bear in mind that the database might contain inconsistent data due to
+ partially-committed transactions. You should immediately dump your data,
+ run <command>initdb</command>, and restore. After restore, check for
+ inconsistencies and repair as needed.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This utility can only be run by the user who installed the server, because
+ it requires read/write access to the data directory.
+ For safety reasons, you must specify the data directory on the command line.
+ <command>pg_resetwal</command> does not use the environment variable
+ <envar>PGDATA</envar>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If <command>pg_resetwal</command> complains that it cannot determine
+ valid data for <filename>pg_control</filename>, you can force it to proceed anyway
+ by specifying the <option>-f</option> (force) option. In this case plausible
+ values will be substituted for the missing data. Most of the fields can be
+ expected to match, but manual assistance might be needed for the next OID,
+ next transaction ID and epoch, next multitransaction ID and offset, and
+ WAL starting location fields. These fields can be set using the options
+ discussed below. If you are not able to determine correct values for all
+ these fields, <option>-f</option> can still be used, but
+ the recovered database must be treated with even more suspicion than
+ usual: an immediate dump and restore is imperative. <emphasis>Do not</emphasis>
+ execute any data-modifying operations in the database before you dump,
+ as any such action is likely to make the corruption worse.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-f</option></term>
+ <term><option>--force</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Force <command>pg_resetwal</command> to proceed even if it cannot determine
+ valid data for <filename>pg_control</filename>, as explained above.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-n</option></term>
+ <term><option>--dry-run</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <option>-n</option>/<option>--dry-run</option> option instructs
+ <command>pg_resetwal</command> to print the values reconstructed from
+ <filename>pg_control</filename> and values about to be changed, and then exit
+ without modifying anything. This is mainly a debugging tool, but can be
+ useful as a sanity check before allowing <command>pg_resetwal</command>
+ to proceed for real.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-V</option></term>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem><para>Display version information, then exit.</para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem><para>Show help, then exit.</para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ The following options are only needed when
+ <command>pg_resetwal</command> is unable to determine appropriate values
+ by reading <filename>pg_control</filename>. Safe values can be determined as
+ described below. For values that take numeric arguments, hexadecimal
+ values can be specified by using the prefix <literal>0x</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-c <replaceable class="parameter">xid</replaceable>,<replaceable class="parameter">xid</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--commit-timestamp-ids=<replaceable class="parameter">xid</replaceable>,<replaceable class="parameter">xid</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Manually set the oldest and newest transaction IDs for which the commit
+ time can be retrieved.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A safe value for the oldest transaction ID for which the commit time can
+ be retrieved (first part) can be determined by looking
+ for the numerically smallest file name in the directory
+ <filename>pg_commit_ts</filename> under the data directory. Conversely, a safe
+ value for the newest transaction ID for which the commit time can be
+ retrieved (second part) can be determined by looking for the numerically
+ greatest file name in the same directory. The file names are in
+ hexadecimal.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-e <replaceable class="parameter">xid_epoch</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--epoch=<replaceable class="parameter">xid_epoch</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Manually set the next transaction ID's epoch.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The transaction ID epoch is not actually stored anywhere in the database
+ except in the field that is set by <command>pg_resetwal</command>,
+ so any value will work so far as the database itself is concerned.
+ You might need to adjust this value to ensure that replication
+ systems such as <application>Slony-I</application> and
+ <application>Skytools</application> work correctly &mdash;
+ if so, an appropriate value should be obtainable from the state of
+ the downstream replicated database.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-l <replaceable class="parameter">walfile</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--next-wal-file=<replaceable class="parameter">walfile</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Manually set the WAL starting location by specifying the name of the
+ next WAL segment file.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The name of next WAL segment file should be
+ larger than any WAL segment file name currently existing in
+ the directory <filename>pg_wal</filename> under the data directory.
+ These names are also in hexadecimal and have three parts. The first
+ part is the <quote>timeline ID</quote> and should usually be kept the same.
+ For example, if <filename>00000001000000320000004A</filename> is the
+ largest entry in <filename>pg_wal</filename>, use <literal>-l 00000001000000320000004B</literal> or higher.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Note that when using nondefault WAL segment sizes, the numbers in the WAL
+ file names are different from the LSNs that are reported by system
+ functions and system views. This option takes a WAL file name, not an
+ LSN.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ <command>pg_resetwal</command> itself looks at the files in
+ <filename>pg_wal</filename> and chooses a default <option>-l</option> setting
+ beyond the last existing file name. Therefore, manual adjustment of
+ <option>-l</option> should only be needed if you are aware of WAL segment
+ files that are not currently present in <filename>pg_wal</filename>, such as
+ entries in an offline archive; or if the contents of
+ <filename>pg_wal</filename> have been lost entirely.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-m <replaceable class="parameter">mxid</replaceable>,<replaceable class="parameter">mxid</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--multixact-ids=<replaceable class="parameter">mxid</replaceable>,<replaceable class="parameter">mxid</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Manually set the next and oldest multitransaction ID.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A safe value for the next multitransaction ID (first part) can be
+ determined by looking for the numerically largest file name in the
+ directory <filename>pg_multixact/offsets</filename> under the data directory,
+ adding one, and then multiplying by 65536 (0x10000). Conversely, a safe
+ value for the oldest multitransaction ID (second part of
+ <option>-m</option>) can be determined by looking for the numerically smallest
+ file name in the same directory and multiplying by 65536. The file
+ names are in hexadecimal, so the easiest way to do this is to specify
+ the option value in hexadecimal and append four zeroes.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-o <replaceable class="parameter">oid</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--next-oid=<replaceable class="parameter">oid</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Manually set the next OID.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no comparably easy way to determine a next OID that's beyond
+ the largest one in the database, but fortunately it is not critical to
+ get the next-OID setting right.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-O <replaceable class="parameter">mxoff</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--multixact-offset=<replaceable class="parameter">mxoff</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Manually set the next multitransaction offset.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A safe value can be determined by looking for the numerically largest
+ file name in the directory <filename>pg_multixact/members</filename> under the
+ data directory, adding one, and then multiplying by 52352 (0xCC80).
+ The file names are in hexadecimal. There is no simple recipe such as
+ the ones for other options of appending zeroes.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--wal-segsize=<replaceable class="parameter">wal_segment_size</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Set the new WAL segment size, in megabytes. The value must be set to a
+ power of 2 between 1 and 1024 (megabytes). See the same option of <xref
+ linkend="app-initdb"/> for more information.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ While <command>pg_resetwal</command> will set the WAL starting address
+ beyond the latest existing WAL segment file, some segment size changes
+ can cause previous WAL file names to be reused. It is recommended to
+ use <option>-l</option> together with this option to manually set the
+ WAL starting address if WAL file name overlap will cause problems with
+ your archiving strategy.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-u <replaceable class="parameter">xid</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--oldest-transaction-id=<replaceable class="parameter">xid</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Manually set the oldest unfrozen transaction ID.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A safe value can be determined by looking for the numerically smallest
+ file name in the directory <filename>pg_xact</filename> under the data directory
+ and then multiplying by 1048576 (0x100000). Note that the file names are in
+ hexadecimal. It is usually easiest to specify the option value in
+ hexadecimal too. For example, if <filename>0007</filename> is the smallest entry
+ in <filename>pg_xact</filename>, <literal>-u 0x700000</literal> will work (five
+ trailing zeroes provide the proper multiplier).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-x <replaceable class="parameter">xid</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--next-transaction-id=<replaceable class="parameter">xid</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Manually set the next transaction ID.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A safe value can be determined by looking for the numerically largest
+ file name in the directory <filename>pg_xact</filename> under the data directory,
+ adding one,
+ and then multiplying by 1048576 (0x100000). Note that the file names are in
+ hexadecimal. It is usually easiest to specify the option value in
+ hexadecimal too. For example, if <filename>0011</filename> is the largest entry
+ in <filename>pg_xact</filename>, <literal>-x 0x1200000</literal> will work (five
+ trailing zeroes provide the proper multiplier).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Environment</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PG_COLOR</envar></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether to use color in diagnostic messages. Possible values
+ are <literal>always</literal>, <literal>auto</literal> and
+ <literal>never</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This command must not be used when the server is
+ running. <command>pg_resetwal</command> will refuse to start up if
+ it finds a server lock file in the data directory. If the
+ server crashed then a lock file might have been left
+ behind; in that case you can remove the lock file to allow
+ <command>pg_resetwal</command> to run. But before you do
+ so, make doubly certain that there is no server process still alive.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>pg_resetwal</command> works only with servers of the same
+ major version.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="app-pgcontroldata"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_restore.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_restore.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1b56a4a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_restore.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,1033 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_restore.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="app-pgrestore">
+ <indexterm zone="app-pgrestore">
+ <primary>pg_restore</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>pg_restore</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>pg_restore</refname>
+
+ <refpurpose>
+ restore a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database from an
+ archive file created by <application>pg_dump</application>
+ </refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_restore</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>connection-option</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><replaceable>filename</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+
+ <refsect1 id="app-pgrestore-description">
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_restore</application> is a utility for restoring a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database from an archive
+ created by <xref linkend="app-pgdump"/> in one of the non-plain-text
+ formats. It will issue the commands necessary to reconstruct the
+ database to the state it was in at the time it was saved. The
+ archive files also allow <application>pg_restore</application> to
+ be selective about what is restored, or even to reorder the items
+ prior to being restored. The archive files are designed to be
+ portable across architectures.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_restore</application> can operate in two modes.
+ If a database name is specified, <application>pg_restore</application>
+ connects to that database and restores archive contents directly into
+ the database. Otherwise, a script containing the SQL
+ commands necessary to rebuild the database is created and written
+ to a file or standard output. This script output is equivalent to
+ the plain text output format of <application>pg_dump</application>.
+ Some of the options controlling the output are therefore analogous to
+ <application>pg_dump</application> options.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Obviously, <application>pg_restore</application> cannot restore information
+ that is not present in the archive file. For instance, if the
+ archive was made using the <quote>dump data as
+ <command>INSERT</command> commands</quote> option,
+ <application>pg_restore</application> will not be able to load the data
+ using <command>COPY</command> statements.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="app-pgrestore-options">
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_restore</application> accepts the following command
+ line arguments.
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the location of the archive file (or directory, for a
+ directory-format archive) to be restored.
+ If not specified, the standard input is used.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-a</option></term>
+ <term><option>--data-only</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Restore only the data, not the schema (data definitions).
+ Table data, large objects, and sequence values are restored,
+ if present in the archive.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This option is similar to, but for historical reasons not identical
+ to, specifying <option>--section=data</option>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-c</option></term>
+ <term><option>--clean</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Clean (drop) database objects before recreating them.
+ (Unless <option>--if-exists</option> is used,
+ this might generate some harmless error messages, if any objects
+ were not present in the destination database.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-C</option></term>
+ <term><option>--create</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Create the database before restoring into it.
+ If <option>--clean</option> is also specified, drop and
+ recreate the target database before connecting to it.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ With <option>--create</option>, <application>pg_restore</application>
+ also restores the database's comment if any, and any configuration
+ variable settings that are specific to this database, that is,
+ any <command>ALTER DATABASE ... SET ...</command>
+ and <command>ALTER ROLE ... IN DATABASE ... SET ...</command>
+ commands that mention this database.
+ Access privileges for the database itself are also restored,
+ unless <option>--no-acl</option> is specified.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When this option is used, the database named with <option>-d</option>
+ is used only to issue the initial <command>DROP DATABASE</command> and
+ <command>CREATE DATABASE</command> commands. All data is restored into the
+ database name that appears in the archive.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-d <replaceable class="parameter">dbname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--dbname=<replaceable class="parameter">dbname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Connect to database <replaceable
+ class="parameter">dbname</replaceable> and restore directly
+ into the database. The <replaceable>dbname</replaceable> can
+ be a <link linkend="libpq-connstring">connection string</link>.
+ If so, connection string parameters will override any conflicting
+ command line options.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-e</option></term>
+ <term><option>--exit-on-error</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Exit if an error is encountered while sending SQL commands to
+ the database. The default is to continue and to display a count of
+ errors at the end of the restoration.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-f <replaceable>filename</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--file=<replaceable>filename</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specify output file for generated script, or for the listing
+ when used with <option>-l</option>. Use <literal>-</literal>
+ for <systemitem>stdout</systemitem>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-F <replaceable class="parameter">format</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--format=<replaceable class="parameter">format</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specify format of the archive. It is not necessary to specify
+ the format, since <application>pg_restore</application> will
+ determine the format automatically. If specified, it can be
+ one of the following:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>c</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>custom</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The archive is in the custom format of
+ <application>pg_dump</application>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>d</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>directory</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The archive is a directory archive.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>t</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>tar</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The archive is a <command>tar</command> archive.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist></para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-I <replaceable class="parameter">index</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--index=<replaceable class="parameter">index</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Restore definition of named index only. Multiple indexes
+ may be specified with multiple <option>-I</option> switches.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-j <replaceable class="parameter">number-of-jobs</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--jobs=<replaceable class="parameter">number-of-jobs</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Run the most time-consuming steps
+ of <application>pg_restore</application> &mdash; those that load data,
+ create indexes, or create constraints &mdash; concurrently, using up
+ to <replaceable class="parameter">number-of-jobs</replaceable>
+ concurrent sessions. This option can dramatically reduce the time
+ to restore a large database to a server running on a
+ multiprocessor machine. This option is ignored when emitting a script
+ rather than connecting directly to a database server.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Each job is one process or one thread, depending on the
+ operating system, and uses a separate connection to the
+ server.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The optimal value for this option depends on the hardware
+ setup of the server, of the client, and of the network.
+ Factors include the number of CPU cores and the disk setup. A
+ good place to start is the number of CPU cores on the server,
+ but values larger than that can also lead to faster restore
+ times in many cases. Of course, values that are too high will
+ lead to decreased performance because of thrashing.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Only the custom and directory archive formats are supported
+ with this option.
+ The input must be a regular file or directory (not, for example, a
+ pipe or standard input). Also, multiple
+ jobs cannot be used together with the
+ option <option>--single-transaction</option>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-l</option></term>
+ <term><option>--list</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ List the table of contents of the archive. The output of this operation
+ can be used as input to the <option>-L</option> option. Note that
+ if filtering switches such as <option>-n</option> or <option>-t</option> are
+ used with <option>-l</option>, they will restrict the items listed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-L <replaceable class="parameter">list-file</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--use-list=<replaceable class="parameter">list-file</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Restore only those archive elements that are listed in <replaceable
+ class="parameter">list-file</replaceable>, and restore them in the
+ order they appear in the file. Note that
+ if filtering switches such as <option>-n</option> or <option>-t</option> are
+ used with <option>-L</option>, they will further restrict the items restored.
+ </para>
+ <para><replaceable class="parameter">list-file</replaceable> is normally created by
+ editing the output of a previous <option>-l</option> operation.
+ Lines can be moved or removed, and can also
+ be commented out by placing a semicolon (<literal>;</literal>) at the
+ start of the line. See below for examples.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-n <replaceable class="parameter">schema</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--schema=<replaceable class="parameter">schema</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Restore only objects that are in the named schema. Multiple schemas
+ may be specified with multiple <option>-n</option> switches. This can be
+ combined with the <option>-t</option> option to restore just a
+ specific table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-N <replaceable class="parameter">schema</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--exclude-schema=<replaceable class="parameter">schema</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not restore objects that are in the named schema. Multiple schemas
+ to be excluded may be specified with multiple <option>-N</option> switches.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When both <option>-n</option> and <option>-N</option> are given for the same
+ schema name, the <option>-N</option> switch wins and the schema is excluded.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-O</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-owner</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not output commands to set
+ ownership of objects to match the original database.
+ By default, <application>pg_restore</application> issues
+ <command>ALTER OWNER</command> or
+ <command>SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION</command>
+ statements to set ownership of created schema elements.
+ These statements will fail unless the initial connection to the
+ database is made by a superuser
+ (or the same user that owns all of the objects in the script).
+ With <option>-O</option>, any user name can be used for the
+ initial connection, and this user will own all the created objects.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-P <replaceable class="parameter">function-name(argtype [, ...])</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--function=<replaceable class="parameter">function-name(argtype [, ...])</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Restore the named function only. Be careful to spell the function
+ name and arguments exactly as they appear in the dump file's table
+ of contents. Multiple functions may be specified with multiple
+ <option>-P</option> switches.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-R</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-reconnect</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option is obsolete but still accepted for backwards
+ compatibility.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-s</option></term>
+ <term><option>--schema-only</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Restore only the schema (data definitions), not data,
+ to the extent that schema entries are present in the archive.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ This option is the inverse of <option>--data-only</option>.
+ It is similar to, but for historical reasons not identical to,
+ specifying
+ <option>--section=pre-data --section=post-data</option>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ (Do not confuse this with the <option>--schema</option> option, which
+ uses the word <quote>schema</quote> in a different meaning.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-S <replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--superuser=<replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specify the superuser user name to use when disabling triggers.
+ This is relevant only if <option>--disable-triggers</option> is used.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-t <replaceable class="parameter">table</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--table=<replaceable class="parameter">table</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Restore definition and/or data of only the named table.
+ For this purpose, <quote>table</quote> includes views, materialized views,
+ sequences, and foreign tables. Multiple tables
+ can be selected by writing multiple <option>-t</option> switches.
+ This option can be combined with the <option>-n</option> option to
+ specify table(s) in a particular schema.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ When <option>-t</option> is specified, <application>pg_restore</application>
+ makes no attempt to restore any other database objects that the
+ selected table(s) might depend upon. Therefore, there is no
+ guarantee that a specific-table restore into a clean database will
+ succeed.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ This flag does not behave identically to the <option>-t</option>
+ flag of <application>pg_dump</application>. There is not currently
+ any provision for wild-card matching in <application>pg_restore</application>,
+ nor can you include a schema name within its <option>-t</option>.
+ And, while <application>pg_dump</application>'s <option>-t</option>
+ flag will also dump subsidiary objects (such as indexes) of the
+ selected table(s),
+ <application>pg_restore</application>'s <option>-t</option>
+ flag does not include such subsidiary objects.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ In versions prior to <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 9.6, this flag
+ matched only tables, not any other type of relation.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-T <replaceable class="parameter">trigger</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--trigger=<replaceable class="parameter">trigger</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Restore named trigger only. Multiple triggers may be specified with
+ multiple <option>-T</option> switches.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-v</option></term>
+ <term><option>--verbose</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies verbose mode. This will cause
+ <application>pg_restore</application> to output detailed object
+ comments and start/stop times to the output file, and progress
+ messages to standard error.
+ Repeating the option causes additional debug-level messages
+ to appear on standard error.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-V</option></term>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the <application>pg_restore</application> version and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-x</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-privileges</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-acl</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Prevent restoration of access privileges (grant/revoke commands).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-1</option></term>
+ <term><option>--single-transaction</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Execute the restore as a single transaction (that is, wrap the
+ emitted commands in <command>BEGIN</command>/<command>COMMIT</command>). This
+ ensures that either all the commands complete successfully, or no
+ changes are applied. This option implies
+ <option>--exit-on-error</option>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--disable-triggers</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option is relevant only when performing a data-only restore.
+ It instructs <application>pg_restore</application> to execute commands
+ to temporarily disable triggers on the target tables while
+ the data is restored. Use this if you have referential
+ integrity checks or other triggers on the tables that you
+ do not want to invoke during data restore.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Presently, the commands emitted for
+ <option>--disable-triggers</option> must be done as superuser. So you
+ should also specify a superuser name with <option>-S</option> or,
+ preferably, run <application>pg_restore</application> as a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> superuser.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--enable-row-security</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option is relevant only when restoring the contents of a table
+ which has row security. By default, <application>pg_restore</application> will set
+ <xref linkend="guc-row-security"/> to off, to ensure
+ that all data is restored in to the table. If the user does not have
+ sufficient privileges to bypass row security, then an error is thrown.
+ This parameter instructs <application>pg_restore</application> to set
+ <xref linkend="guc-row-security"/> to on instead, allowing the user to attempt to restore
+ the contents of the table with row security enabled. This might still
+ fail if the user does not have the right to insert the rows from the
+ dump into the table.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Note that this option currently also requires the dump be in <command>INSERT</command>
+ format, as <command>COPY FROM</command> does not support row security.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--if-exists</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Use conditional commands (i.e., add an <literal>IF EXISTS</literal>
+ clause) to drop database objects. This option is not valid
+ unless <option>--clean</option> is also specified.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-comments</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not output commands to restore comments, even if the archive
+ contains them.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-data-for-failed-tables</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ By default, table data is restored even if the creation command
+ for the table failed (e.g., because it already exists).
+ With this option, data for such a table is skipped.
+ This behavior is useful if the target database already
+ contains the desired table contents. For example,
+ auxiliary tables for <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extensions
+ such as <productname>PostGIS</productname> might already be loaded in
+ the target database; specifying this option prevents duplicate
+ or obsolete data from being loaded into them.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This option is effective only when restoring directly into a
+ database, not when producing SQL script output.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-publications</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not output commands to restore publications, even if the archive
+ contains them.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-security-labels</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not output commands to restore security labels,
+ even if the archive contains them.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-subscriptions</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not output commands to restore subscriptions, even if the archive
+ contains them.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-tablespaces</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not output commands to select tablespaces.
+ With this option, all objects will be created in whichever
+ tablespace is the default during restore.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--section=<replaceable class="parameter">sectionname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Only restore the named section. The section name can be
+ <option>pre-data</option>, <option>data</option>, or <option>post-data</option>.
+ This option can be specified more than once to select multiple
+ sections. The default is to restore all sections.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The data section contains actual table data as well as large-object
+ definitions.
+ Post-data items consist of definitions of indexes, triggers, rules
+ and constraints other than validated check constraints.
+ Pre-data items consist of all other data definition items.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--strict-names</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Require that each schema
+ (<option>-n</option>/<option>--schema</option>) and table
+ (<option>-t</option>/<option>--table</option>) qualifier match at
+ least one schema/table in the backup file.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--use-set-session-authorization</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Output SQL-standard <command>SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION</command> commands
+ instead of <command>ALTER OWNER</command> commands to determine object
+ ownership. This makes the dump more standards-compatible, but
+ depending on the history of the objects in the dump, might not restore
+ properly.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show help about <application>pg_restore</application> command line
+ arguments, and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_restore</application> also accepts
+ the following command line arguments for connection parameters:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-h <replaceable class="parameter">host</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--host=<replaceable class="parameter">host</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the host name of the machine on which the server is
+ running. If the value begins with a slash, it is used as the
+ directory for the Unix domain socket. The default is taken
+ from the <envar>PGHOST</envar> environment variable, if set,
+ else a Unix domain socket connection is attempted.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-p <replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--port=<replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the TCP port or local Unix domain socket file
+ extension on which the server is listening for connections.
+ Defaults to the <envar>PGPORT</envar> environment variable, if
+ set, or a compiled-in default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-U <replaceable>username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--username=<replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ User name to connect as.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-w</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Never issue a password prompt. If the server requires
+ password authentication and a password is not available by
+ other means such as a <filename>.pgpass</filename> file, the
+ connection attempt will fail. This option can be useful in
+ batch jobs and scripts where no user is present to enter a
+ password.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-W</option></term>
+ <term><option>--password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Force <application>pg_restore</application> to prompt for a
+ password before connecting to a database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This option is never essential, since
+ <application>pg_restore</application> will automatically prompt
+ for a password if the server demands password authentication.
+ However, <application>pg_restore</application> will waste a
+ connection attempt finding out that the server wants a password.
+ In some cases it is worth typing <option>-W</option> to avoid the extra
+ connection attempt.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--role=<replaceable class="parameter">rolename</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies a role name to be used to perform the restore.
+ This option causes <application>pg_restore</application> to issue a
+ <command>SET ROLE</command> <replaceable class="parameter">rolename</replaceable>
+ command after connecting to the database. It is useful when the
+ authenticated user (specified by <option>-U</option>) lacks privileges
+ needed by <application>pg_restore</application>, but can switch to a role with
+ the required rights. Some installations have a policy against
+ logging in directly as a superuser, and use of this option allows
+ restores to be performed without violating the policy.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Environment</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PGHOST</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGOPTIONS</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGPORT</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGUSER</envar></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Default connection parameters
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PG_COLOR</envar></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether to use color in diagnostic messages. Possible values
+ are <literal>always</literal>, <literal>auto</literal> and
+ <literal>never</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ This utility, like most other <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> utilities,
+ also uses the environment variables supported by <application>libpq</application>
+ (see <xref linkend="libpq-envars"/>). However, it does not read
+ <envar>PGDATABASE</envar> when a database name is not supplied.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1 id="app-pgrestore-diagnostics">
+ <title>Diagnostics</title>
+
+ <para>
+ When a direct database connection is specified using the
+ <option>-d</option> option, <application>pg_restore</application>
+ internally executes <acronym>SQL</acronym> statements. If you have
+ problems running <application>pg_restore</application>, make sure
+ you are able to select information from the database using, for
+ example, <xref linkend="app-psql"/>. Also, any default connection
+ settings and environment variables used by the
+ <application>libpq</application> front-end library will apply.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1 id="app-pgrestore-notes">
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ If your installation has any local additions to the
+ <literal>template1</literal> database, be careful to load the output of
+ <application>pg_restore</application> into a truly empty database;
+ otherwise you are likely to get errors due to duplicate definitions
+ of the added objects. To make an empty database without any local
+ additions, copy from <literal>template0</literal> not <literal>template1</literal>, for example:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE DATABASE foo WITH TEMPLATE template0;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The limitations of <application>pg_restore</application> are detailed below.
+
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ When restoring data to a pre-existing table and the option
+ <option>--disable-triggers</option> is used,
+ <application>pg_restore</application> emits commands
+ to disable triggers on user tables before inserting the data, then emits commands to
+ re-enable them after the data has been inserted. If the restore is stopped in the
+ middle, the system catalogs might be left in the wrong state.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para><application>pg_restore</application> cannot restore large objects
+ selectively; for instance, only those for a specific table. If
+ an archive contains large objects, then all large objects will be
+ restored, or none of them if they are excluded via <option>-L</option>,
+ <option>-t</option>, or other options.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ </itemizedlist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ See also the <xref linkend="app-pgdump"/> documentation for details on
+ limitations of <application>pg_dump</application>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Once restored, it is wise to run <command>ANALYZE</command> on each
+ restored table so the optimizer has useful statistics; see
+ <xref linkend="vacuum-for-statistics"/> and
+ <xref linkend="autovacuum"/> for more information.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1 id="app-pgrestore-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Assume we have dumped a database called <literal>mydb</literal> into a
+ custom-format dump file:
+
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_dump -Fc mydb &gt; db.dump</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To drop the database and recreate it from the dump:
+
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>dropdb mydb</userinput>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_restore -C -d postgres db.dump</userinput>
+</screen>
+
+ The database named in the <option>-d</option> switch can be any database existing
+ in the cluster; <application>pg_restore</application> only uses it to issue the
+ <command>CREATE DATABASE</command> command for <literal>mydb</literal>. With
+ <option>-C</option>, data is always restored into the database name that appears
+ in the dump file.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To restore the dump into a new database called <literal>newdb</literal>:
+
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>createdb -T template0 newdb</userinput>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_restore -d newdb db.dump</userinput>
+</screen>
+
+ Notice we don't use <option>-C</option>, and instead connect directly to the
+ database to be restored into. Also note that we clone the new database
+ from <literal>template0</literal> not <literal>template1</literal>, to ensure it is
+ initially empty.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To reorder database items, it is first necessary to dump the table of
+ contents of the archive:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_restore -l db.dump &gt; db.list</userinput>
+</screen>
+ The listing file consists of a header and one line for each item, e.g.:
+<programlisting>
+;
+; Archive created at Mon Sep 14 13:55:39 2009
+; dbname: DBDEMOS
+; TOC Entries: 81
+; Compression: 9
+; Dump Version: 1.10-0
+; Format: CUSTOM
+; Integer: 4 bytes
+; Offset: 8 bytes
+; Dumped from database version: 8.3.5
+; Dumped by pg_dump version: 8.3.8
+;
+;
+; Selected TOC Entries:
+;
+3; 2615 2200 SCHEMA - public pasha
+1861; 0 0 COMMENT - SCHEMA public pasha
+1862; 0 0 ACL - public pasha
+317; 1247 17715 TYPE public composite pasha
+319; 1247 25899 DOMAIN public domain0 pasha
+</programlisting>
+ Semicolons start a comment, and the numbers at the start of lines refer to the
+ internal archive ID assigned to each item.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Lines in the file can be commented out, deleted, and reordered. For example:
+<programlisting>
+10; 145433 TABLE map_resolutions postgres
+;2; 145344 TABLE species postgres
+;4; 145359 TABLE nt_header postgres
+6; 145402 TABLE species_records postgres
+;8; 145416 TABLE ss_old postgres
+</programlisting>
+ could be used as input to <application>pg_restore</application> and would only restore
+ items 10 and 6, in that order:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_restore -L db.list db.dump</userinput>
+</screen></para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="app-pgdump"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="app-pg-dumpall"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="app-psql"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_rewind.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_rewind.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..47c5549
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_rewind.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,403 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_rewind.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="app-pgrewind">
+ <indexterm zone="app-pgrewind">
+ <primary>pg_rewind</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>pg_rewind</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>pg_rewind</refname>
+ <refpurpose>synchronize a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> data directory with another data directory that was forked from it</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_rewind</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+ <group choice="plain">
+ <group choice="req">
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>-D</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>--target-pgdata</option></arg>
+ </group>
+ <replaceable> directory</replaceable>
+ <group choice="req">
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>--source-pgdata=<replaceable>directory</replaceable></option></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>--source-server=<replaceable>connstr</replaceable></option></arg>
+ </group>
+ </group>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_rewind</application> is a tool for synchronizing a PostgreSQL cluster
+ with another copy of the same cluster, after the clusters' timelines have
+ diverged. A typical scenario is to bring an old primary server back online
+ after failover as a standby that follows the new primary.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ After a successful rewind, the state of the target data directory is
+ analogous to a base backup of the source data directory. Unlike taking
+ a new base backup or using a tool like <application>rsync</application>,
+ <application>pg_rewind</application> does not require comparing or copying
+ unchanged relation blocks in the cluster. Only changed blocks from existing
+ relation files are copied; all other files, including new relation files,
+ configuration files, and WAL segments, are copied in full. As such the
+ rewind operation is significantly faster than other approaches when the
+ database is large and only a small fraction of blocks differ between the
+ clusters.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_rewind</application> examines the timeline histories of the source
+ and target clusters to determine the point where they diverged, and
+ expects to find WAL in the target cluster's <filename>pg_wal</filename> directory
+ reaching all the way back to the point of divergence. The point of divergence
+ can be found either on the target timeline, the source timeline, or their common
+ ancestor. In the typical failover scenario where the target cluster was
+ shut down soon after the divergence, this is not a problem, but if the
+ target cluster ran for a long time after the divergence, its old WAL
+ files might no longer be present. In this case, you can manually copy them
+ from the WAL archive to the <filename>pg_wal</filename> directory, or run
+ <application>pg_rewind</application> with the <literal>-c</literal> option to
+ automatically retrieve them from the WAL archive. The use of
+ <application>pg_rewind</application> is not limited to failover, e.g., a standby
+ server can be promoted, run some write transactions, and then rewound
+ to become a standby again.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ After running <application>pg_rewind</application>, WAL replay needs to
+ complete for the data directory to be in a consistent state. When the
+ target server is started again it will enter archive recovery and replay
+ all WAL generated in the source server from the last checkpoint before
+ the point of divergence. If some of the WAL was no longer available in the
+ source server when <application>pg_rewind</application> was run, and
+ therefore could not be copied by the <application>pg_rewind</application>
+ session, it must be made available when the target server is started.
+ This can be done by creating a <filename>recovery.signal</filename> file
+ in the target data directory and by configuring a suitable
+ <xref linkend="guc-restore-command"/> in
+ <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_rewind</application> requires that the target server either has
+ the <xref linkend="guc-wal-log-hints"/> option enabled
+ in <filename>postgresql.conf</filename> or data checksums enabled when
+ the cluster was initialized with <application>initdb</application>. Neither of these
+ are currently on by default. <xref linkend="guc-full-page-writes"/>
+ must also be set to <literal>on</literal>, but is enabled by default.
+ </para>
+
+ <warning>
+ <para>
+ If <application>pg_rewind</application> fails while processing, then
+ the data folder of the target is likely not in a state that can be
+ recovered. In such a case, taking a new fresh backup is recommended.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ As <application>pg_rewind</application> copies configuration files
+ entirely from the source, it may be required to correct the configuration
+ used for recovery before restarting the target server, especially if
+ the target is reintroduced as a standby of the source. If you restart
+ the server after the rewind operation has finished but without configuring
+ recovery, the target may again diverge from the primary.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_rewind</application> will fail immediately if it finds
+ files it cannot write directly to. This can happen for example when
+ the source and the target server use the same file mapping for read-only
+ SSL keys and certificates. If such files are present on the target server
+ it is recommended to remove them before running
+ <application>pg_rewind</application>. After doing the rewind, some of
+ those files may have been copied from the source, in which case it may
+ be necessary to remove the data copied and restore back the set of links
+ used before the rewind.
+ </para>
+ </warning>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_rewind</application> accepts the following command-line
+ arguments:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-D <replaceable class="parameter">directory</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--target-pgdata=<replaceable class="parameter">directory</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option specifies the target data directory that is synchronized
+ with the source. The target server must be shut down cleanly before
+ running <application>pg_rewind</application>
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--source-pgdata=<replaceable class="parameter">directory</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the file system path to the data directory of the source
+ server to synchronize the target with. This option requires the
+ source server to be cleanly shut down.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--source-server=<replaceable class="parameter">connstr</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies a libpq connection string to connect to the source
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> server to synchronize the target
+ with. The connection must be a normal (non-replication) connection
+ with a role having sufficient permissions to execute the functions
+ used by <application>pg_rewind</application> on the source server
+ (see Notes section for details) or a superuser role. This option
+ requires the source server to be running and accepting connections.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-R</option></term>
+ <term><option>--write-recovery-conf</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Create <filename>standby.signal</filename> and append connection
+ settings to <filename>postgresql.auto.conf</filename> in the output
+ directory. <literal>--source-server</literal> is mandatory with
+ this option.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-n</option></term>
+ <term><option>--dry-run</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do everything except actually modifying the target directory.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-N</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-sync</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ By default, <command>pg_rewind</command> will wait for all files
+ to be written safely to disk. This option causes
+ <command>pg_rewind</command> to return without waiting, which is
+ faster, but means that a subsequent operating system crash can leave
+ the data directory corrupt. Generally, this option is useful for
+ testing but should not be used on a production
+ installation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-P</option></term>
+ <term><option>--progress</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Enables progress reporting. Turning this on will deliver an approximate
+ progress report while copying data from the source cluster.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-c</option></term>
+ <term><option>--restore-target-wal</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Use <varname>restore_command</varname> defined in the target cluster
+ configuration to retrieve WAL files from the WAL archive if these
+ files are no longer available in the <filename>pg_wal</filename>
+ directory.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--debug</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print verbose debugging output that is mostly useful for developers
+ debugging <application>pg_rewind</application>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-ensure-shutdown</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_rewind</application> requires that the target server
+ is cleanly shut down before rewinding. By default, if the target server
+ is not shut down cleanly, <application>pg_rewind</application> starts
+ the target server in single-user mode to complete crash recovery first,
+ and stops it.
+ By passing this option, <application>pg_rewind</application> skips
+ this and errors out immediately if the server is not cleanly shut
+ down. Users are expected to handle the situation themselves in that
+ case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-V</option></term>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem><para>Display version information, then exit.</para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem><para>Show help, then exit.</para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Environment</title>
+
+ <para>
+ When <option>--source-server</option> option is used,
+ <application>pg_rewind</application> also uses the environment variables
+ supported by <application>libpq</application> (see <xref linkend="libpq-envars"/>).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The environment variable <envar>PG_COLOR</envar> specifies whether to use
+ color in diagnostic messages. Possible values are
+ <literal>always</literal>, <literal>auto</literal> and
+ <literal>never</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ When executing <application>pg_rewind</application> using an online
+ cluster as source, a role having sufficient permissions to execute the
+ functions used by <application>pg_rewind</application> on the source
+ cluster can be used instead of a superuser. Here is how to create such
+ a role, named <literal>rewind_user</literal> here:
+<programlisting>
+CREATE USER rewind_user LOGIN;
+GRANT EXECUTE ON function pg_catalog.pg_ls_dir(text, boolean, boolean) TO rewind_user;
+GRANT EXECUTE ON function pg_catalog.pg_stat_file(text, boolean) TO rewind_user;
+GRANT EXECUTE ON function pg_catalog.pg_read_binary_file(text) TO rewind_user;
+GRANT EXECUTE ON function pg_catalog.pg_read_binary_file(text, bigint, bigint, boolean) TO rewind_user;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When executing <application>pg_rewind</application> using an online
+ cluster as source which has been recently promoted, it is necessary
+ to execute a <command>CHECKPOINT</command> after promotion such that its
+ control file reflects up-to-date timeline information, which is used by
+ <application>pg_rewind</application> to check if the target cluster
+ can be rewound using the designated source cluster.
+ </para>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>How It Works</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The basic idea is to copy all file system-level changes from the source
+ cluster to the target cluster:
+ </para>
+
+ <procedure>
+ <step>
+ <para>
+ Scan the WAL log of the target cluster, starting from the last
+ checkpoint before the point where the source cluster's timeline
+ history forked off from the target cluster. For each WAL record,
+ record each data block that was touched. This yields a list of all
+ the data blocks that were changed in the target cluster, after the
+ source cluster forked off. If some of the WAL files are no longer
+ available, try re-running <application>pg_rewind</application> with
+ the <option>-c</option> option to search for the missing files in
+ the WAL archive.
+ </para>
+ </step>
+ <step>
+ <para>
+ Copy all those changed blocks from the source cluster to
+ the target cluster, either using direct file system access
+ (<option>--source-pgdata</option>) or SQL (<option>--source-server</option>).
+ Relation files are now in a state equivalent to the moment of the last
+ completed checkpoint prior to the point at which the WAL timelines of the
+ source and target diverged plus the current state on the source of any
+ blocks changed on the target after that divergence.
+ </para>
+ </step>
+ <step>
+ <para>
+ Copy all other files, including new relation files, WAL segments,
+ <filename>pg_xact</filename>, and configuration files from the source
+ cluster to the target cluster. Similarly to base backups, the contents
+ of the directories <filename>pg_dynshmem/</filename>,
+ <filename>pg_notify/</filename>, <filename>pg_replslot/</filename>,
+ <filename>pg_serial/</filename>, <filename>pg_snapshots/</filename>,
+ <filename>pg_stat_tmp/</filename>, and <filename>pg_subtrans/</filename>
+ are omitted from the data copied from the source cluster. The files
+ <filename>backup_label</filename>,
+ <filename>tablespace_map</filename>,
+ <filename>pg_internal.init</filename>,
+ <filename>postmaster.opts</filename>, and
+ <filename>postmaster.pid</filename>, as well as any file or directory
+ beginning with <filename>pgsql_tmp</filename>, are omitted.
+ </para>
+ </step>
+ <step>
+ <para>
+ Create a <filename>backup_label</filename> file to begin WAL replay at
+ the checkpoint created at failover and configure the
+ <filename>pg_control</filename> file with a minimum consistency LSN
+ defined as the result of <literal>pg_current_wal_insert_lsn()</literal>
+ when rewinding from a live source or the last checkpoint LSN when
+ rewinding from a stopped source.
+ </para>
+ </step>
+ <step>
+ <para>
+ When starting the target, <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> replays
+ all the required WAL, resulting in a data directory in a consistent
+ state.
+ </para>
+ </step>
+ </procedure>
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_verifybackup.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_verifybackup.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5f83c98
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_verifybackup.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,289 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_verifybackup.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="app-pgverifybackup">
+ <indexterm zone="app-pgverifybackup">
+ <primary>pg_verifybackup</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>pg_verifybackup</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>pg_verifybackup</refname>
+ <refpurpose>verify the integrity of a base backup of a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> cluster</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_verifybackup</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_verifybackup</application> is used to check the
+ integrity of a database cluster backup taken using
+ <command>pg_basebackup</command> against a
+ <literal>backup_manifest</literal> generated by the server at the time
+ of the backup. The backup must be stored in the "plain"
+ format; a "tar" format backup can be checked after extracting it.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ It is important to note that the validation which is performed by
+ <application>pg_verifybackup</application> does not and cannot include
+ every check which will be performed by a running server when attempting
+ to make use of the backup. Even if you use this tool, you should still
+ perform test restores and verify that the resulting databases work as
+ expected and that they appear to contain the correct data. However,
+ <application>pg_verifybackup</application> can detect many problems
+ that commonly occur due to storage problems or user error.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Backup verification proceeds in four stages. First,
+ <literal>pg_verifybackup</literal> reads the
+ <literal>backup_manifest</literal> file. If that file
+ does not exist, cannot be read, is malformed, or fails verification
+ against its own internal checksum, <literal>pg_verifybackup</literal>
+ will terminate with a fatal error.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Second, <literal>pg_verifybackup</literal> will attempt to verify that
+ the data files currently stored on disk are exactly the same as the data
+ files which the server intended to send, with some exceptions that are
+ described below. Extra and missing files will be detected, with a few
+ exceptions. This step will ignore the presence or absence of, or any
+ modifications to, <literal>postgresql.auto.conf</literal>,
+ <literal>standby.signal</literal>, and <literal>recovery.signal</literal>,
+ because it is expected that these files may have been created or modified
+ as part of the process of taking the backup. It also won't complain about
+ a <literal>backup_manifest</literal> file in the target directory or
+ about anything inside <literal>pg_wal</literal>, even though these
+ files won't be listed in the backup manifest. Only files are checked;
+ the presence or absence of directories is not verified, except
+ indirectly: if a directory is missing, any files it should have contained
+ will necessarily also be missing.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Next, <literal>pg_verifybackup</literal> will checksum all the files,
+ compare the checksums against the values in the manifest, and emit errors
+ for any files for which the computed checksum does not match the
+ checksum stored in the manifest. This step is not performed for any files
+ which produced errors in the previous step, since they are already known
+ to have problems. Files which were ignored in the previous step are also
+ ignored in this step.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Finally, <literal>pg_verifybackup</literal> will use the manifest to
+ verify that the write-ahead log records which will be needed to recover
+ the backup are present and that they can be read and parsed. The
+ <literal>backup_manifest</literal> contains information about which
+ write-ahead log records will be needed, and
+ <literal>pg_verifybackup</literal> will use that information to
+ invoke <literal>pg_waldump</literal> to parse those write-ahead log
+ records. The <literal>--quiet</literal> flag will be used, so that
+ <literal>pg_waldump</literal> will only report errors, without producing
+ any other output. While this level of verification is sufficient to
+ detect obvious problems such as a missing file or one whose internal
+ checksums do not match, they aren't extensive enough to detect every
+ possible problem that might occur when attempting to recover. For
+ instance, a server bug that produces write-ahead log records that have
+ the correct checksums but specify nonsensical actions can't be detected
+ by this method.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Note that if extra WAL files which are not required to recover the backup
+ are present, they will not be checked by this tool, although
+ a separate invocation of <literal>pg_waldump</literal> could be used for
+ that purpose. Also note that WAL verification is version-specific: you
+ must use the version of <literal>pg_verifybackup</literal>, and thus of
+ <literal>pg_waldump</literal>, which pertains to the backup being checked.
+ In contrast, the data file integrity checks should work with any version
+ of the server that generates a <literal>backup_manifest</literal> file.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_verifybackup</application> accepts the following
+ command-line arguments:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-e</option></term>
+ <term><option>--exit-on-error</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Exit as soon as a problem with the backup is detected. If this option
+ is not specified, <literal>pg_verifybackup</literal> will continue
+ checking the backup even after a problem has been detected, and will
+ report all problems detected as errors.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-i <replaceable class="parameter">path</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--ignore=<replaceable class="parameter">path</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Ignore the specified file or directory, which should be expressed
+ as a relative path name, when comparing the list of data files
+ actually present in the backup to those listed in the
+ <literal>backup_manifest</literal> file. If a directory is
+ specified, this option affects the entire subtree rooted at that
+ location. Complaints about extra files, missing files, file size
+ differences, or checksum mismatches will be suppressed if the
+ relative path name matches the specified path name. This option
+ can be specified multiple times.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-m <replaceable class="parameter">path</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--manifest-path=<replaceable class="parameter">path</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Use the manifest file at the specified path, rather than one located
+ in the root of the backup directory.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-n</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-parse-wal</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Don't attempt to parse write-ahead log data that will be needed
+ to recover from this backup.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-q</option></term>
+ <term><option>--quiet</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Don't print anything when a backup is successfully verified.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-s</option></term>
+ <term><option>--skip-checksums</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not verify data file checksums. The presence or absence of
+ files and the sizes of those files will still be checked. This is
+ much faster, because the files themselves do not need to be read.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-w <replaceable class="parameter">path</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--wal-directory=<replaceable class="parameter">path</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Try to parse WAL files stored in the specified directory, rather than
+ in <literal>pg_wal</literal>. This may be useful if the backup is
+ stored in a separate location from the WAL archive.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Other options are also available:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-V</option></term>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the <application>pg_verifybackup</application> version and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show help about <application>pg_verifybackup</application> command
+ line arguments, and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To create a base backup of the server at <literal>mydbserver</literal> and
+ verify the integrity of the backup:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_basebackup -h mydbserver -D /usr/local/pgsql/data</userinput>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_verifybackup /usr/local/pgsql/data</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To create a base backup of the server at <literal>mydbserver</literal>, move
+ the manifest somewhere outside the backup directory, and verify the
+ backup:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_basebackup -h mydbserver -D /usr/local/pgsql/backup1234</userinput>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>mv /usr/local/pgsql/backup1234/backup_manifest /my/secure/location/backup_manifest.1234</userinput>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_verifybackup -m /my/secure/location/backup_manifest.1234 /usr/local/pgsql/backup1234</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To verify a backup while ignoring a file that was added manually to the
+ backup directory, and also skipping checksum verification:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_basebackup -h mydbserver -D /usr/local/pgsql/data</userinput>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>edit /usr/local/pgsql/data/note.to.self</userinput>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>pg_verifybackup --ignore=note.to.self --skip-checksums /usr/local/pgsql/data</userinput>
+</screen></para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="app-pgbasebackup"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_waldump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_waldump.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5fcdfe2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_waldump.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,273 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_waldump.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="pgwaldump">
+ <indexterm zone="pgwaldump">
+ <primary>pg_waldump</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>pg_waldump</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>pg_waldump</refname>
+ <refpurpose>display a human-readable rendering of the write-ahead log of a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database cluster</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_waldump</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat" choice="opt"><option>option</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>startseg</option><arg choice="opt"><option>endseg</option></arg></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1 id="r1-app-pgwaldump-1">
+ <title>Description</title>
+ <para>
+ <command>pg_waldump</command> displays the write-ahead log (WAL) and is mainly
+ useful for debugging or educational purposes.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This utility can only be run by the user who installed the server, because
+ it requires read-only access to the data directory.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The following command-line options control the location and format of the
+ output:
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">startseg</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Start reading at the specified log segment file. This implicitly determines
+ the path in which files will be searched for, and the timeline to use.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">endseg</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Stop after reading the specified log segment file.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-b</option></term>
+ <term><option>--bkp-details</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Output detailed information about backup blocks.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-e <replaceable>end</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--end=<replaceable>end</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Stop reading at the specified WAL location, instead of reading to the
+ end of the log stream.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-f</option></term>
+ <term><option>--follow</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ After reaching the end of valid WAL, keep polling once per second for
+ new WAL to appear.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-n <replaceable>limit</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--limit=<replaceable>limit</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Display the specified number of records, then stop.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-p <replaceable>path</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--path=<replaceable>path</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies a directory to search for log segment files or a
+ directory with a <literal>pg_wal</literal> subdirectory that
+ contains such files. The default is to search in the current
+ directory, the <literal>pg_wal</literal> subdirectory of the
+ current directory, and the <literal>pg_wal</literal> subdirectory
+ of <envar>PGDATA</envar>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-q</option></term>
+ <term><option>--quiet</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not print any output, except for errors. This option can be useful
+ when you want to know whether a range of WAL records can be
+ successfully parsed but don't care about the record contents.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-r <replaceable>rmgr</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--rmgr=<replaceable>rmgr</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Only display records generated by the specified resource manager.
+ If <literal>list</literal> is passed as name, print a list of valid resource manager
+ names, and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-s <replaceable>start</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--start=<replaceable>start</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ WAL location at which to start reading. The default is to start reading
+ the first valid log record found in the earliest file found.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-t <replaceable>timeline</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--timeline=<replaceable>timeline</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Timeline from which to read log records. The default is to use the
+ value in <replaceable>startseg</replaceable>, if that is specified; otherwise, the
+ default is 1.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-V</option></term>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the <application>pg_waldump</application> version and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-x <replaceable>xid</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--xid=<replaceable>xid</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Only display records marked with the given transaction ID.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-z</option></term>
+ <term><option>--stats[=record]</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Display summary statistics (number and size of records and
+ full-page images) instead of individual records. Optionally
+ generate statistics per-record instead of per-rmgr.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show help about <application>pg_waldump</application> command line
+ arguments, and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Environment</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PGDATA</envar></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Data directory; see also the <option>-p</option> option.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PG_COLOR</envar></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether to use color in diagnostic messages. Possible values
+ are <literal>always</literal>, <literal>auto</literal> and
+ <literal>never</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+ <para>
+ Can give wrong results when the server is running.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Only the specified timeline is displayed (or the default, if none is
+ specified). Records in other timelines are ignored.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_waldump</application> cannot read WAL files with suffix
+ <literal>.partial</literal>. If those files need to be read, <literal>.partial</literal>
+ suffix needs to be removed from the file name.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="wal-internals"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pgarchivecleanup.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pgarchivecleanup.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e27db3c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pgarchivecleanup.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,208 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/pgarchivecleanup.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="pgarchivecleanup">
+ <indexterm zone="pgarchivecleanup">
+ <primary>pg_archivecleanup</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>pg_archivecleanup</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>pg_archivecleanup</refname>
+ <refpurpose>clean up <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> WAL archive files</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_archivecleanup</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><replaceable>archivelocation</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><replaceable>oldestkeptwalfile</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_archivecleanup</application> is designed to be used as an
+ <literal>archive_cleanup_command</literal> to clean up WAL file archives when
+ running as a standby server (see <xref linkend="warm-standby"/>).
+ <application>pg_archivecleanup</application> can also be used as a standalone program to
+ clean WAL file archives.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To configure a standby
+ server to use <application>pg_archivecleanup</application>, put this into its
+ <filename>postgresql.conf</filename> configuration file:
+<programlisting>
+archive_cleanup_command = 'pg_archivecleanup <replaceable>archivelocation</replaceable> %r'
+</programlisting>
+ where <replaceable>archivelocation</replaceable> is the directory from which WAL segment
+ files should be removed.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ When used within <xref linkend="guc-archive-cleanup-command"/>, all WAL files
+ logically preceding the value of the <literal>%r</literal> argument will be removed
+ from <replaceable>archivelocation</replaceable>. This minimizes the number of files
+ that need to be retained, while preserving crash-restart capability. Use of
+ this parameter is appropriate if the <replaceable>archivelocation</replaceable> is a
+ transient staging area for this particular standby server, but
+ <emphasis>not</emphasis> when the <replaceable>archivelocation</replaceable> is intended as a
+ long-term WAL archive area, or when multiple standby servers are recovering
+ from the same archive location.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ When used as a standalone program all WAL files logically preceding the
+ <replaceable>oldestkeptwalfile</replaceable> will be removed from <replaceable>archivelocation</replaceable>.
+ In this mode, if you specify a <filename>.partial</filename> or <filename>.backup</filename>
+ file name, then only the file prefix will be used as the
+ <replaceable>oldestkeptwalfile</replaceable>. This treatment of <filename>.backup</filename>
+ file name allows you to remove
+ all WAL files archived prior to a specific base backup without error.
+ For example, the following example will remove all files older than
+ WAL file name <filename>000000010000003700000010</filename>:
+<programlisting>
+pg_archivecleanup -d archive 000000010000003700000010.00000020.backup
+
+pg_archivecleanup: keep WAL file "archive/000000010000003700000010" and later
+pg_archivecleanup: removing file "archive/00000001000000370000000F"
+pg_archivecleanup: removing file "archive/00000001000000370000000E"
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_archivecleanup</application> assumes that
+ <replaceable>archivelocation</replaceable> is a directory readable and writable by the
+ server-owning user.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_archivecleanup</application> accepts the following command-line arguments:
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-d</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print lots of debug logging output on <filename>stderr</filename>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-n</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the names of the files that would have been removed on <filename>stdout</filename> (performs a dry run).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-V</option></term>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the <application>pg_archivecleanup</application> version and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-x</option> <replaceable>extension</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Provide an extension
+ that will be stripped from all file names before deciding if they
+ should be deleted. This is typically useful for cleaning up archives
+ that have been compressed during storage, and therefore have had an
+ extension added by the compression program. For example: <literal>-x
+ .gz</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show help about <application>pg_archivecleanup</application> command line
+ arguments, and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Environment</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The environment variable <envar>PG_COLOR</envar> specifies whether to use
+ color in diagnostic messages. Possible values are
+ <literal>always</literal>, <literal>auto</literal> and
+ <literal>never</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_archivecleanup</application> is designed to work with
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 8.0 and later when used as a standalone utility,
+ or with <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 9.0 and later when used as an
+ archive cleanup command.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_archivecleanup</application> is written in C and has an
+ easy-to-modify source code, with specifically designated sections to modify
+ for your own needs
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>On Linux or Unix systems, you might use:
+<programlisting>
+archive_cleanup_command = 'pg_archivecleanup -d /mnt/standby/archive %r 2>>cleanup.log'
+</programlisting>
+ where the archive directory is physically located on the standby server,
+ so that the <varname>archive_command</varname> is accessing it across NFS,
+ but the files are local to the standby.
+ This will:
+ </para>
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ produce debugging output in <filename>cleanup.log</filename>
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ remove no-longer-needed files from the archive directory
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pgbench.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pgbench.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0c60077
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pgbench.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,2436 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/pgbench.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="pgbench">
+ <indexterm zone="pgbench">
+ <primary>pgbench</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>pgbench</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>pgbench</refname>
+ <refpurpose>run a benchmark test on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname></refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pgbench</command>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>-i</option></arg>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><replaceable>dbname</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pgbench</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><replaceable>dbname</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+ <para>
+ <application>pgbench</application> is a simple program for running benchmark
+ tests on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>. It runs the same sequence of SQL
+ commands over and over, possibly in multiple concurrent database sessions,
+ and then calculates the average transaction rate (transactions per second).
+ By default, <application>pgbench</application> tests a scenario that is
+ loosely based on TPC-B, involving five <command>SELECT</command>,
+ <command>UPDATE</command>, and <command>INSERT</command> commands per transaction.
+ However, it is easy to test other cases by writing your own transaction
+ script files.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Typical output from <application>pgbench</application> looks like:
+
+<screen>
+transaction type: &lt;builtin: TPC-B (sort of)&gt;
+scaling factor: 10
+query mode: simple
+number of clients: 10
+number of threads: 1
+number of transactions per client: 1000
+number of transactions actually processed: 10000/10000
+latency average = 11.013 ms
+latency stddev = 7.351 ms
+initial connection time = 45.758 ms
+tps = 896.967014 (without initial connection time)
+</screen>
+
+ The first six lines report some of the most important parameter
+ settings. The next line reports the number of transactions completed
+ and intended (the latter being just the product of number of clients
+ and number of transactions per client); these will be equal unless the run
+ failed before completion. (In <option>-T</option> mode, only the actual
+ number of transactions is printed.)
+ The last line reports the number of transactions per second.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The default TPC-B-like transaction test requires specific tables to be
+ set up beforehand. <application>pgbench</application> should be invoked with
+ the <option>-i</option> (initialize) option to create and populate these
+ tables. (When you are testing a custom script, you don't need this
+ step, but will instead need to do whatever setup your test needs.)
+ Initialization looks like:
+
+<programlisting>
+pgbench -i <optional> <replaceable>other-options</replaceable> </optional> <replaceable>dbname</replaceable>
+</programlisting>
+
+ where <replaceable>dbname</replaceable> is the name of the already-created
+ database to test in. (You may also need <option>-h</option>,
+ <option>-p</option>, and/or <option>-U</option> options to specify how to
+ connect to the database server.)
+ </para>
+
+ <caution>
+ <para>
+ <literal>pgbench -i</literal> creates four tables <structname>pgbench_accounts</structname>,
+ <structname>pgbench_branches</structname>, <structname>pgbench_history</structname>, and
+ <structname>pgbench_tellers</structname>,
+ destroying any existing tables of these names.
+ Be very careful to use another database if you have tables having these
+ names!
+ </para>
+ </caution>
+
+ <para>
+ At the default <quote>scale factor</quote> of 1, the tables initially
+ contain this many rows:
+<screen>
+table # of rows
+---------------------------------
+pgbench_branches 1
+pgbench_tellers 10
+pgbench_accounts 100000
+pgbench_history 0
+</screen>
+ You can (and, for most purposes, probably should) increase the number
+ of rows by using the <option>-s</option> (scale factor) option. The
+ <option>-F</option> (fillfactor) option might also be used at this point.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Once you have done the necessary setup, you can run your benchmark
+ with a command that doesn't include <option>-i</option>, that is
+
+<programlisting>
+pgbench <optional> <replaceable>options</replaceable> </optional> <replaceable>dbname</replaceable>
+</programlisting>
+
+ In nearly all cases, you'll need some options to make a useful test.
+ The most important options are <option>-c</option> (number of clients),
+ <option>-t</option> (number of transactions), <option>-T</option> (time limit),
+ and <option>-f</option> (specify a custom script file).
+ See below for a full list.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The following is divided into three subsections. Different options are
+ used during database initialization and while running benchmarks, but some
+ options are useful in both cases.
+ </para>
+
+ <refsect2 id="pgbench-init-options">
+ <title>Initialization Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pgbench</application> accepts the following command-line
+ initialization arguments:
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">dbname</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the name of the database to test in. If this is
+ not specified, the environment variable
+ <envar>PGDATABASE</envar> is used. If that is not set, the
+ user name specified for the connection is used.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-i</option></term>
+ <term><option>--initialize</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Required to invoke initialization mode.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-I <replaceable>init_steps</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--init-steps=<replaceable>init_steps</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Perform just a selected set of the normal initialization steps.
+ <replaceable>init_steps</replaceable> specifies the
+ initialization steps to be performed, using one character per step.
+ Each step is invoked in the specified order.
+ The default is <literal>dtgvp</literal>.
+ The available steps are:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>d</literal> (Drop)</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Drop any existing <application>pgbench</application> tables.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>t</literal> (create Tables)</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Create the tables used by the
+ standard <application>pgbench</application> scenario, namely
+ <structname>pgbench_accounts</structname>,
+ <structname>pgbench_branches</structname>,
+ <structname>pgbench_history</structname>, and
+ <structname>pgbench_tellers</structname>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>g</literal> or <literal>G</literal> (Generate data, client-side or server-side)</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Generate data and load it into the standard tables,
+ replacing any data already present.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ With <literal>g</literal> (client-side data generation),
+ data is generated in <command>pgbench</command> client and then
+ sent to the server. This uses the client/server bandwidth
+ extensively through a <command>COPY</command>.
+ Using <literal>g</literal> causes logging to print one message
+ every 100,000 rows while generating data for the
+ <structname>pgbench_accounts</structname> table.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ With <literal>G</literal> (server-side data generation),
+ only small queries are sent from the <command>pgbench</command>
+ client and then data is actually generated in the server.
+ No significant bandwidth is required for this variant, but
+ the server will do more work.
+ Using <literal>G</literal> causes logging not to print any progress
+ message while generating data.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The default initialization behavior uses client-side data
+ generation (equivalent to <literal>g</literal>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>v</literal> (Vacuum)</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Invoke <command>VACUUM</command> on the standard tables.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>p</literal> (create Primary keys)</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Create primary key indexes on the standard tables.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>f</literal> (create Foreign keys)</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Create foreign key constraints between the standard tables.
+ (Note that this step is not performed by default.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist></para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-F</option> <replaceable>fillfactor</replaceable></term>
+ <term><option>--fillfactor=</option><replaceable>fillfactor</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Create the <structname>pgbench_accounts</structname>,
+ <structname>pgbench_tellers</structname> and
+ <structname>pgbench_branches</structname> tables with the given fillfactor.
+ Default is 100.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-n</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-vacuum</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Perform no vacuuming during initialization.
+ (This option suppresses the <literal>v</literal> initialization step,
+ even if it was specified in <option>-I</option>.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-q</option></term>
+ <term><option>--quiet</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Switch logging to quiet mode, producing only one progress message per 5
+ seconds. The default logging prints one message each 100,000 rows, which
+ often outputs many lines per second (especially on good hardware).
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ This setting has no effect if <literal>G</literal> is specified
+ in <option>-I</option>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-s</option> <replaceable>scale_factor</replaceable></term>
+ <term><option>--scale=</option><replaceable>scale_factor</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Multiply the number of rows generated by the scale factor.
+ For example, <literal>-s 100</literal> will create 10,000,000 rows
+ in the <structname>pgbench_accounts</structname> table. Default is 1.
+ When the scale is 20,000 or larger, the columns used to
+ hold account identifiers (<structfield>aid</structfield> columns)
+ will switch to using larger integers (<type>bigint</type>),
+ in order to be big enough to hold the range of account
+ identifiers.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--foreign-keys</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Create foreign key constraints between the standard tables.
+ (This option adds the <literal>f</literal> step to the initialization
+ step sequence, if it is not already present.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--index-tablespace=<replaceable>index_tablespace</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Create indexes in the specified tablespace, rather than the default
+ tablespace.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--partition-method=<replaceable>NAME</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Create a partitioned <literal>pgbench_accounts</literal> table with
+ <replaceable>NAME</replaceable> method.
+ Expected values are <literal>range</literal> or <literal>hash</literal>.
+ This option requires that <option>--partitions</option> is set to non-zero.
+ If unspecified, default is <literal>range</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--partitions=<replaceable>NUM</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Create a partitioned <literal>pgbench_accounts</literal> table with
+ <replaceable>NUM</replaceable> partitions of nearly equal size for
+ the scaled number of accounts.
+ Default is <literal>0</literal>, meaning no partitioning.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--tablespace=<replaceable>tablespace</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Create tables in the specified tablespace, rather than the default
+ tablespace.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--unlogged-tables</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Create all tables as unlogged tables, rather than permanent tables.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2 id="pgbench-run-options">
+ <title>Benchmarking Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pgbench</application> accepts the following command-line
+ benchmarking arguments:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-b</option> <replaceable>scriptname[@weight]</replaceable></term>
+ <term><option>--builtin</option>=<replaceable>scriptname[@weight]</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Add the specified built-in script to the list of scripts to be executed.
+ Available built-in scripts are: <literal>tpcb-like</literal>,
+ <literal>simple-update</literal> and <literal>select-only</literal>.
+ Unambiguous prefixes of built-in names are accepted.
+ With the special name <literal>list</literal>, show the list of built-in scripts
+ and exit immediately.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Optionally, write an integer weight after <literal>@</literal> to
+ adjust the probability of selecting this script versus other ones.
+ The default weight is 1.
+ See below for details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-c</option> <replaceable>clients</replaceable></term>
+ <term><option>--client=</option><replaceable>clients</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Number of clients simulated, that is, number of concurrent database
+ sessions. Default is 1.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-C</option></term>
+ <term><option>--connect</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Establish a new connection for each transaction, rather than
+ doing it just once per client session.
+ This is useful to measure the connection overhead.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-d</option></term>
+ <term><option>--debug</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print debugging output.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-D</option> <replaceable>varname</replaceable><literal>=</literal><replaceable>value</replaceable></term>
+ <term><option>--define=</option><replaceable>varname</replaceable><literal>=</literal><replaceable>value</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Define a variable for use by a custom script (see below).
+ Multiple <option>-D</option> options are allowed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-f</option> <replaceable>filename[@weight]</replaceable></term>
+ <term><option>--file=</option><replaceable>filename[@weight]</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Add a transaction script read from <replaceable>filename</replaceable>
+ to the list of scripts to be executed.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Optionally, write an integer weight after <literal>@</literal> to
+ adjust the probability of selecting this script versus other ones.
+ The default weight is 1.
+ (To use a script file name that includes an <literal>@</literal>
+ character, append a weight so that there is no ambiguity, for
+ example <literal>filen@me@1</literal>.)
+ See below for details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-j</option> <replaceable>threads</replaceable></term>
+ <term><option>--jobs=</option><replaceable>threads</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Number of worker threads within <application>pgbench</application>.
+ Using more than one thread can be helpful on multi-CPU machines.
+ Clients are distributed as evenly as possible among available threads.
+ Default is 1.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-l</option></term>
+ <term><option>--log</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Write information about each transaction to a log file.
+ See below for details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-L</option> <replaceable>limit</replaceable></term>
+ <term><option>--latency-limit=</option><replaceable>limit</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Transactions that last more than <replaceable>limit</replaceable> milliseconds
+ are counted and reported separately, as <firstterm>late</firstterm>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ When throttling is used (<option>--rate=...</option>), transactions that
+ lag behind schedule by more than <replaceable>limit</replaceable> ms, and thus
+ have no hope of meeting the latency limit, are not sent to the server
+ at all. They are counted and reported separately as
+ <firstterm>skipped</firstterm>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-M</option> <replaceable>querymode</replaceable></term>
+ <term><option>--protocol=</option><replaceable>querymode</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Protocol to use for submitting queries to the server:
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para><literal>simple</literal>: use simple query protocol.</para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para><literal>extended</literal>: use extended query protocol.</para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para><literal>prepared</literal>: use extended query protocol with prepared statements.</para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+
+ In the <literal>prepared</literal> mode, <application>pgbench</application>
+ reuses the parse analysis result starting from the second query
+ iteration, so <application>pgbench</application> runs faster
+ than in other modes.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The default is simple query protocol. (See <xref linkend="protocol"/>
+ for more information.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-n</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-vacuum</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Perform no vacuuming before running the test.
+ This option is <emphasis>necessary</emphasis>
+ if you are running a custom test scenario that does not include
+ the standard tables <structname>pgbench_accounts</structname>,
+ <structname>pgbench_branches</structname>, <structname>pgbench_history</structname>, and
+ <structname>pgbench_tellers</structname>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-N</option></term>
+ <term><option>--skip-some-updates</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Run built-in simple-update script.
+ Shorthand for <option>-b simple-update</option>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-P</option> <replaceable>sec</replaceable></term>
+ <term><option>--progress=</option><replaceable>sec</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show progress report every <replaceable>sec</replaceable> seconds. The report
+ includes the time since the beginning of the run, the TPS since the
+ last report, and the transaction latency average and standard
+ deviation since the last report. Under throttling (<option>-R</option>),
+ the latency is computed with respect to the transaction scheduled
+ start time, not the actual transaction beginning time, thus it also
+ includes the average schedule lag time.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-r</option></term>
+ <term><option>--report-latencies</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Report the average per-statement latency (execution time from the
+ perspective of the client) of each command after the benchmark
+ finishes. See below for details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-R</option> <replaceable>rate</replaceable></term>
+ <term><option>--rate=</option><replaceable>rate</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Execute transactions targeting the specified rate instead of running
+ as fast as possible (the default). The rate is given in transactions
+ per second. If the targeted rate is above the maximum possible rate,
+ the rate limit won't impact the results.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The rate is targeted by starting transactions along a
+ Poisson-distributed schedule time line. The expected start time
+ schedule moves forward based on when the client first started, not
+ when the previous transaction ended. That approach means that when
+ transactions go past their original scheduled end time, it is
+ possible for later ones to catch up again.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ When throttling is active, the transaction latency reported at the
+ end of the run is calculated from the scheduled start times, so it
+ includes the time each transaction had to wait for the previous
+ transaction to finish. The wait time is called the schedule lag time,
+ and its average and maximum are also reported separately. The
+ transaction latency with respect to the actual transaction start time,
+ i.e., the time spent executing the transaction in the database, can be
+ computed by subtracting the schedule lag time from the reported
+ latency.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If <option>--latency-limit</option> is used together with <option>--rate</option>,
+ a transaction can lag behind so much that it is already over the
+ latency limit when the previous transaction ends, because the latency
+ is calculated from the scheduled start time. Such transactions are
+ not sent to the server, but are skipped altogether and counted
+ separately.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A high schedule lag time is an indication that the system cannot
+ process transactions at the specified rate, with the chosen number of
+ clients and threads. When the average transaction execution time is
+ longer than the scheduled interval between each transaction, each
+ successive transaction will fall further behind, and the schedule lag
+ time will keep increasing the longer the test run is. When that
+ happens, you will have to reduce the specified transaction rate.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-s</option> <replaceable>scale_factor</replaceable></term>
+ <term><option>--scale=</option><replaceable>scale_factor</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Report the specified scale factor in <application>pgbench</application>'s
+ output. With the built-in tests, this is not necessary; the
+ correct scale factor will be detected by counting the number of
+ rows in the <structname>pgbench_branches</structname> table.
+ However, when testing only custom benchmarks (<option>-f</option> option),
+ the scale factor will be reported as 1 unless this option is used.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-S</option></term>
+ <term><option>--select-only</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Run built-in select-only script.
+ Shorthand for <option>-b select-only</option>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-t</option> <replaceable>transactions</replaceable></term>
+ <term><option>--transactions=</option><replaceable>transactions</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Number of transactions each client runs. Default is 10.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-T</option> <replaceable>seconds</replaceable></term>
+ <term><option>--time=</option><replaceable>seconds</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Run the test for this many seconds, rather than a fixed number of
+ transactions per client. <option>-t</option> and
+ <option>-T</option> are mutually exclusive.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-v</option></term>
+ <term><option>--vacuum-all</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Vacuum all four standard tables before running the test.
+ With neither <option>-n</option> nor <option>-v</option>, <application>pgbench</application> will vacuum the
+ <structname>pgbench_tellers</structname> and <structname>pgbench_branches</structname>
+ tables, and will truncate <structname>pgbench_history</structname>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--aggregate-interval=<replaceable>seconds</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Length of aggregation interval (in seconds). May be used only
+ with <option>-l</option> option. With this option, the log contains
+ per-interval summary data, as described below.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--log-prefix=<replaceable>prefix</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Set the filename prefix for the log files created by
+ <option>--log</option>. The default is <literal>pgbench_log</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--progress-timestamp</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ When showing progress (option <option>-P</option>), use a timestamp
+ (Unix epoch) instead of the number of seconds since the
+ beginning of the run. The unit is in seconds, with millisecond
+ precision after the dot.
+ This helps compare logs generated by various tools.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--random-seed=</option><replaceable>seed</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Set random generator seed. Seeds the system random number generator,
+ which then produces a sequence of initial generator states, one for
+ each thread.
+ Values for <replaceable>seed</replaceable> may be:
+ <literal>time</literal> (the default, the seed is based on the current time),
+ <literal>rand</literal> (use a strong random source, failing if none
+ is available), or an unsigned decimal integer value.
+ The random generator is invoked explicitly from a pgbench script
+ (<literal>random...</literal> functions) or implicitly (for instance option
+ <option>--rate</option> uses it to schedule transactions).
+ When explicitly set, the value used for seeding is shown on the terminal.
+ Any value allowed for <replaceable>seed</replaceable> may also be
+ provided through the environment variable
+ <literal>PGBENCH_RANDOM_SEED</literal>.
+ To ensure that the provided seed impacts all possible uses, put this option
+ first or use the environment variable.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Setting the seed explicitly allows to reproduce a <command>pgbench</command>
+ run exactly, as far as random numbers are concerned.
+ As the random state is managed per thread, this means the exact same
+ <command>pgbench</command> run for an identical invocation if there is one
+ client per thread and there are no external or data dependencies.
+ From a statistical viewpoint reproducing runs exactly is a bad idea because
+ it can hide the performance variability or improve performance unduly,
+ e.g., by hitting the same pages as a previous run.
+ However, it may also be of great help for debugging, for instance
+ re-running a tricky case which leads to an error.
+ Use wisely.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--sampling-rate=<replaceable>rate</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sampling rate, used when writing data into the log, to reduce the
+ amount of log generated. If this option is given, only the specified
+ fraction of transactions are logged. 1.0 means all transactions will
+ be logged, 0.05 means only 5% of the transactions will be logged.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Remember to take the sampling rate into account when processing the
+ log file. For example, when computing TPS values, you need to multiply
+ the numbers accordingly (e.g., with 0.01 sample rate, you'll only get
+ 1/100 of the actual TPS).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--show-script=</option><replaceable>scriptname</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show the actual code of builtin script <replaceable>scriptname</replaceable>
+ on stderr, and exit immediately.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2 id="pgbench-common-options">
+ <title>Common Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pgbench</application> also accepts the following common command-line
+ arguments for connection parameters:
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-h</option> <replaceable>hostname</replaceable></term>
+ <term><option>--host=</option><replaceable>hostname</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The database server's host name
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-p</option> <replaceable>port</replaceable></term>
+ <term><option>--port=</option><replaceable>port</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The database server's port number
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-U</option> <replaceable>login</replaceable></term>
+ <term><option>--username=</option><replaceable>login</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The user name to connect as
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-V</option></term>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the <application>pgbench</application> version and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show help about <application>pgbench</application> command line
+ arguments, and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Exit Status</title>
+
+ <para>
+ A successful run will exit with status 0. Exit status 1 indicates static
+ problems such as invalid command-line options. Errors during the run such
+ as database errors or problems in the script will result in exit status 2.
+ In the latter case, <application>pgbench</application> will print partial
+ results.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Environment</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PGDATABASE</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGHOST</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGPORT</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGUSER</envar></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Default connection parameters.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ This utility, like most other <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> utilities,
+ uses the environment variables supported by <application>libpq</application>
+ (see <xref linkend="libpq-envars"/>).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The environment variable <envar>PG_COLOR</envar> specifies whether to use
+ color in diagnostic messages. Possible values are
+ <literal>always</literal>, <literal>auto</literal> and
+ <literal>never</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>What Is the <quote>Transaction</quote> Actually Performed in <application>pgbench</application>?</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pgbench</application> executes test scripts chosen randomly
+ from a specified list.
+ The scripts may include built-in scripts specified with <option>-b</option>
+ and user-provided scripts specified with <option>-f</option>.
+ Each script may be given a relative weight specified after an
+ <literal>@</literal> so as to change its selection probability.
+ The default weight is <literal>1</literal>.
+ Scripts with a weight of <literal>0</literal> are ignored.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The default built-in transaction script (also invoked with <option>-b tpcb-like</option>)
+ issues seven commands per transaction over randomly chosen <literal>aid</literal>,
+ <literal>tid</literal>, <literal>bid</literal> and <literal>delta</literal>.
+ The scenario is inspired by the TPC-B benchmark, but is not actually TPC-B,
+ hence the name.
+ </para>
+
+ <orderedlist>
+ <listitem><para><literal>BEGIN;</literal></para></listitem>
+ <listitem><para><literal>UPDATE pgbench_accounts SET abalance = abalance + :delta WHERE aid = :aid;</literal></para></listitem>
+ <listitem><para><literal>SELECT abalance FROM pgbench_accounts WHERE aid = :aid;</literal></para></listitem>
+ <listitem><para><literal>UPDATE pgbench_tellers SET tbalance = tbalance + :delta WHERE tid = :tid;</literal></para></listitem>
+ <listitem><para><literal>UPDATE pgbench_branches SET bbalance = bbalance + :delta WHERE bid = :bid;</literal></para></listitem>
+ <listitem><para><literal>INSERT INTO pgbench_history (tid, bid, aid, delta, mtime) VALUES (:tid, :bid, :aid, :delta, CURRENT_TIMESTAMP);</literal></para></listitem>
+ <listitem><para><literal>END;</literal></para></listitem>
+ </orderedlist>
+
+ <para>
+ If you select the <literal>simple-update</literal> built-in (also <option>-N</option>),
+ steps 4 and 5 aren't included in the transaction.
+ This will avoid update contention on these tables, but
+ it makes the test case even less like TPC-B.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If you select the <literal>select-only</literal> built-in (also <option>-S</option>),
+ only the <command>SELECT</command> is issued.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Custom Scripts</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pgbench</application> has support for running custom
+ benchmark scenarios by replacing the default transaction script
+ (described above) with a transaction script read from a file
+ (<option>-f</option> option). In this case a <quote>transaction</quote>
+ counts as one execution of a script file.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A script file contains one or more SQL commands terminated by
+ semicolons. Empty lines and lines beginning with
+ <literal>--</literal> are ignored. Script files can also contain
+ <quote>meta commands</quote>, which are interpreted by <application>pgbench</application>
+ itself, as described below.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ Before <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 9.6, SQL commands in script files
+ were terminated by newlines, and so they could not be continued across
+ lines. Now a semicolon is <emphasis>required</emphasis> to separate consecutive
+ SQL commands (though an SQL command does not need one if it is followed
+ by a meta command). If you need to create a script file that works with
+ both old and new versions of <application>pgbench</application>, be sure to write
+ each SQL command on a single line ending with a semicolon.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+
+ <para>
+ There is a simple variable-substitution facility for script files.
+ Variable names must consist of letters (including non-Latin letters),
+ digits, and underscores, with the first character not being a digit.
+ Variables can be set by the command-line <option>-D</option> option,
+ explained above, or by the meta commands explained below.
+ In addition to any variables preset by <option>-D</option> command-line options,
+ there are a few variables that are preset automatically, listed in
+ <xref linkend="pgbench-automatic-variables"/>. A value specified for these
+ variables using <option>-D</option> takes precedence over the automatic presets.
+ Once set, a variable's
+ value can be inserted into an SQL command by writing
+ <literal>:</literal><replaceable>variablename</replaceable>. When running more than
+ one client session, each session has its own set of variables.
+ <application>pgbench</application> supports up to 255 variable uses in one
+ statement.
+ </para>
+
+ <table id="pgbench-automatic-variables">
+ <title>pgbench Automatic Variables</title>
+ <tgroup cols="2">
+ <colspec colname="col1" colwidth="1*"/>
+ <colspec colname="col2" colwidth="2*"/>
+ <thead>
+ <row>
+ <entry>Variable</entry>
+ <entry>Description</entry>
+ </row>
+ </thead>
+
+ <tbody>
+ <row>
+ <entry> <literal>client_id</literal> </entry>
+ <entry>unique number identifying the client session (starts from zero)</entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry> <literal>default_seed</literal> </entry>
+ <entry>seed used in hash and pseudorandom permutation functions by default</entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry> <literal>random_seed</literal> </entry>
+ <entry>random generator seed (unless overwritten with <option>-D</option>)</entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry> <literal>scale</literal> </entry>
+ <entry>current scale factor</entry>
+ </row>
+ </tbody>
+ </tgroup>
+ </table>
+
+ <para>
+ Script file meta commands begin with a backslash (<literal>\</literal>) and
+ normally extend to the end of the line, although they can be continued
+ to additional lines by writing backslash-return.
+ Arguments to a meta command are separated by white space.
+ These meta commands are supported:
+ </para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry id='pgbench-metacommand-gset'>
+ <term>
+ <literal>\gset [<replaceable>prefix</replaceable>]</literal>
+ <literal>\aset [<replaceable>prefix</replaceable>]</literal>
+ </term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These commands may be used to end SQL queries, taking the place of the
+ terminating semicolon (<literal>;</literal>).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When the <literal>\gset</literal> command is used, the preceding SQL query is
+ expected to return one row, the columns of which are stored into variables
+ named after column names, and prefixed with <replaceable>prefix</replaceable>
+ if provided.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When the <literal>\aset</literal> command is used, all combined SQL queries
+ (separated by <literal>\;</literal>) have their columns stored into variables
+ named after column names, and prefixed with <replaceable>prefix</replaceable>
+ if provided. If a query returns no row, no assignment is made and the variable
+ can be tested for existence to detect this. If a query returns more than one
+ row, the last value is kept.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <literal>\gset</literal> and <literal>\aset</literal> cannot be used in
+ pipeline mode, since the query results are not yet available by the time
+ the commands would need them.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The following example puts the final account balance from the first query
+ into variable <replaceable>abalance</replaceable>, and fills variables
+ <replaceable>p_two</replaceable> and <replaceable>p_three</replaceable>
+ with integers from the third query.
+ The result of the second query is discarded.
+ The result of the two last combined queries are stored in variables
+ <replaceable>four</replaceable> and <replaceable>five</replaceable>.
+<programlisting>
+UPDATE pgbench_accounts
+ SET abalance = abalance + :delta
+ WHERE aid = :aid
+ RETURNING abalance \gset
+-- compound of two queries
+SELECT 1 \;
+SELECT 2 AS two, 3 AS three \gset p_
+SELECT 4 AS four \; SELECT 5 AS five \aset
+</programlisting></para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\if</literal> <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable></term>
+ <term><literal>\elif</literal> <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable></term>
+ <term><literal>\else</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>\endif</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This group of commands implements nestable conditional blocks,
+ similarly to <literal>psql</literal>'s <xref linkend="psql-metacommand-if"/>.
+ Conditional expressions are identical to those with <literal>\set</literal>,
+ with non-zero values interpreted as true.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id='pgbench-metacommand-set'>
+ <term>
+ <literal>\set <replaceable>varname</replaceable> <replaceable>expression</replaceable></literal>
+ </term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets variable <replaceable>varname</replaceable> to a value calculated
+ from <replaceable>expression</replaceable>.
+ The expression may contain the <literal>NULL</literal> constant,
+ Boolean constants <literal>TRUE</literal> and <literal>FALSE</literal>,
+ integer constants such as <literal>5432</literal>,
+ double constants such as <literal>3.14159</literal>,
+ references to variables <literal>:</literal><replaceable>variablename</replaceable>,
+ <link linkend="pgbench-builtin-operators">operators</link>
+ with their usual SQL precedence and associativity,
+ <link linkend="pgbench-builtin-functions">function calls</link>,
+ SQL <link linkend="functions-case"><token>CASE</token> generic conditional
+ expressions</link> and parentheses.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Functions and most operators return <literal>NULL</literal> on
+ <literal>NULL</literal> input.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For conditional purposes, non zero numerical values are
+ <literal>TRUE</literal>, zero numerical values and <literal>NULL</literal>
+ are <literal>FALSE</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Too large or small integer and double constants, as well as
+ integer arithmetic operators (<literal>+</literal>,
+ <literal>-</literal>, <literal>*</literal> and <literal>/</literal>)
+ raise errors on overflows.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When no final <token>ELSE</token> clause is provided to a
+ <token>CASE</token>, the default value is <literal>NULL</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Examples:
+<programlisting>
+\set ntellers 10 * :scale
+\set aid (1021 * random(1, 100000 * :scale)) % \
+ (100000 * :scale) + 1
+\set divx CASE WHEN :x &lt;&gt; 0 THEN :y/:x ELSE NULL END
+</programlisting></para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term>
+ <literal>\sleep <replaceable>number</replaceable> [ us | ms | s ]</literal>
+ </term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Causes script execution to sleep for the specified duration in
+ microseconds (<literal>us</literal>), milliseconds (<literal>ms</literal>) or seconds
+ (<literal>s</literal>). If the unit is omitted then seconds are the default.
+ <replaceable>number</replaceable> can be either an integer constant or a
+ <literal>:</literal><replaceable>variablename</replaceable> reference to a variable
+ having an integer value.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Example:
+<programlisting>
+\sleep 10 ms
+</programlisting></para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term>
+ <literal>\setshell <replaceable>varname</replaceable> <replaceable>command</replaceable> [ <replaceable>argument</replaceable> ... ]</literal>
+ </term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets variable <replaceable>varname</replaceable> to the result of the shell command
+ <replaceable>command</replaceable> with the given <replaceable>argument</replaceable>(s).
+ The command must return an integer value through its standard output.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <replaceable>command</replaceable> and each <replaceable>argument</replaceable> can be either
+ a text constant or a <literal>:</literal><replaceable>variablename</replaceable> reference
+ to a variable. If you want to use an <replaceable>argument</replaceable> starting
+ with a colon, write an additional colon at the beginning of
+ <replaceable>argument</replaceable>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Example:
+<programlisting>
+\setshell variable_to_be_assigned command literal_argument :variable ::literal_starting_with_colon
+</programlisting></para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term>
+ <literal>\shell <replaceable>command</replaceable> [ <replaceable>argument</replaceable> ... ]</literal>
+ </term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Same as <literal>\setshell</literal>, but the result of the command
+ is discarded.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Example:
+<programlisting>
+\shell command literal_argument :variable ::literal_starting_with_colon
+</programlisting></para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id='pgbench-metacommand-pipeline'>
+ <term><literal>\startpipeline</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>\endpipeline</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These commands delimit the start and end of a pipeline of SQL
+ statements. In pipeline mode, statements are sent to the server
+ without waiting for the results of previous statements. See
+ <xref linkend="libpq-pipeline-mode"/> for more details.
+ Pipeline mode requires the use of extended query protocol.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2 id="pgbench-builtin-operators">
+ <title>Built-in Operators</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The arithmetic, bitwise, comparison and logical operators listed in
+ <xref linkend="pgbench-operators"/> are built into <application>pgbench</application>
+ and may be used in expressions appearing in
+ <link linkend="pgbench-metacommand-set"><literal>\set</literal></link>.
+ The operators are listed in increasing precedence order.
+ Except as noted, operators taking two numeric inputs will produce
+ a double value if either input is double, otherwise they produce
+ an integer result.
+ </para>
+
+ <table id="pgbench-operators">
+ <title>pgbench Operators</title>
+ <tgroup cols="1">
+ <thead>
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ Operator
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Description
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Example(s)
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+ </thead>
+
+ <tbody>
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <replaceable>boolean</replaceable> <literal>OR</literal> <replaceable>boolean</replaceable>
+ <returnvalue><replaceable>boolean</replaceable></returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Logical OR
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>5 or 0</literal>
+ <returnvalue>TRUE</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <replaceable>boolean</replaceable> <literal>AND</literal> <replaceable>boolean</replaceable>
+ <returnvalue><replaceable>boolean</replaceable></returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Logical AND
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>3 and 0</literal>
+ <returnvalue>FALSE</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <literal>NOT</literal> <replaceable>boolean</replaceable>
+ <returnvalue><replaceable>boolean</replaceable></returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Logical NOT
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>not false</literal>
+ <returnvalue>TRUE</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <replaceable>boolean</replaceable> <literal>IS [NOT] (NULL|TRUE|FALSE)</literal>
+ <returnvalue><replaceable>boolean</replaceable></returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Boolean value tests
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>1 is null</literal>
+ <returnvalue>FALSE</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <replaceable>value</replaceable> <literal>ISNULL|NOTNULL</literal>
+ <returnvalue><replaceable>boolean</replaceable></returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Nullness tests
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>1 notnull</literal>
+ <returnvalue>TRUE</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <replaceable>number</replaceable> <literal>=</literal> <replaceable>number</replaceable>
+ <returnvalue><replaceable>boolean</replaceable></returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Equal
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>5 = 4</literal>
+ <returnvalue>FALSE</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <replaceable>number</replaceable> <literal>&lt;&gt;</literal> <replaceable>number</replaceable>
+ <returnvalue><replaceable>boolean</replaceable></returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Not equal
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>5 &lt;&gt; 4</literal>
+ <returnvalue>TRUE</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <replaceable>number</replaceable> <literal>!=</literal> <replaceable>number</replaceable>
+ <returnvalue><replaceable>boolean</replaceable></returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Not equal
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>5 != 5</literal>
+ <returnvalue>FALSE</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <replaceable>number</replaceable> <literal>&lt;</literal> <replaceable>number</replaceable>
+ <returnvalue><replaceable>boolean</replaceable></returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Less than
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>5 &lt; 4</literal>
+ <returnvalue>FALSE</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <replaceable>number</replaceable> <literal>&lt;=</literal> <replaceable>number</replaceable>
+ <returnvalue><replaceable>boolean</replaceable></returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Less than or equal to
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>5 &lt;= 4</literal>
+ <returnvalue>FALSE</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <replaceable>number</replaceable> <literal>&gt;</literal> <replaceable>number</replaceable>
+ <returnvalue><replaceable>boolean</replaceable></returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Greater than
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>5 &gt; 4</literal>
+ <returnvalue>TRUE</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <replaceable>number</replaceable> <literal>&gt;=</literal> <replaceable>number</replaceable>
+ <returnvalue><replaceable>boolean</replaceable></returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Greater than or equal to
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>5 &gt;= 4</literal>
+ <returnvalue>TRUE</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <replaceable>integer</replaceable> <literal>|</literal> <replaceable>integer</replaceable>
+ <returnvalue><replaceable>integer</replaceable></returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Bitwise OR
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>1 | 2</literal>
+ <returnvalue>3</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <replaceable>integer</replaceable> <literal>#</literal> <replaceable>integer</replaceable>
+ <returnvalue><replaceable>integer</replaceable></returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Bitwise XOR
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>1 # 3</literal>
+ <returnvalue>2</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <replaceable>integer</replaceable> <literal>&amp;</literal> <replaceable>integer</replaceable>
+ <returnvalue><replaceable>integer</replaceable></returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Bitwise AND
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>1 &amp; 3</literal>
+ <returnvalue>1</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <literal>~</literal> <replaceable>integer</replaceable>
+ <returnvalue><replaceable>integer</replaceable></returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Bitwise NOT
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>~ 1</literal>
+ <returnvalue>-2</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <replaceable>integer</replaceable> <literal>&lt;&lt;</literal> <replaceable>integer</replaceable>
+ <returnvalue><replaceable>integer</replaceable></returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Bitwise shift left
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>1 &lt;&lt; 2</literal>
+ <returnvalue>4</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <replaceable>integer</replaceable> <literal>&gt;&gt;</literal> <replaceable>integer</replaceable>
+ <returnvalue><replaceable>integer</replaceable></returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Bitwise shift right
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>8 &gt;&gt; 2</literal>
+ <returnvalue>2</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <replaceable>number</replaceable> <literal>+</literal> <replaceable>number</replaceable>
+ <returnvalue><replaceable>number</replaceable></returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Addition
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>5 + 4</literal>
+ <returnvalue>9</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <replaceable>number</replaceable> <literal>-</literal> <replaceable>number</replaceable>
+ <returnvalue><replaceable>number</replaceable></returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Subtraction
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>3 - 2.0</literal>
+ <returnvalue>1.0</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <replaceable>number</replaceable> <literal>*</literal> <replaceable>number</replaceable>
+ <returnvalue><replaceable>number</replaceable></returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Multiplication
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>5 * 4</literal>
+ <returnvalue>20</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <replaceable>number</replaceable> <literal>/</literal> <replaceable>number</replaceable>
+ <returnvalue><replaceable>number</replaceable></returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Division (truncates the result towards zero if both inputs are integers)
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>5 / 3</literal>
+ <returnvalue>1</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <replaceable>integer</replaceable> <literal>%</literal> <replaceable>integer</replaceable>
+ <returnvalue><replaceable>integer</replaceable></returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Modulo (remainder)
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>3 % 2</literal>
+ <returnvalue>1</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <literal>-</literal> <replaceable>number</replaceable>
+ <returnvalue><replaceable>number</replaceable></returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Negation
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>- 2.0</literal>
+ <returnvalue>-2.0</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+ </tbody>
+ </tgroup>
+ </table>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2 id="pgbench-builtin-functions">
+ <title>Built-In Functions</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The functions listed in <xref linkend="pgbench-functions"/> are built
+ into <application>pgbench</application> and may be used in expressions appearing in
+ <link linkend="pgbench-metacommand-set"><literal>\set</literal></link>.
+ </para>
+
+ <!-- list pgbench functions in alphabetical order -->
+ <table id="pgbench-functions">
+ <title>pgbench Functions</title>
+ <tgroup cols="1">
+ <thead>
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ Function
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Description
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Example(s)
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+ </thead>
+
+ <tbody>
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <function>abs</function> ( <replaceable>number</replaceable> )
+ <returnvalue></returnvalue> same type as input
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Absolute value
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>abs(-17)</literal>
+ <returnvalue>17</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <function>debug</function> ( <replaceable>number</replaceable> )
+ <returnvalue></returnvalue> same type as input
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Prints the argument to <systemitem>stderr</systemitem>,
+ and returns the argument.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>debug(5432.1)</literal>
+ <returnvalue>5432.1</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <function>double</function> ( <replaceable>number</replaceable> )
+ <returnvalue>double</returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Casts to double.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>double(5432)</literal>
+ <returnvalue>5432.0</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <function>exp</function> ( <replaceable>number</replaceable> )
+ <returnvalue>double</returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Exponential (<literal>e</literal> raised to the given power)
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>exp(1.0)</literal>
+ <returnvalue>2.718281828459045</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <function>greatest</function> ( <replaceable>number</replaceable> <optional>, <literal>...</literal> </optional> )
+ <returnvalue></returnvalue> <type>double</type> if any argument is double, else <type>integer</type>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Selects the largest value among the arguments.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>greatest(5, 4, 3, 2)</literal>
+ <returnvalue>5</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <function>hash</function> ( <parameter>value</parameter> <optional>, <parameter>seed</parameter> </optional> )
+ <returnvalue>integer</returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ This is an alias for <function>hash_murmur2</function>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>hash(10, 5432)</literal>
+ <returnvalue>-5817877081768721676</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <function>hash_fnv1a</function> ( <parameter>value</parameter> <optional>, <parameter>seed</parameter> </optional> )
+ <returnvalue>integer</returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Computes <ulink url="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fowler%E2%80%93Noll%E2%80%93Vo_hash_function">FNV-1a hash</ulink>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>hash_fnv1a(10, 5432)</literal>
+ <returnvalue>-7793829335365542153</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <function>hash_murmur2</function> ( <parameter>value</parameter> <optional>, <parameter>seed</parameter> </optional> )
+ <returnvalue>integer</returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Computes <ulink url="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MurmurHash">MurmurHash2 hash</ulink>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>hash_murmur2(10, 5432)</literal>
+ <returnvalue>-5817877081768721676</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <function>int</function> ( <replaceable>number</replaceable> )
+ <returnvalue>integer</returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Casts to integer.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>int(5.4 + 3.8)</literal>
+ <returnvalue>9</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <function>least</function> ( <replaceable>number</replaceable> <optional>, <literal>...</literal> </optional> )
+ <returnvalue></returnvalue> <type>double</type> if any argument is double, else <type>integer</type>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Selects the smallest value among the arguments.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>least(5, 4, 3, 2.1)</literal>
+ <returnvalue>2.1</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <function>ln</function> ( <replaceable>number</replaceable> )
+ <returnvalue>double</returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Natural logarithm
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>ln(2.718281828459045)</literal>
+ <returnvalue>1.0</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+<function>mod</function> ( <replaceable>integer</replaceable>, <replaceable>integer</replaceable> )
+ <returnvalue>integer</returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Modulo (remainder)
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>mod(54, 32)</literal>
+ <returnvalue>22</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <function>permute</function> ( <parameter>i</parameter>, <parameter>size</parameter> [, <parameter>seed</parameter> ] )
+ <returnvalue>integer</returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Permuted value of <parameter>i</parameter>, in the range
+ <literal>[0, size)</literal>. This is the new position of
+ <parameter>i</parameter> (modulo <parameter>size</parameter>) in a
+ pseudorandom permutation of the integers <literal>0...size-1</literal>,
+ parameterized by <parameter>seed</parameter>, see below.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>permute(0, 4)</literal>
+ <returnvalue>an integer between 0 and 3</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <function>pi</function> ()
+ <returnvalue>double</returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Approximate value of <phrase role="symbol_font">&pi;</phrase>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>pi()</literal>
+ <returnvalue>3.14159265358979323846</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <function>pow</function> ( <parameter>x</parameter>, <parameter>y</parameter> )
+ <returnvalue>double</returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para role="func_signature">
+ <function>power</function> ( <parameter>x</parameter>, <parameter>y</parameter> )
+ <returnvalue>double</returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <parameter>x</parameter> raised to the power of <parameter>y</parameter>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>pow(2.0, 10)</literal>
+ <returnvalue>1024.0</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <function>random</function> ( <parameter>lb</parameter>, <parameter>ub</parameter> )
+ <returnvalue>integer</returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Computes a uniformly-distributed random integer in <literal>[lb,
+ ub]</literal>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>random(1, 10)</literal>
+ <returnvalue>an integer between 1 and 10</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <function>random_exponential</function> ( <parameter>lb</parameter>, <parameter>ub</parameter>, <parameter>parameter</parameter> )
+ <returnvalue>integer</returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Computes an exponentially-distributed random integer in <literal>[lb,
+ ub]</literal>, see below.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>random_exponential(1, 10, 3.0)</literal>
+ <returnvalue>an integer between 1 and 10</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <function>random_gaussian</function> ( <parameter>lb</parameter>, <parameter>ub</parameter>, <parameter>parameter</parameter> )
+ <returnvalue>integer</returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Computes a Gaussian-distributed random integer in <literal>[lb,
+ ub]</literal>, see below.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>random_gaussian(1, 10, 2.5)</literal>
+ <returnvalue>an integer between 1 and 10</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <function>random_zipfian</function> ( <parameter>lb</parameter>, <parameter>ub</parameter>, <parameter>parameter</parameter> )
+ <returnvalue>integer</returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Computes a Zipfian-distributed random integer in <literal>[lb,
+ ub]</literal>, see below.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>random_zipfian(1, 10, 1.5)</literal>
+ <returnvalue>an integer between 1 and 10</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry role="func_table_entry"><para role="func_signature">
+ <function>sqrt</function> ( <replaceable>number</replaceable> )
+ <returnvalue>double</returnvalue>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Square root
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>sqrt(2.0)</literal>
+ <returnvalue>1.414213562</returnvalue>
+ </para></entry>
+ </row>
+ </tbody>
+ </tgroup>
+ </table>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>random</literal> function generates values using a uniform
+ distribution, that is all the values are drawn within the specified
+ range with equal probability. The <literal>random_exponential</literal>,
+ <literal>random_gaussian</literal> and <literal>random_zipfian</literal>
+ functions require an additional double parameter which determines the precise
+ shape of the distribution.
+ </para>
+
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ For an exponential distribution, <replaceable>parameter</replaceable>
+ controls the distribution by truncating a quickly-decreasing
+ exponential distribution at <replaceable>parameter</replaceable>, and then
+ projecting onto integers between the bounds.
+ To be precise, with
+<literallayout>
+f(x) = exp(-parameter * (x - min) / (max - min + 1)) / (1 - exp(-parameter))
+</literallayout>
+ Then value <replaceable>i</replaceable> between <replaceable>min</replaceable> and
+ <replaceable>max</replaceable> inclusive is drawn with probability:
+ <literal>f(i) - f(i + 1)</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Intuitively, the larger the <replaceable>parameter</replaceable>, the more
+ frequently values close to <replaceable>min</replaceable> are accessed, and the
+ less frequently values close to <replaceable>max</replaceable> are accessed.
+ The closer to 0 <replaceable>parameter</replaceable> is, the flatter (more
+ uniform) the access distribution.
+ A crude approximation of the distribution is that the most frequent 1%
+ values in the range, close to <replaceable>min</replaceable>, are drawn
+ <replaceable>parameter</replaceable>% of the time.
+ The <replaceable>parameter</replaceable> value must be strictly positive.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ For a Gaussian distribution, the interval is mapped onto a standard
+ normal distribution (the classical bell-shaped Gaussian curve) truncated
+ at <literal>-parameter</literal> on the left and <literal>+parameter</literal>
+ on the right.
+ Values in the middle of the interval are more likely to be drawn.
+ To be precise, if <literal>PHI(x)</literal> is the cumulative distribution
+ function of the standard normal distribution, with mean <literal>mu</literal>
+ defined as <literal>(max + min) / 2.0</literal>, with
+<literallayout>
+f(x) = PHI(2.0 * parameter * (x - mu) / (max - min + 1)) /
+ (2.0 * PHI(parameter) - 1)
+</literallayout>
+ then value <replaceable>i</replaceable> between <replaceable>min</replaceable> and
+ <replaceable>max</replaceable> inclusive is drawn with probability:
+ <literal>f(i + 0.5) - f(i - 0.5)</literal>.
+ Intuitively, the larger the <replaceable>parameter</replaceable>, the more
+ frequently values close to the middle of the interval are drawn, and the
+ less frequently values close to the <replaceable>min</replaceable> and
+ <replaceable>max</replaceable> bounds. About 67% of values are drawn from the
+ middle <literal>1.0 / parameter</literal>, that is a relative
+ <literal>0.5 / parameter</literal> around the mean, and 95% in the middle
+ <literal>2.0 / parameter</literal>, that is a relative
+ <literal>1.0 / parameter</literal> around the mean; for instance, if
+ <replaceable>parameter</replaceable> is 4.0, 67% of values are drawn from the
+ middle quarter (1.0 / 4.0) of the interval (i.e., from
+ <literal>3.0 / 8.0</literal> to <literal>5.0 / 8.0</literal>) and 95% from
+ the middle half (<literal>2.0 / 4.0</literal>) of the interval (second and third
+ quartiles). The minimum allowed <replaceable>parameter</replaceable>
+ value is 2.0.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ <literal>random_zipfian</literal> generates a bounded Zipfian
+ distribution.
+ <replaceable>parameter</replaceable> defines how skewed the distribution
+ is. The larger the <replaceable>parameter</replaceable>, the more
+ frequently values closer to the beginning of the interval are drawn.
+ The distribution is such that, assuming the range starts from 1,
+ the ratio of the probability of drawing <replaceable>k</replaceable>
+ versus drawing <replaceable>k+1</replaceable> is
+ <literal>((<replaceable>k</replaceable>+1)/<replaceable>k</replaceable>)**<replaceable>parameter</replaceable></literal>.
+ For example, <literal>random_zipfian(1, ..., 2.5)</literal> produces
+ the value <literal>1</literal> about <literal>(2/1)**2.5 =
+ 5.66</literal> times more frequently than <literal>2</literal>, which
+ itself is produced <literal>(3/2)**2.5 = 2.76</literal> times more
+ frequently than <literal>3</literal>, and so on.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <application>pgbench</application>'s implementation is based on
+ "Non-Uniform Random Variate Generation", Luc Devroye, p. 550-551,
+ Springer 1986. Due to limitations of that algorithm,
+ the <replaceable>parameter</replaceable> value is restricted to
+ the range [1.001, 1000].
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ When designing a benchmark which selects rows non-uniformly, be aware
+ that the rows chosen may be correlated with other data such as IDs from
+ a sequence or the physical row ordering, which may skew performance
+ measurements.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ To avoid this, you may wish to use the <function>permute</function>
+ function, or some other additional step with similar effect, to shuffle
+ the selected rows and remove such correlations.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+
+ <para>
+ Hash functions <literal>hash</literal>, <literal>hash_murmur2</literal> and
+ <literal>hash_fnv1a</literal> accept an input value and an optional seed parameter.
+ In case the seed isn't provided the value of <literal>:default_seed</literal>
+ is used, which is initialized randomly unless set by the command-line
+ <literal>-D</literal> option.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <literal>permute</literal> accepts an input value, a size, and an optional
+ seed parameter. It generates a pseudorandom permutation of integers in
+ the range <literal>[0, size)</literal>, and returns the index of the input
+ value in the permuted values. The permutation chosen is parameterized by
+ the seed, which defaults to <literal>:default_seed</literal>, if not
+ specified. Unlike the hash functions, <literal>permute</literal> ensures
+ that there are no collisions or holes in the output values. Input values
+ outside the interval are interpreted modulo the size. The function raises
+ an error if the size is not positive. <function>permute</function> can be
+ used to scatter the distribution of non-uniform random functions such as
+ <literal>random_zipfian</literal> or <literal>random_exponential</literal>
+ so that values drawn more often are not trivially correlated. For
+ instance, the following <application>pgbench</application> script
+ simulates a possible real world workload typical for social media and
+ blogging platforms where a few accounts generate excessive load:
+
+<programlisting>
+\set size 1000000
+\set r random_zipfian(1, :size, 1.07)
+\set k 1 + permute(:r, :size)
+</programlisting>
+
+ In some cases several distinct distributions are needed which don't correlate
+ with each other and this is when the optional seed parameter comes in handy:
+
+<programlisting>
+\set k1 1 + permute(:r, :size, :default_seed + 123)
+\set k2 1 + permute(:r, :size, :default_seed + 321)
+</programlisting>
+
+ A similar behavior can also be approximated with <function>hash</function>:
+
+<programlisting>
+\set size 1000000
+\set r random_zipfian(1, 100 * :size, 1.07)
+\set k 1 + abs(hash(:r)) % :size
+</programlisting>
+
+ However, since <function>hash</function> generates collisions, some values
+ will not be reachable and others will be more frequent than expected from
+ the original distribution.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ As an example, the full definition of the built-in TPC-B-like
+ transaction is:
+
+<programlisting>
+\set aid random(1, 100000 * :scale)
+\set bid random(1, 1 * :scale)
+\set tid random(1, 10 * :scale)
+\set delta random(-5000, 5000)
+BEGIN;
+UPDATE pgbench_accounts SET abalance = abalance + :delta WHERE aid = :aid;
+SELECT abalance FROM pgbench_accounts WHERE aid = :aid;
+UPDATE pgbench_tellers SET tbalance = tbalance + :delta WHERE tid = :tid;
+UPDATE pgbench_branches SET bbalance = bbalance + :delta WHERE bid = :bid;
+INSERT INTO pgbench_history (tid, bid, aid, delta, mtime) VALUES (:tid, :bid, :aid, :delta, CURRENT_TIMESTAMP);
+END;
+</programlisting>
+
+ This script allows each iteration of the transaction to reference
+ different, randomly-chosen rows. (This example also shows why it's
+ important for each client session to have its own variables &mdash;
+ otherwise they'd not be independently touching different rows.)
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Per-Transaction Logging</title>
+
+ <para>
+ With the <option>-l</option> option (but without
+ the <option>--aggregate-interval</option> option),
+ <application>pgbench</application> writes information about each transaction
+ to a log file. The log file will be named
+ <filename><replaceable>prefix</replaceable>.<replaceable>nnn</replaceable></filename>,
+ where <replaceable>prefix</replaceable> defaults to <literal>pgbench_log</literal>, and
+ <replaceable>nnn</replaceable> is the PID of the
+ <application>pgbench</application> process.
+ The prefix can be changed by using the <option>--log-prefix</option> option.
+ If the <option>-j</option> option is 2 or higher, so that there are multiple
+ worker threads, each will have its own log file. The first worker will
+ use the same name for its log file as in the standard single worker case.
+ The additional log files for the other workers will be named
+ <filename><replaceable>prefix</replaceable>.<replaceable>nnn</replaceable>.<replaceable>mmm</replaceable></filename>,
+ where <replaceable>mmm</replaceable> is a sequential number for each worker starting
+ with 1.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The format of the log is:
+
+<synopsis>
+<replaceable>client_id</replaceable> <replaceable>transaction_no</replaceable> <replaceable>time</replaceable> <replaceable>script_no</replaceable> <replaceable>time_epoch</replaceable> <replaceable>time_us</replaceable> <optional> <replaceable>schedule_lag</replaceable> </optional>
+</synopsis>
+
+ where
+ <replaceable>client_id</replaceable> indicates which client session ran the transaction,
+ <replaceable>transaction_no</replaceable> counts how many transactions have been
+ run by that session,
+ <replaceable>time</replaceable> is the total elapsed transaction time in microseconds,
+ <replaceable>script_no</replaceable> identifies which script file was used (useful when
+ multiple scripts were specified with <option>-f</option> or <option>-b</option>),
+ and <replaceable>time_epoch</replaceable>/<replaceable>time_us</replaceable> are a
+ Unix-epoch time stamp and an offset
+ in microseconds (suitable for creating an ISO 8601
+ time stamp with fractional seconds) showing when
+ the transaction completed.
+ The <replaceable>schedule_lag</replaceable> field is the difference between the
+ transaction's scheduled start time, and the time it actually started, in
+ microseconds. It is only present when the <option>--rate</option> option is used.
+ When both <option>--rate</option> and <option>--latency-limit</option> are used,
+ the <replaceable>time</replaceable> for a skipped transaction will be reported as
+ <literal>skipped</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Here is a snippet of a log file generated in a single-client run:
+<screen>
+0 199 2241 0 1175850568 995598
+0 200 2465 0 1175850568 998079
+0 201 2513 0 1175850569 608
+0 202 2038 0 1175850569 2663
+</screen>
+
+ Another example with <literal>--rate=100</literal>
+ and <literal>--latency-limit=5</literal> (note the additional
+ <replaceable>schedule_lag</replaceable> column):
+<screen>
+0 81 4621 0 1412881037 912698 3005
+0 82 6173 0 1412881037 914578 4304
+0 83 skipped 0 1412881037 914578 5217
+0 83 skipped 0 1412881037 914578 5099
+0 83 4722 0 1412881037 916203 3108
+0 84 4142 0 1412881037 918023 2333
+0 85 2465 0 1412881037 919759 740
+</screen>
+ In this example, transaction 82 was late, because its latency (6.173 ms) was
+ over the 5 ms limit. The next two transactions were skipped, because they
+ were already late before they were even started.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When running a long test on hardware that can handle a lot of transactions,
+ the log files can become very large. The <option>--sampling-rate</option> option
+ can be used to log only a random sample of transactions.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Aggregated Logging</title>
+
+ <para>
+ With the <option>--aggregate-interval</option> option, a different
+ format is used for the log files:
+
+<synopsis>
+<replaceable>interval_start</replaceable> <replaceable>num_transactions</replaceable>&zwsp; <replaceable>sum_latency</replaceable> <replaceable>sum_latency_2</replaceable> <replaceable>min_latency</replaceable> <replaceable>max_latency</replaceable>&zwsp; <optional> <replaceable>sum_lag</replaceable> <replaceable>sum_lag_2</replaceable> <replaceable>min_lag</replaceable> <replaceable>max_lag</replaceable> <optional> <replaceable>skipped</replaceable> </optional> </optional>
+</synopsis>
+
+ where
+ <replaceable>interval_start</replaceable> is the start of the interval (as a Unix
+ epoch time stamp),
+ <replaceable>num_transactions</replaceable> is the number of transactions
+ within the interval,
+ <replaceable>sum_latency</replaceable> is the sum of the transaction
+ latencies within the interval,
+ <replaceable>sum_latency_2</replaceable> is the sum of squares of the
+ transaction latencies within the interval,
+ <replaceable>min_latency</replaceable> is the minimum latency within the interval,
+ and
+ <replaceable>max_latency</replaceable> is the maximum latency within the interval.
+ The next fields,
+ <replaceable>sum_lag</replaceable>, <replaceable>sum_lag_2</replaceable>, <replaceable>min_lag</replaceable>,
+ and <replaceable>max_lag</replaceable>, are only present if the <option>--rate</option>
+ option is used.
+ They provide statistics about the time each transaction had to wait for the
+ previous one to finish, i.e., the difference between each transaction's
+ scheduled start time and the time it actually started.
+ The very last field, <replaceable>skipped</replaceable>,
+ is only present if the <option>--latency-limit</option> option is used, too.
+ It counts the number of transactions skipped because they would have
+ started too late.
+ Each transaction is counted in the interval when it was committed.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Here is some example output:
+<screen>
+1345828501 5601 1542744 483552416 61 2573
+1345828503 7884 1979812 565806736 60 1479
+1345828505 7208 1979422 567277552 59 1391
+1345828507 7685 1980268 569784714 60 1398
+1345828509 7073 1979779 573489941 236 1411
+</screen></para>
+
+ <para>
+ Notice that while the plain (unaggregated) log file shows which script
+ was used for each transaction, the aggregated log does not. Therefore if
+ you need per-script data, you need to aggregate the data on your own.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Per-Statement Latencies</title>
+
+ <para>
+ With the <option>-r</option> option, <application>pgbench</application> collects
+ the elapsed transaction time of each statement executed by every
+ client. It then reports an average of those values, referred to
+ as the latency for each statement, after the benchmark has finished.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For the default script, the output will look similar to this:
+<screen>
+starting vacuum...end.
+transaction type: &lt;builtin: TPC-B (sort of)&gt;
+scaling factor: 1
+query mode: simple
+number of clients: 10
+number of threads: 1
+number of transactions per client: 1000
+number of transactions actually processed: 10000/10000
+latency average = 10.870 ms
+latency stddev = 7.341 ms
+initial connection time = 30.954 ms
+tps = 907.949122 (without initial connection time)
+statement latencies in milliseconds:
+ 0.001 \set aid random(1, 100000 * :scale)
+ 0.001 \set bid random(1, 1 * :scale)
+ 0.001 \set tid random(1, 10 * :scale)
+ 0.000 \set delta random(-5000, 5000)
+ 0.046 BEGIN;
+ 0.151 UPDATE pgbench_accounts SET abalance = abalance + :delta WHERE aid = :aid;
+ 0.107 SELECT abalance FROM pgbench_accounts WHERE aid = :aid;
+ 4.241 UPDATE pgbench_tellers SET tbalance = tbalance + :delta WHERE tid = :tid;
+ 5.245 UPDATE pgbench_branches SET bbalance = bbalance + :delta WHERE bid = :bid;
+ 0.102 INSERT INTO pgbench_history (tid, bid, aid, delta, mtime) VALUES (:tid, :bid, :aid, :delta, CURRENT_TIMESTAMP);
+ 0.974 END;
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If multiple script files are specified, the averages are reported
+ separately for each script file.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Note that collecting the additional timing information needed for
+ per-statement latency computation adds some overhead. This will slow
+ average execution speed and lower the computed TPS. The amount
+ of slowdown varies significantly depending on platform and hardware.
+ Comparing average TPS values with and without latency reporting enabled
+ is a good way to measure if the timing overhead is significant.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Good Practices</title>
+
+ <para>
+ It is very easy to use <application>pgbench</application> to produce completely
+ meaningless numbers. Here are some guidelines to help you get useful
+ results.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In the first place, <emphasis>never</emphasis> believe any test that runs
+ for only a few seconds. Use the <option>-t</option> or <option>-T</option> option
+ to make the run last at least a few minutes, so as to average out noise.
+ In some cases you could need hours to get numbers that are reproducible.
+ It's a good idea to try the test run a few times, to find out if your
+ numbers are reproducible or not.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For the default TPC-B-like test scenario, the initialization scale factor
+ (<option>-s</option>) should be at least as large as the largest number of
+ clients you intend to test (<option>-c</option>); else you'll mostly be
+ measuring update contention. There are only <option>-s</option> rows in
+ the <structname>pgbench_branches</structname> table, and every transaction wants to
+ update one of them, so <option>-c</option> values in excess of <option>-s</option>
+ will undoubtedly result in lots of transactions blocked waiting for
+ other transactions.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The default test scenario is also quite sensitive to how long it's been
+ since the tables were initialized: accumulation of dead rows and dead space
+ in the tables changes the results. To understand the results you must keep
+ track of the total number of updates and when vacuuming happens. If
+ autovacuum is enabled it can result in unpredictable changes in measured
+ performance.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A limitation of <application>pgbench</application> is that it can itself become
+ the bottleneck when trying to test a large number of client sessions.
+ This can be alleviated by running <application>pgbench</application> on a different
+ machine from the database server, although low network latency will be
+ essential. It might even be useful to run several <application>pgbench</application>
+ instances concurrently, on several client machines, against the same
+ database server.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Security</title>
+
+ <para>
+ If untrusted users have access to a database that has not adopted a
+ <link linkend="ddl-schemas-patterns">secure schema usage pattern</link>,
+ do not run <application>pgbench</application> in that
+ database. <application>pgbench</application> uses unqualified names and
+ does not manipulate the search path.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pgtestfsync.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pgtestfsync.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..95be7a1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pgtestfsync.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,127 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/pgtestfsync.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="pgtestfsync">
+ <indexterm zone="pgtestfsync">
+ <primary>pg_test_fsync</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>pg_test_fsync</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>pg_test_fsync</refname>
+ <refpurpose>determine fastest <varname>wal_sync_method</varname> for <productname>PostgreSQL</productname></refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_test_fsync</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_test_fsync</application> is intended to give you a reasonable
+ idea of what the fastest <xref linkend="guc-wal-sync-method"/> is on your
+ specific system,
+ as well as supplying diagnostic information in the event of an identified I/O
+ problem. However, differences shown by
+ <application>pg_test_fsync</application> might not make any significant
+ difference in real database throughput, especially since many database servers
+ are not speed-limited by their write-ahead logs.
+ <application>pg_test_fsync</application> reports average file sync operation
+ time in microseconds for each <literal>wal_sync_method</literal>, which can also be used to
+ inform efforts to optimize the value of <xref linkend="guc-commit-delay"/>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_test_fsync</application> accepts the following
+ command-line options:
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-f</option></term>
+ <term><option>--filename</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the file name to write test data in.
+ This file should be in the same file system that the
+ <filename>pg_wal</filename> directory is or will be placed in.
+ (<filename>pg_wal</filename> contains the <acronym>WAL</acronym> files.)
+ The default is <filename>pg_test_fsync.out</filename> in the current
+ directory.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-s</option></term>
+ <term><option>--secs-per-test</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the number of seconds for each test. The more time
+ per test, the greater the test's accuracy, but the longer it takes
+ to run. The default is 5 seconds, which allows the program to
+ complete in under 2 minutes.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-V</option></term>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the <application>pg_test_fsync</application> version and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show help about <application>pg_test_fsync</application> command line
+ arguments, and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Environment</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The environment variable <envar>PG_COLOR</envar> specifies whether to use
+ color in diagnostic messages. Possible values are
+ <literal>always</literal>, <literal>auto</literal> and
+ <literal>never</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="app-postgres"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pgtesttiming.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pgtesttiming.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a5eb3aa
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pgtesttiming.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,303 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/pgtesttiming.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="pgtesttiming">
+ <indexterm zone="pgtesttiming">
+ <primary>pg_test_timing</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>pg_test_timing</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>pg_test_timing</refname>
+ <refpurpose>measure timing overhead</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_test_timing</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_test_timing</application> is a tool to measure the timing overhead
+ on your system and confirm that the system time never moves backwards.
+ Systems that are slow to collect timing data can give less accurate
+ <command>EXPLAIN ANALYZE</command> results.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_test_timing</application> accepts the following
+ command-line options:
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-d <replaceable class="parameter">duration</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--duration=<replaceable class="parameter">duration</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the test duration, in seconds. Longer durations
+ give slightly better accuracy, and are more likely to discover
+ problems with the system clock moving backwards. The default
+ test duration is 3 seconds.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-V</option></term>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the <application>pg_test_timing</application> version and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show help about <application>pg_test_timing</application> command line
+ arguments, and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Usage</title>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Interpreting Results</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Good results will show most (>90%) individual timing calls take less than
+ one microsecond. Average per loop overhead will be even lower, below 100
+ nanoseconds. This example from an Intel i7-860 system using a TSC clock
+ source shows excellent performance:
+
+<screen><![CDATA[
+Testing timing overhead for 3 seconds.
+Per loop time including overhead: 35.96 ns
+Histogram of timing durations:
+ < us % of total count
+ 1 96.40465 80435604
+ 2 3.59518 2999652
+ 4 0.00015 126
+ 8 0.00002 13
+ 16 0.00000 2
+]]></screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Note that different units are used for the per loop time than the
+ histogram. The loop can have resolution within a few nanoseconds (ns),
+ while the individual timing calls can only resolve down to one microsecond
+ (us).
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect2>
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Measuring Executor Timing Overhead</title>
+
+ <para>
+ When the query executor is running a statement using
+ <command>EXPLAIN ANALYZE</command>, individual operations are timed as well
+ as showing a summary. The overhead of your system can be checked by
+ counting rows with the <application>psql</application> program:
+
+<screen>
+CREATE TABLE t AS SELECT * FROM generate_series(1,100000);
+\timing
+SELECT COUNT(*) FROM t;
+EXPLAIN ANALYZE SELECT COUNT(*) FROM t;
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The i7-860 system measured runs the count query in 9.8 ms while
+ the <command>EXPLAIN ANALYZE</command> version takes 16.6 ms, each
+ processing just over 100,000 rows. That 6.8 ms difference means the timing
+ overhead per row is 68 ns, about twice what pg_test_timing estimated it
+ would be. Even that relatively small amount of overhead is making the fully
+ timed count statement take almost 70% longer. On more substantial queries,
+ the timing overhead would be less problematic.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Changing Time Sources</title>
+ <para>
+ On some newer Linux systems, it's possible to change the clock source used
+ to collect timing data at any time. A second example shows the slowdown
+ possible from switching to the slower acpi_pm time source, on the same
+ system used for the fast results above:
+
+<screen><![CDATA[
+# cat /sys/devices/system/clocksource/clocksource0/available_clocksource
+tsc hpet acpi_pm
+# echo acpi_pm > /sys/devices/system/clocksource/clocksource0/current_clocksource
+# pg_test_timing
+Per loop time including overhead: 722.92 ns
+Histogram of timing durations:
+ < us % of total count
+ 1 27.84870 1155682
+ 2 72.05956 2990371
+ 4 0.07810 3241
+ 8 0.01357 563
+ 16 0.00007 3
+]]></screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In this configuration, the sample <command>EXPLAIN ANALYZE</command> above
+ takes 115.9 ms. That's 1061 ns of timing overhead, again a small multiple
+ of what's measured directly by this utility. That much timing overhead
+ means the actual query itself is only taking a tiny fraction of the
+ accounted for time, most of it is being consumed in overhead instead. In
+ this configuration, any <command>EXPLAIN ANALYZE</command> totals involving
+ many timed operations would be inflated significantly by timing overhead.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ FreeBSD also allows changing the time source on the fly, and it logs
+ information about the timer selected during boot:
+
+<screen>
+# dmesg | grep "Timecounter"
+Timecounter "ACPI-fast" frequency 3579545 Hz quality 900
+Timecounter "i8254" frequency 1193182 Hz quality 0
+Timecounters tick every 10.000 msec
+Timecounter "TSC" frequency 2531787134 Hz quality 800
+# sysctl kern.timecounter.hardware=TSC
+kern.timecounter.hardware: ACPI-fast -> TSC
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Other systems may only allow setting the time source on boot. On older
+ Linux systems the "clock" kernel setting is the only way to make this sort
+ of change. And even on some more recent ones, the only option you'll see
+ for a clock source is "jiffies". Jiffies are the older Linux software clock
+ implementation, which can have good resolution when it's backed by fast
+ enough timing hardware, as in this example:
+
+<screen><![CDATA[
+$ cat /sys/devices/system/clocksource/clocksource0/available_clocksource
+jiffies
+$ dmesg | grep time.c
+time.c: Using 3.579545 MHz WALL PM GTOD PIT/TSC timer.
+time.c: Detected 2400.153 MHz processor.
+$ pg_test_timing
+Testing timing overhead for 3 seconds.
+Per timing duration including loop overhead: 97.75 ns
+Histogram of timing durations:
+ < us % of total count
+ 1 90.23734 27694571
+ 2 9.75277 2993204
+ 4 0.00981 3010
+ 8 0.00007 22
+ 16 0.00000 1
+ 32 0.00000 1
+]]></screen></para>
+
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Clock Hardware and Timing Accuracy</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Collecting accurate timing information is normally done on computers using
+ hardware clocks with various levels of accuracy. With some hardware the
+ operating systems can pass the system clock time almost directly to
+ programs. A system clock can also be derived from a chip that simply
+ provides timing interrupts, periodic ticks at some known time interval. In
+ either case, operating system kernels provide a clock source that hides
+ these details. But the accuracy of that clock source and how quickly it can
+ return results varies based on the underlying hardware.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Inaccurate time keeping can result in system instability. Test any change
+ to the clock source very carefully. Operating system defaults are sometimes
+ made to favor reliability over best accuracy. And if you are using a virtual
+ machine, look into the recommended time sources compatible with it. Virtual
+ hardware faces additional difficulties when emulating timers, and there are
+ often per operating system settings suggested by vendors.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The Time Stamp Counter (TSC) clock source is the most accurate one available
+ on current generation CPUs. It's the preferred way to track the system time
+ when it's supported by the operating system and the TSC clock is
+ reliable. There are several ways that TSC can fail to provide an accurate
+ timing source, making it unreliable. Older systems can have a TSC clock that
+ varies based on the CPU temperature, making it unusable for timing. Trying
+ to use TSC on some older multicore CPUs can give a reported time that's
+ inconsistent among multiple cores. This can result in the time going
+ backwards, a problem this program checks for. And even the newest systems
+ can fail to provide accurate TSC timing with very aggressive power saving
+ configurations.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Newer operating systems may check for the known TSC problems and switch to a
+ slower, more stable clock source when they are seen. If your system
+ supports TSC time but doesn't default to that, it may be disabled for a good
+ reason. And some operating systems may not detect all the possible problems
+ correctly, or will allow using TSC even in situations where it's known to be
+ inaccurate.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The High Precision Event Timer (HPET) is the preferred timer on systems
+ where it's available and TSC is not accurate. The timer chip itself is
+ programmable to allow up to 100 nanosecond resolution, but you may not see
+ that much accuracy in your system clock.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Advanced Configuration and Power Interface (ACPI) provides a Power
+ Management (PM) Timer, which Linux refers to as the acpi_pm. The clock
+ derived from acpi_pm will at best provide 300 nanosecond resolution.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Timers used on older PC hardware include the 8254 Programmable Interval
+ Timer (PIT), the real-time clock (RTC), the Advanced Programmable Interrupt
+ Controller (APIC) timer, and the Cyclone timer. These timers aim for
+ millisecond resolution.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-explain"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pgupgrade.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pgupgrade.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9866210
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pgupgrade.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,849 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/pgupgrade.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="pgupgrade">
+ <indexterm zone="pgupgrade">
+ <primary>pg_upgrade</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>pg_upgrade</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>pg_upgrade</refname>
+ <refpurpose>upgrade a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> server instance</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>pg_upgrade</command>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>-b</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><replaceable>oldbindir</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><option>-B</option> <replaceable>newbindir</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>-d</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><replaceable>oldconfigdir</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>-D</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><replaceable>newconfigdir</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_upgrade</application> (formerly called <application>pg_migrator</application>) allows data
+ stored in <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> data files to be upgraded to a later <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ major version without the data dump/restore typically required for
+ major version upgrades, e.g., from 9.5.8 to 9.6.4 or from 10.7 to 11.2.
+ It is not required for minor version upgrades, e.g., from 9.6.2 to 9.6.3
+ or from 10.1 to 10.2.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Major PostgreSQL releases regularly add new features that often
+ change the layout of the system tables, but the internal data storage
+ format rarely changes. <application>pg_upgrade</application> uses this fact
+ to perform rapid upgrades by creating new system tables and simply
+ reusing the old user data files. If a future major release ever
+ changes the data storage format in a way that makes the old data
+ format unreadable, <application>pg_upgrade</application> will not be usable
+ for such upgrades. (The community will attempt to avoid such
+ situations.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_upgrade</application> does its best to
+ make sure the old and new clusters are binary-compatible, e.g., by
+ checking for compatible compile-time settings, including 32/64-bit
+ binaries. It is important that
+ any external modules are also binary compatible, though this cannot
+ be checked by <application>pg_upgrade</application>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ pg_upgrade supports upgrades from 8.4.X and later to the current
+ major release of <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>, including snapshot and beta releases.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_upgrade</application> accepts the following command-line arguments:
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-b</option> <replaceable>bindir</replaceable></term>
+ <term><option>--old-bindir=</option><replaceable>bindir</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem><para>the old PostgreSQL executable directory;
+ environment variable <envar>PGBINOLD</envar></para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-B</option> <replaceable>bindir</replaceable></term>
+ <term><option>--new-bindir=</option><replaceable>bindir</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem><para>the new PostgreSQL executable directory;
+ default is the directory where <application>pg_upgrade</application> resides;
+ environment variable <envar>PGBINNEW</envar></para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-c</option></term>
+ <term><option>--check</option></term>
+ <listitem><para>check clusters only, don't change any data</para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-d</option> <replaceable>configdir</replaceable></term>
+ <term><option>--old-datadir=</option><replaceable>configdir</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem><para>the old database cluster configuration directory; environment
+ variable <envar>PGDATAOLD</envar></para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-D</option> <replaceable>configdir</replaceable></term>
+ <term><option>--new-datadir=</option><replaceable>configdir</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem><para>the new database cluster configuration directory; environment
+ variable <envar>PGDATANEW</envar></para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-j <replaceable class="parameter">njobs</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--jobs=<replaceable class="parameter">njobs</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem><para>number of simultaneous processes or threads to use
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-k</option></term>
+ <term><option>--link</option></term>
+ <listitem><para>use hard links instead of copying files to the new
+ cluster</para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-o</option> <replaceable class="parameter">options</replaceable></term>
+ <term><option>--old-options</option> <replaceable class="parameter">options</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem><para>options to be passed directly to the
+ old <command>postgres</command> command; multiple
+ option invocations are appended</para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-O</option> <replaceable class="parameter">options</replaceable></term>
+ <term><option>--new-options</option> <replaceable class="parameter">options</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem><para>options to be passed directly to the
+ new <command>postgres</command> command; multiple
+ option invocations are appended</para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-p</option> <replaceable>port</replaceable></term>
+ <term><option>--old-port=</option><replaceable>port</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem><para>the old cluster port number; environment
+ variable <envar>PGPORTOLD</envar></para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-P</option> <replaceable>port</replaceable></term>
+ <term><option>--new-port=</option><replaceable>port</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem><para>the new cluster port number; environment
+ variable <envar>PGPORTNEW</envar></para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-r</option></term>
+ <term><option>--retain</option></term>
+ <listitem><para>retain SQL and log files even after successful completion
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-s</option> <replaceable>dir</replaceable></term>
+ <term><option>--socketdir=</option><replaceable>dir</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem><para>directory to use for postmaster sockets during upgrade;
+ default is current working directory; environment
+ variable <envar>PGSOCKETDIR</envar></para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-U</option> <replaceable>username</replaceable></term>
+ <term><option>--username=</option><replaceable>username</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem><para>cluster's install user name; environment
+ variable <envar>PGUSER</envar></para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-v</option></term>
+ <term><option>--verbose</option></term>
+ <listitem><para>enable verbose internal logging</para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-V</option></term>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem><para>display version information, then exit</para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--clone</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Use efficient file cloning (also known as <quote>reflinks</quote> on
+ some systems) instead of copying files to the new cluster. This can
+ result in near-instantaneous copying of the data files, giving the
+ speed advantages of <option>-k</option>/<option>--link</option> while
+ leaving the old cluster untouched.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ File cloning is only supported on some operating systems and file
+ systems. If it is selected but not supported, the
+ <application>pg_upgrade</application> run will error. At present, it
+ is supported on Linux (kernel 4.5 or later) with Btrfs and XFS (on
+ file systems created with reflink support), and on macOS with APFS.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem><para>show help, then exit</para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Usage</title>
+
+ <para>
+ These are the steps to perform an upgrade
+ with <application>pg_upgrade</application>:
+ </para>
+
+ <procedure>
+ <step performance="optional">
+ <title>Optionally move the old cluster</title>
+
+ <para>
+ If you are using a version-specific installation directory, e.g.,
+ <filename>/opt/PostgreSQL/&majorversion;</filename>, you do not need to move the old cluster. The
+ graphical installers all use version-specific installation directories.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If your installation directory is not version-specific, e.g.,
+ <filename>/usr/local/pgsql</filename>, it is necessary to move the current PostgreSQL install
+ directory so it does not interfere with the new <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> installation.
+ Once the current <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> server is shut down, it is safe to rename the
+ PostgreSQL installation directory; assuming the old directory is
+ <filename>/usr/local/pgsql</filename>, you can do:
+
+<programlisting>
+mv /usr/local/pgsql /usr/local/pgsql.old
+</programlisting>
+ to rename the directory.
+ </para>
+ </step>
+
+ <step>
+ <title>For source installs, build the new version</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Build the new PostgreSQL source with <command>configure</command> flags that are compatible
+ with the old cluster. <application>pg_upgrade</application> will check <command>pg_controldata</command> to make
+ sure all settings are compatible before starting the upgrade.
+ </para>
+ </step>
+
+ <step>
+ <title>Install the new PostgreSQL binaries</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Install the new server's binaries and support
+ files. <application>pg_upgrade</application> is included in a default installation.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For source installs, if you wish to install the new server in a custom
+ location, use the <literal>prefix</literal> variable:
+
+<programlisting>
+make prefix=/usr/local/pgsql.new install
+</programlisting></para>
+ </step>
+
+ <step>
+ <title>Initialize the new PostgreSQL cluster</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Initialize the new cluster using <command>initdb</command>.
+ Again, use compatible <command>initdb</command>
+ flags that match the old cluster. Many
+ prebuilt installers do this step automatically. There is no need to
+ start the new cluster.
+ </para>
+ </step>
+
+ <step>
+ <title>Install extension shared object files</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Many extensions and custom modules, whether from
+ <filename>contrib</filename> or another source, use shared object
+ files (or DLLs), e.g., <filename>pgcrypto.so</filename>. If the old
+ cluster used these, shared object files matching the new server binary
+ must be installed in the new cluster, usually via operating system
+ commands. Do not load the schema definitions, e.g., <command>CREATE
+ EXTENSION pgcrypto</command>, because these will be duplicated from
+ the old cluster. If extension updates are available,
+ <application>pg_upgrade</application> will report this and create
+ a script that can be run later to update them.
+ </para>
+ </step>
+
+ <step>
+ <title>Copy custom full-text search files</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Copy any custom full text search files (dictionary, synonym,
+ thesaurus, stop words) from the old to the new cluster.
+ </para>
+ </step>
+
+ <step>
+ <title>Adjust authentication</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>pg_upgrade</command> will connect to the old and new servers several
+ times, so you might want to set authentication to <literal>peer</literal>
+ in <filename>pg_hba.conf</filename> or use a <filename>~/.pgpass</filename> file
+ (see <xref linkend="libpq-pgpass"/>).
+ </para>
+ </step>
+
+ <step>
+ <title>Stop both servers</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Make sure both database servers are stopped using, on Unix, e.g.:
+
+<programlisting>
+pg_ctl -D /opt/PostgreSQL/9.6 stop
+pg_ctl -D /opt/PostgreSQL/&majorversion; stop
+</programlisting>
+
+ or on Windows, using the proper service names:
+
+<programlisting>
+NET STOP postgresql-9.6
+NET STOP postgresql-&majorversion;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Streaming replication and log-shipping standby servers can
+ remain running until a later step.
+ </para>
+ </step>
+
+ <step>
+ <title>Prepare for standby server upgrades</title>
+
+ <para>
+ If you are upgrading standby servers using methods outlined in section <xref
+ linkend="pgupgrade-step-replicas"/>, verify that the old standby
+ servers are caught up by running <application>pg_controldata</application>
+ against the old primary and standby clusters. Verify that the
+ <quote>Latest checkpoint location</quote> values match in all clusters.
+ (There will be a mismatch if old standby servers were shut down
+ before the old primary or if the old standby servers are still running.)
+ Also, make sure <varname>wal_level</varname> is not set to
+ <literal>minimal</literal> in the <filename>postgresql.conf</filename> file on the
+ new primary cluster.
+ </para>
+ </step>
+
+ <step>
+ <title>Run <application>pg_upgrade</application></title>
+
+ <para>
+ Always run the <application>pg_upgrade</application> binary of the new server, not the old one.
+ <application>pg_upgrade</application> requires the specification of the old and new cluster's
+ data and executable (<filename>bin</filename>) directories. You can also specify
+ user and port values, and whether you want the data files linked or cloned
+ instead of the default copy behavior.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If you use link mode, the upgrade will be much faster (no file
+ copying) and use less disk space, but you will not be able to access
+ your old cluster
+ once you start the new cluster after the upgrade. Link mode also
+ requires that the old and new cluster data directories be in the
+ same file system. (Tablespaces and <filename>pg_wal</filename> can be on
+ different file systems.)
+ Clone mode provides the same speed and disk space advantages but
+ does not cause the old cluster to be unusable once the new cluster
+ is started. Clone mode also requires that the old and new data
+ directories be in the same file system. This mode is only available
+ on certain operating systems and file systems.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <option>--jobs</option> option allows multiple CPU cores to be used
+ for copying/linking of files and to dump and restore database schemas
+ in parallel; a good place to start is the maximum of the number of
+ CPU cores and tablespaces. This option can dramatically reduce the
+ time to upgrade a multi-database server running on a multiprocessor
+ machine.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For Windows users, you must be logged into an administrative account, and
+ then start a shell as the <literal>postgres</literal> user and set the proper path:
+
+<programlisting>
+RUNAS /USER:postgres "CMD.EXE"
+SET PATH=%PATH%;C:\Program Files\PostgreSQL\&majorversion;\bin;
+</programlisting>
+
+ and then run <application>pg_upgrade</application> with quoted directories, e.g.:
+
+<programlisting>
+pg_upgrade.exe
+ --old-datadir "C:/Program Files/PostgreSQL/9.6/data"
+ --new-datadir "C:/Program Files/PostgreSQL/&majorversion;/data"
+ --old-bindir "C:/Program Files/PostgreSQL/9.6/bin"
+ --new-bindir "C:/Program Files/PostgreSQL/&majorversion;/bin"
+</programlisting>
+
+ Once started, <command>pg_upgrade</command> will verify the two clusters are compatible
+ and then do the upgrade. You can use <command>pg_upgrade --check</command>
+ to perform only the checks, even if the old server is still
+ running. <command>pg_upgrade --check</command> will also outline any
+ manual adjustments you will need to make after the upgrade. If you
+ are going to be using link or clone mode, you should use the option
+ <option>--link</option> or <option>--clone</option> with
+ <option>--check</option> to enable mode-specific checks.
+ <command>pg_upgrade</command> requires write permission in the current directory.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Obviously, no one should be accessing the clusters during the
+ upgrade. <application>pg_upgrade</application> defaults to running servers
+ on port 50432 to avoid unintended client connections.
+ You can use the same port number for both clusters when doing an
+ upgrade because the old and new clusters will not be running at the
+ same time. However, when checking an old running server, the old
+ and new port numbers must be different.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If an error occurs while restoring the database schema, <command>pg_upgrade</command> will
+ exit and you will have to revert to the old cluster as outlined in <xref linkend="pgupgrade-step-revert"/>
+ below. To try <command>pg_upgrade</command> again, you will need to modify the old
+ cluster so the pg_upgrade schema restore succeeds. If the problem is a
+ <filename>contrib</filename> module, you might need to uninstall the <filename>contrib</filename> module from
+ the old cluster and install it in the new cluster after the upgrade,
+ assuming the module is not being used to store user data.
+ </para>
+ </step>
+
+ <step id="pgupgrade-step-replicas">
+ <title>Upgrade streaming replication and log-shipping standby servers</title>
+
+ <para>
+ If you used link mode and have Streaming Replication (see <xref
+ linkend="streaming-replication"/>) or Log-Shipping (see <xref
+ linkend="warm-standby"/>) standby servers, you can follow these steps to
+ quickly upgrade them. You will not be running <application>pg_upgrade</application> on
+ the standby servers, but rather <application>rsync</application> on the primary.
+ Do not start any servers yet.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If you did <emphasis>not</emphasis> use link mode, do not have or do not
+ want to use <application>rsync</application>, or want an easier solution, skip
+ the instructions in this section and simply recreate the standby
+ servers once <application>pg_upgrade</application> completes and the new primary
+ is running.
+ </para>
+
+ <substeps>
+
+ <step>
+ <title>Install the new PostgreSQL binaries on standby servers</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Make sure the new binaries and support files are installed on all
+ standby servers.
+ </para>
+ </step>
+
+ <step>
+ <title>Make sure the new standby data directories do <emphasis>not</emphasis> exist</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Make sure the new standby data directories do <emphasis>not</emphasis>
+ exist or are empty. If <application>initdb</application> was run, delete
+ the standby servers' new data directories.
+ </para>
+ </step>
+
+ <step>
+ <title>Install extension shared object files</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Install the same extension shared object files on the new standbys
+ that you installed in the new primary cluster.
+ </para>
+ </step>
+
+ <step>
+ <title>Stop standby servers</title>
+
+ <para>
+ If the standby servers are still running, stop them now using the
+ above instructions.
+ </para>
+ </step>
+
+ <step>
+ <title>Save configuration files</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Save any configuration files from the old standbys' configuration
+ directories you need to keep, e.g., <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>
+ (and any files included by it), <filename>postgresql.auto.conf</filename>,
+ <literal>pg_hba.conf</literal>, because these will be overwritten
+ or removed in the next step.
+ </para>
+ </step>
+
+ <step>
+ <title>Run <application>rsync</application></title>
+
+ <para>
+ When using link mode, standby servers can be quickly upgraded using
+ <application>rsync</application>. To accomplish this, from a directory on
+ the primary server that is above the old and new database cluster
+ directories, run this on the <emphasis>primary</emphasis> for each standby
+ server:
+
+<programlisting>
+rsync --archive --delete --hard-links --size-only --no-inc-recursive old_cluster new_cluster remote_dir
+</programlisting>
+
+ where <option>old_cluster</option> and <option>new_cluster</option> are relative
+ to the current directory on the primary, and <option>remote_dir</option>
+ is <emphasis>above</emphasis> the old and new cluster directories
+ on the standby. The directory structure under the specified
+ directories on the primary and standbys must match. Consult the
+ <application>rsync</application> manual page for details on specifying the
+ remote directory, e.g.,
+
+<programlisting>
+rsync --archive --delete --hard-links --size-only --no-inc-recursive /opt/PostgreSQL/9.5 \
+ /opt/PostgreSQL/9.6 standby.example.com:/opt/PostgreSQL
+</programlisting>
+
+ You can verify what the command will do using
+ <application>rsync</application>'s <option>--dry-run</option> option. While
+ <application>rsync</application> must be run on the primary for at least one
+ standby, it is possible to run <application>rsync</application> on an upgraded
+ standby to upgrade other standbys, as long as the upgraded standby
+ has not been started.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ What this does is to record the links created by
+ <application>pg_upgrade</application>'s link mode that connect files in the
+ old and new clusters on the primary server. It then finds matching
+ files in the standby's old cluster and creates links for them in the
+ standby's new cluster. Files that were not linked on the primary
+ are copied from the primary to the standby. (They are usually
+ small.) This provides rapid standby upgrades. Unfortunately,
+ <application>rsync</application> needlessly copies files associated with
+ temporary and unlogged tables because these files don't normally
+ exist on standby servers.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If you have tablespaces, you will need to run a similar
+ <application>rsync</application> command for each tablespace directory, e.g.:
+
+<programlisting>
+rsync --archive --delete --hard-links --size-only --no-inc-recursive /vol1/pg_tblsp/PG_9.5_201510051 \
+ /vol1/pg_tblsp/PG_9.6_201608131 standby.example.com:/vol1/pg_tblsp
+</programlisting>
+
+ If you have relocated <filename>pg_wal</filename> outside the data
+ directories, <application>rsync</application> must be run on those directories
+ too.
+ </para>
+ </step>
+
+ <step>
+ <title>Configure streaming replication and log-shipping standby servers</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Configure the servers for log shipping. (You do not need to run
+ <function>pg_start_backup()</function> and <function>pg_stop_backup()</function>
+ or take a file system backup as the standbys are still synchronized
+ with the primary.) Replication slots are not copied and must
+ be recreated.
+ </para>
+ </step>
+
+ </substeps>
+
+ </step>
+
+ <step>
+ <title>Restore <filename>pg_hba.conf</filename></title>
+
+ <para>
+ If you modified <filename>pg_hba.conf</filename>, restore its original settings.
+ It might also be necessary to adjust other configuration files in the new
+ cluster to match the old cluster, e.g., <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>
+ (and any files included by it), <filename>postgresql.auto.conf</filename>.
+ </para>
+ </step>
+
+ <step>
+ <title>Start the new server</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The new server can now be safely started, and then any
+ <application>rsync</application>'ed standby servers.
+ </para>
+ </step>
+
+ <step>
+ <title>Post-upgrade processing</title>
+
+ <para>
+ If any post-upgrade processing is required, pg_upgrade will issue
+ warnings as it completes. It will also generate script files that must
+ be run by the administrator. The script files will connect to each
+ database that needs post-upgrade processing. Each script should be
+ run using:
+
+<programlisting>
+psql --username=postgres --file=script.sql postgres
+</programlisting>
+
+ The scripts can be run in any order and can be deleted once they have
+ been run.
+ </para>
+
+ <caution>
+ <para>
+ In general it is unsafe to access tables referenced in rebuild scripts
+ until the rebuild scripts have run to completion; doing so could yield
+ incorrect results or poor performance. Tables not referenced in rebuild
+ scripts can be accessed immediately.
+ </para>
+ </caution>
+ </step>
+
+ <step>
+ <title>Statistics</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Because optimizer statistics are not transferred by <command>pg_upgrade</command>, you will
+ be instructed to run a command to regenerate that information at the end
+ of the upgrade. You might need to set connection parameters to
+ match your new cluster.
+ </para>
+ </step>
+
+ <step>
+ <title>Delete old cluster</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Once you are satisfied with the upgrade, you can delete the old
+ cluster's data directories by running the script mentioned when
+ <command>pg_upgrade</command> completes. (Automatic deletion is not
+ possible if you have user-defined tablespaces inside the old data
+ directory.) You can also delete the old installation directories
+ (e.g., <filename>bin</filename>, <filename>share</filename>).
+ </para>
+ </step>
+
+ <step id="pgupgrade-step-revert" performance="optional">
+ <title>Reverting to old cluster</title>
+
+ <para>
+ If, after running <command>pg_upgrade</command>, you wish to revert to the old cluster,
+ there are several options:
+
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If the <option>--check</option> option was used, the old cluster
+ was unmodified; it can be restarted.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If the <option>--link</option> option was <emphasis>not</emphasis>
+ used, the old cluster was unmodified; it can be restarted.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If the <option>--link</option> option was used, the data
+ files might be shared between the old and new cluster:
+
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If <command>pg_upgrade</command> aborted before linking started,
+ the old cluster was unmodified; it can be restarted.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If you did <emphasis>not</emphasis> start the new cluster, the old
+ cluster was unmodified except that, when linking started, a
+ <literal>.old</literal> suffix was appended to
+ <filename>$PGDATA/global/pg_control</filename>. To reuse the old
+ cluster, remove the <filename>.old</filename> suffix from
+ <filename>$PGDATA/global/pg_control</filename>; you can then restart
+ the old cluster.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If you did start the new cluster, it has written to shared files
+ and it is unsafe to use the old cluster. The old cluster will
+ need to be restored from backup in this case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ </itemizedlist></para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist></para>
+ </step>
+ </procedure>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_upgrade</application> creates various working files, such
+ as schema dumps, in the current working directory. For security, be sure
+ that that directory is not readable or writable by any other users.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_upgrade</application> launches short-lived postmasters in
+ the old and new data directories. Temporary Unix socket files for
+ communication with these postmasters are, by default, made in the current
+ working directory. In some situations the path name for the current
+ directory might be too long to be a valid socket name. In that case you
+ can use the <option>-s</option> option to put the socket files in some
+ directory with a shorter path name. For security, be sure that that
+ directory is not readable or writable by any other users.
+ (This is not supported on Windows.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ All failure, rebuild, and reindex cases will be reported by
+ <application>pg_upgrade</application> if they affect your installation;
+ post-upgrade scripts to rebuild tables and indexes will be
+ generated automatically. If you are trying to automate the upgrade
+ of many clusters, you should find that clusters with identical database
+ schemas require the same post-upgrade steps for all cluster upgrades;
+ this is because the post-upgrade steps are based on the database
+ schemas, and not user data.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For deployment testing, create a schema-only copy of the old cluster,
+ insert dummy data, and upgrade that.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>pg_upgrade</application> does not support upgrading of databases
+ containing table columns using these <type>reg*</type> OID-referencing system data types:
+ <simplelist>
+ <member><type>regcollation</type></member>
+ <member><type>regconfig</type></member>
+ <member><type>regdictionary</type></member>
+ <member><type>regnamespace</type></member>
+ <member><type>regoper</type></member>
+ <member><type>regoperator</type></member>
+ <member><type>regproc</type></member>
+ <member><type>regprocedure</type></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ (<type>regclass</type>, <type>regrole</type>, and <type>regtype</type> can be upgraded.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If you are upgrading a pre-<productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 9.2 cluster
+ that uses a configuration-file-only directory, you must pass the
+ real data directory location to <application>pg_upgrade</application>, and
+ pass the configuration directory location to the server, e.g.,
+ <literal>-d /real-data-directory -o '-D /configuration-directory'</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If using a pre-9.1 old server that is using a non-default Unix-domain
+ socket directory or a default that differs from the default of the
+ new cluster, set <envar>PGHOST</envar> to point to the old server's socket
+ location. (This is not relevant on Windows.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If you want to use link mode and you do not want your old cluster
+ to be modified when the new cluster is started, consider using the clone mode.
+ If that is not available, make a copy of the
+ old cluster and upgrade that in link mode. To make a valid copy
+ of the old cluster, use <command>rsync</command> to create a dirty
+ copy of the old cluster while the server is running, then shut down
+ the old server and run <command>rsync --checksum</command> again to update the
+ copy with any changes to make it consistent. (<option>--checksum</option>
+ is necessary because <command>rsync</command> only has file modification-time
+ granularity of one second.) You might want to exclude some
+ files, e.g., <filename>postmaster.pid</filename>, as documented in <xref
+ linkend="backup-lowlevel-base-backup"/>. If your file system supports
+ file system snapshots or copy-on-write file copies, you can use that
+ to make a backup of the old cluster and tablespaces, though the snapshot
+ and copies must be created simultaneously or while the database server
+ is down.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="app-initdb"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="app-pg-ctl"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="app-pgdump"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="app-postgres"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/postgres-ref.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/postgres-ref.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4aaa7ab
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/postgres-ref.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,837 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/postgres-ref.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="app-postgres">
+ <indexterm zone="app-postgres">
+ <primary>postgres</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>postgres</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>postgres</refname>
+ <refpurpose><productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database server</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>postgres</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>postgres</command> is the
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database server. In order
+ for a client application to access a database it connects (over a
+ network or locally) to a running <command>postgres</command> instance.
+ The <command>postgres</command> instance then starts a separate server
+ process to handle the connection.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ One <command>postgres</command> instance always manages the data of
+ exactly one database cluster. A database cluster is a collection
+ of databases that is stored at a common file system location (the
+ <quote>data area</quote>). More than one
+ <command>postgres</command> instance can run on a system at one
+ time, so long as they use different data areas and different
+ communication ports (see below). When
+ <command>postgres</command> starts it needs to know the location
+ of the data area. The location must be specified by the
+ <option>-D</option> option or the <envar>PGDATA</envar> environment
+ variable; there is no default. Typically, <option>-D</option> or
+ <envar>PGDATA</envar> points directly to the data area directory
+ created by <xref linkend="app-initdb"/>. Other possible file layouts are
+ discussed in <xref linkend="runtime-config-file-locations"/>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ By default <command>postgres</command> starts in the
+ foreground and prints log messages to the standard error stream. In
+ practical applications <command>postgres</command>
+ should be started as a background process, perhaps at boot time.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>postgres</command> command can also be called in
+ single-user mode. The primary use for this mode is during
+ bootstrapping by <xref linkend="app-initdb"/>. Sometimes it is used
+ for debugging or disaster recovery; note that running a single-user
+ server is not truly suitable for debugging the server, since no
+ realistic interprocess communication and locking will happen.
+ When invoked in single-user
+ mode from the shell, the user can enter queries and the results
+ will be printed to the screen, but in a form that is more useful
+ for developers than end users. In the single-user mode,
+ the session user will be set to the user with ID 1, and implicit
+ superuser powers are granted to this user.
+ This user does not actually have to exist, so the single-user mode
+ can be used to manually recover from certain
+ kinds of accidental damage to the system catalogs.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="app-postgres-options">
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>postgres</command> accepts the following command-line
+ arguments. For a detailed discussion of the options consult <xref
+ linkend="runtime-config"/>. You can save typing most of these
+ options by setting up a configuration file. Some (safe) options
+ can also be set from the connecting client in an
+ application-dependent way to apply only for that session. For
+ example, if the environment variable <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> is
+ set, then <application>libpq</application>-based clients will pass that
+ string to the server, which will interpret it as
+ <command>postgres</command> command-line options.
+ </para>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>General Purpose</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-B <replaceable class="parameter">nbuffers</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets the number of shared buffers for use by the server
+ processes. The default value of this parameter is chosen
+ automatically by <application>initdb</application>.
+ Specifying this option is equivalent to setting the
+ <xref linkend="guc-shared-buffers"/> configuration parameter.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-c <replaceable>name</replaceable>=<replaceable>value</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets a named run-time parameter. The configuration parameters
+ supported by <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> are
+ described in <xref linkend="runtime-config"/>. Most of the
+ other command line options are in fact short forms of such a
+ parameter assignment. <option>-c</option> can appear multiple times
+ to set multiple parameters.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-C <replaceable>name</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Prints the value of the named run-time parameter, and exits.
+ (See the <option>-c</option> option above for details.) This can
+ be used on a running server, and returns values from
+ <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>, modified by any parameters
+ supplied in this invocation. It does not reflect parameters
+ supplied when the cluster was started.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This option is meant for other programs that interact with a server
+ instance, such as <xref linkend="app-pg-ctl"/>, to query configuration
+ parameter values. User-facing applications should instead use <link
+ linkend="sql-show"><command>SHOW</command></link> or the <structname>pg_settings</structname> view.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-d <replaceable>debug-level</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets the debug level. The higher this value is set, the more
+ debugging output is written to the server log. Values are
+ from 1 to 5. It is also possible to pass <literal>-d
+ 0</literal> for a specific session, which will prevent the
+ server log level of the parent <command>postgres</command> process from being
+ propagated to this session.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-D <replaceable class="parameter">datadir</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the file system location of the database
+ configuration files. See
+ <xref linkend="runtime-config-file-locations"/> for details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-e</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets the default date style to <quote>European</quote>, that is
+ <literal>DMY</literal> ordering of input date fields. This also causes
+ the day to be printed before the month in certain date output formats.
+ See <xref linkend="datatype-datetime"/> for more information.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-F</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Disables <function>fsync</function> calls for improved
+ performance, at the risk of data corruption in the event of a
+ system crash. Specifying this option is equivalent to
+ disabling the <xref linkend="guc-fsync"/> configuration
+ parameter. Read the detailed documentation before using this!
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-h <replaceable class="parameter">hostname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the IP host name or address on which
+ <command>postgres</command> is to listen for TCP/IP
+ connections from client applications. The value can also be a
+ comma-separated list of addresses, or <literal>*</literal> to specify
+ listening on all available interfaces. An empty value
+ specifies not listening on any IP addresses, in which case
+ only Unix-domain sockets can be used to connect to the
+ server. Defaults to listening only on
+ <systemitem class="systemname">localhost</systemitem>.
+ Specifying this option is equivalent to setting the <xref
+ linkend="guc-listen-addresses"/> configuration parameter.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-i</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Allows remote clients to connect via TCP/IP (Internet domain)
+ connections. Without this option, only local connections are
+ accepted. This option is equivalent to setting
+ <varname>listen_addresses</varname> to <literal>*</literal> in
+ <filename>postgresql.conf</filename> or via <option>-h</option>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ This option is deprecated since it does not allow access to the
+ full functionality of <xref linkend="guc-listen-addresses"/>.
+ It's usually better to set <varname>listen_addresses</varname> directly.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-k <replaceable class="parameter">directory</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the directory of the Unix-domain socket on which
+ <command>postgres</command> is to listen for
+ connections from client applications. The value can also be a
+ comma-separated list of directories. An empty value
+ specifies not listening on any Unix-domain sockets, in which case
+ only TCP/IP sockets can be used to connect to the server.
+ The default value is normally
+ <filename>/tmp</filename>, but that can be changed at build time.
+ Specifying this option is equivalent to setting the <xref
+ linkend="guc-unix-socket-directories"/> configuration parameter.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-l</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Enables secure connections using <acronym>SSL</acronym>.
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> must have been compiled with
+ support for <acronym>SSL</acronym> for this option to be
+ available. For more information on using <acronym>SSL</acronym>,
+ refer to <xref linkend="ssl-tcp"/>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-N <replaceable class="parameter">max-connections</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets the maximum number of client connections that this
+ server will accept. The default value of this parameter is chosen
+ automatically by <application>initdb</application>.
+ Specifying this option is equivalent to setting the
+ <xref linkend="guc-max-connections"/> configuration parameter.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-p <replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the TCP/IP port or local Unix domain socket file
+ extension on which <command>postgres</command>
+ is to listen for connections from client applications.
+ Defaults to the value of the <envar>PGPORT</envar> environment
+ variable, or if <envar>PGPORT</envar> is not set, then
+ defaults to the value established during compilation (normally
+ 5432). If you specify a port other than the default port,
+ then all client applications must specify the same port using
+ either command-line options or <envar>PGPORT</envar>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-s</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print time information and other statistics at the end of each command.
+ This is useful for benchmarking or for use in tuning the number of
+ buffers.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-S</option> <replaceable class="parameter">work-mem</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the base amount of memory to be used by sorts and
+ hash tables before resorting to temporary disk files. See the
+ description of the <varname>work_mem</varname> configuration
+ parameter in <xref linkend="runtime-config-resource-memory"/>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-V</option></term>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the <application>postgres</application> version and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--<replaceable>name</replaceable>=<replaceable>value</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets a named run-time parameter; a shorter form of
+ <option>-c</option>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--describe-config</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option dumps out the server's internal configuration variables,
+ descriptions, and defaults in tab-delimited <command>COPY</command> format.
+ It is designed primarily for use by administration tools.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show help about <application>postgres</application> command line
+ arguments, and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Semi-Internal Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The options described here are used
+ mainly for debugging purposes, and in some cases to assist with
+ recovery of severely damaged databases. There should be no reason
+ to use them in a production database setup. They are listed
+ here only for use by <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ system developers. Furthermore, these options might
+ change or be removed in a future release without notice.
+ </para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-f</option> <literal>{ s | i | o | b | t | n | m | h }</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Forbids the use of particular scan and join methods:
+ <literal>s</literal> and <literal>i</literal>
+ disable sequential and index scans respectively,
+ <literal>o</literal>, <literal>b</literal> and <literal>t</literal>
+ disable index-only scans, bitmap index scans, and TID scans
+ respectively, while
+ <literal>n</literal>, <literal>m</literal>, and <literal>h</literal>
+ disable nested-loop, merge and hash joins respectively.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Neither sequential scans nor nested-loop joins can be disabled
+ completely; the <literal>-fs</literal> and
+ <literal>-fn</literal> options simply discourage the optimizer
+ from using those plan types if it has any other alternative.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-n</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option is for debugging problems that cause a server
+ process to die abnormally. The ordinary strategy in this
+ situation is to notify all other server processes that they
+ must terminate and then reinitialize the shared memory and
+ semaphores. This is because an errant server process could
+ have corrupted some shared state before terminating. This
+ option specifies that <command>postgres</command> will
+ not reinitialize shared data structures. A knowledgeable
+ system programmer can then use a debugger to examine shared
+ memory and semaphore state.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-O</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Allows the structure of system tables to be modified. This is
+ used by <command>initdb</command>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-P</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Ignore system indexes when reading system tables, but still update
+ the indexes when modifying the tables. This is useful when
+ recovering from damaged system indexes.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-t</option> <literal>pa[rser] | pl[anner] | e[xecutor]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print timing statistics for each query relating to each of the
+ major system modules. This option cannot be used together
+ with the <option>-s</option> option.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-T</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option is for debugging problems that cause a server
+ process to die abnormally. The ordinary strategy in this
+ situation is to notify all other server processes that they
+ must terminate and then reinitialize the shared memory and
+ semaphores. This is because an errant server process could
+ have corrupted some shared state before terminating. This
+ option specifies that <command>postgres</command> will
+ stop all other server processes by sending the signal
+ <literal>SIGSTOP</literal>, but will not cause them to
+ terminate. This permits system programmers to collect core
+ dumps from all server processes by hand.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-v</option> <replaceable class="parameter">protocol</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the version number of the frontend/backend protocol
+ to be used for a particular session. This option is for
+ internal use only.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-W</option> <replaceable class="parameter">seconds</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A delay of this many seconds occurs when a new server process
+ is started, after it conducts the authentication procedure.
+ This is intended to give an opportunity to attach to the
+ server process with a debugger.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Options for Single-User Mode</title>
+
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary>single-user mode</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <para>
+ The following options only apply to the single-user mode
+ (see <xref linkend="app-postgres-single-user"/> below).
+ </para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--single</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Selects the single-user mode. This must be the first argument
+ on the command line.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">database</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the name of the database to be accessed. This must be
+ the last argument on the command line. If it is
+ omitted it defaults to the user name.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-E</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Echo all commands to standard output before executing them.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-j</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Use semicolon followed by two newlines, rather than just newline,
+ as the command entry terminator.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-r</option> <replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Send all server log output to <replaceable
+ class="parameter">filename</replaceable>. This option is only
+ honored when supplied as a command-line option.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Environment</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PGCLIENTENCODING</envar></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Default character encoding used by clients. (The clients can
+ override this individually.) This value can also be set in the
+ configuration file.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PGDATA</envar></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Default data directory location
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PGDATESTYLE</envar></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Default value of the <xref linkend="guc-datestyle"/> run-time
+ parameter. (The use of this environment variable is deprecated.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PGPORT</envar></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Default port number (preferably set in the configuration file)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Diagnostics</title>
+
+ <para>
+ A failure message mentioning <literal>semget</literal> or
+ <literal>shmget</literal> probably indicates you need to configure your
+ kernel to provide adequate shared memory and semaphores. For more
+ discussion see <xref linkend="kernel-resources"/>. You might be able
+ to postpone reconfiguring your kernel by decreasing <xref
+ linkend="guc-shared-buffers"/> to reduce the shared memory
+ consumption of <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>, and/or by reducing
+ <xref linkend="guc-max-connections"/> to reduce the semaphore
+ consumption.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A failure message suggesting that another server is already running
+ should be checked carefully, for example by using the command
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>ps ax | grep postgres</userinput>
+</screen>
+ or
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>ps -ef | grep postgres</userinput>
+</screen>
+ depending on your system. If you are certain that no conflicting
+ server is running, you can remove the lock file mentioned in the
+ message and try again.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A failure message indicating inability to bind to a port might
+ indicate that that port is already in use by some
+ non-<productname>PostgreSQL</productname> process. You might also
+ get this error if you terminate <command>postgres</command>
+ and immediately restart it using the same port; in this case, you
+ must simply wait a few seconds until the operating system closes
+ the port before trying again. Finally, you might get this error if
+ you specify a port number that your operating system considers to
+ be reserved. For example, many versions of Unix consider port
+ numbers under 1024 to be <quote>trusted</quote> and only permit
+ the Unix superuser to access them.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The utility command <xref linkend="app-pg-ctl"/> can be used to
+ start and shut down the <command>postgres</command> server
+ safely and comfortably.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If at all possible, <emphasis>do not</emphasis> use
+ <literal>SIGKILL</literal> to kill the main
+ <command>postgres</command> server. Doing so will prevent
+ <command>postgres</command> from freeing the system
+ resources (e.g., shared memory and semaphores) that it holds before
+ terminating. This might cause problems for starting a fresh
+ <command>postgres</command> run.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To terminate the <command>postgres</command> server normally, the
+ signals <literal>SIGTERM</literal>, <literal>SIGINT</literal>, or
+ <literal>SIGQUIT</literal> can be used. The first will wait for
+ all clients to terminate before quitting, the second will
+ forcefully disconnect all clients, and the third will quit
+ immediately without proper shutdown, resulting in a recovery run
+ during restart.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>SIGHUP</literal> signal will reload
+ the server configuration files. It is also possible to send
+ <literal>SIGHUP</literal> to an individual server process, but that
+ is usually not sensible.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To cancel a running query, send the <literal>SIGINT</literal> signal
+ to the process running that command. To terminate a backend process
+ cleanly, send <literal>SIGTERM</literal> to that process. See
+ also <function>pg_cancel_backend</function> and <function>pg_terminate_backend</function>
+ in <xref linkend="functions-admin-signal"/> for the SQL-callable equivalents
+ of these two actions.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>postgres</command> server uses <literal>SIGQUIT</literal>
+ to tell subordinate server processes to terminate without normal
+ cleanup.
+ This signal <emphasis>should not</emphasis> be used by users. It
+ is also unwise to send <literal>SIGKILL</literal> to a server
+ process &mdash; the main <command>postgres</command> process will
+ interpret this as a crash and will force all the sibling processes
+ to quit as part of its standard crash-recovery procedure.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="app-postgres-bugs">
+ <title>Bugs</title>
+ <para>
+ The <option>--</option> options will not work on <systemitem
+ class="osname">FreeBSD</systemitem> or <systemitem class="osname">OpenBSD</systemitem>.
+ Use <option>-c</option> instead. This is a bug in the affected operating
+ systems; a future release of <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ will provide a workaround if this is not fixed.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="app-postgres-single-user" xreflabel="Single-User Mode">
+ <title>Single-User Mode</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To start a single-user mode server, use a command like
+<screen>
+<userinput>postgres --single -D /usr/local/pgsql/data <replaceable>other-options</replaceable> my_database</userinput>
+</screen>
+ Provide the correct path to the database directory with <option>-D</option>, or
+ make sure that the environment variable <envar>PGDATA</envar> is set.
+ Also specify the name of the particular database you want to work in.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Normally, the single-user mode server treats newline as the command
+ entry terminator; there is no intelligence about semicolons,
+ as there is in <application>psql</application>. To continue a command
+ across multiple lines, you must type backslash just before each
+ newline except the last one. The backslash and adjacent newline are
+ both dropped from the input command. Note that this will happen even
+ when within a string literal or comment.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ But if you use the <option>-j</option> command line switch, a single newline
+ does not terminate command entry; instead, the sequence
+ semicolon-newline-newline does. That is, type a semicolon immediately
+ followed by a completely empty line. Backslash-newline is not
+ treated specially in this mode. Again, there is no intelligence about
+ such a sequence appearing within a string literal or comment.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In either input mode, if you type a semicolon that is not just before or
+ part of a command entry terminator, it is considered a command separator.
+ When you do type a command entry terminator, the multiple statements
+ you've entered will be executed as a single transaction.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To quit the session, type <acronym>EOF</acronym>
+ (<keycombo action="simul"><keycap>Control</keycap><keycap>D</keycap></keycombo>, usually).
+ If you've entered any text since the last command entry terminator,
+ then <acronym>EOF</acronym> will be taken as a command entry terminator,
+ and another <acronym>EOF</acronym> will be needed to exit.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Note that the single-user mode server does not provide sophisticated
+ line-editing features (no command history, for example).
+ Single-user mode also does not do any background processing, such as
+ automatic checkpoints or replication.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="app-postgres-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To start <command>postgres</command> in the background
+ using default values, type:
+
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>nohup postgres &gt;logfile 2&gt;&amp;1 &lt;/dev/null &amp;</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To start <command>postgres</command> with a specific
+ port, e.g., 1234:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>postgres -p 1234</userinput>
+</screen>
+ To connect to this server using <application>psql</application>, specify this port with the -p option:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>psql -p 1234</userinput>
+</screen>
+ or set the environment variable <envar>PGPORT</envar>:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>export PGPORT=1234</userinput>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>psql</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Named run-time parameters can be set in either of these styles:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>postgres -c work_mem=1234</userinput>
+<prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>postgres --work-mem=1234</userinput>
+</screen>
+ Either form overrides whatever setting might exist for
+ <varname>work_mem</varname> in <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>. Notice that
+ underscores in parameter names can be written as either underscore
+ or dash on the command line. Except for short-term experiments,
+ it's probably better practice to edit the setting in
+ <filename>postgresql.conf</filename> than to rely on a command-line switch
+ to set a parameter.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <xref linkend="app-initdb"/>,
+ <xref linkend="app-pg-ctl"/>
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/postmaster.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/postmaster.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7b544ed
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/postmaster.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,44 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/postmaster.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="app-postmaster">
+ <indexterm zone="app-postmaster">
+ <primary>postmaster</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>postmaster</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>postmaster</refname>
+ <refpurpose><productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database server</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>postmaster</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>postmaster</command> is a deprecated alias of <command>postgres</command>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <xref linkend="app-postgres"/>
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/prepare.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/prepare.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..aae9194
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/prepare.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,257 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/prepare.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-prepare">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-prepare">
+ <primary>PREPARE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <indexterm zone="sql-prepare">
+ <primary>prepared statements</primary>
+ <secondary>creating</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>PREPARE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>PREPARE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>prepare a statement for execution</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+PREPARE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">data_type</replaceable> [, ...] ) ] AS <replaceable class="parameter">statement</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>PREPARE</command> creates a prepared statement. A prepared
+ statement is a server-side object that can be used to optimize
+ performance. When the <command>PREPARE</command> statement is
+ executed, the specified statement is parsed, analyzed, and rewritten.
+ When an <command>EXECUTE</command> command is subsequently
+ issued, the prepared statement is planned and executed. This division
+ of labor avoids repetitive parse analysis work, while allowing
+ the execution plan to depend on the specific parameter values supplied.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Prepared statements can take parameters: values that are
+ substituted into the statement when it is executed. When creating
+ the prepared statement, refer to parameters by position, using
+ <literal>$1</literal>, <literal>$2</literal>, etc. A corresponding list of
+ parameter data types can optionally be specified. When a
+ parameter's data type is not specified or is declared as
+ <literal>unknown</literal>, the type is inferred from the context
+ in which the parameter is first referenced (if possible). When executing the
+ statement, specify the actual values for these parameters in the
+ <command>EXECUTE</command> statement. Refer to <xref
+ linkend="sql-execute"/> for more
+ information about that.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Prepared statements only last for the duration of the current
+ database session. When the session ends, the prepared statement is
+ forgotten, so it must be recreated before being used again. This
+ also means that a single prepared statement cannot be used by
+ multiple simultaneous database clients; however, each client can create
+ their own prepared statement to use. Prepared statements can be
+ manually cleaned up using the <link linkend="sql-deallocate"><command>DEALLOCATE</command></link> command.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Prepared statements potentially have the largest performance advantage
+ when a single session is being used to execute a large number of similar
+ statements. The performance difference will be particularly
+ significant if the statements are complex to plan or rewrite, e.g.,
+ if the query involves a join of many tables or requires
+ the application of several rules. If the statement is relatively simple
+ to plan and rewrite but relatively expensive to execute, the
+ performance advantage of prepared statements will be less noticeable.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An arbitrary name given to this particular prepared
+ statement. It must be unique within a single session and is
+ subsequently used to execute or deallocate a previously prepared
+ statement.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">data_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The data type of a parameter to the prepared statement. If the
+ data type of a particular parameter is unspecified or is
+ specified as <literal>unknown</literal>, it will be inferred
+ from the context in which the parameter is first referenced. To refer to the
+ parameters in the prepared statement itself, use
+ <literal>$1</literal>, <literal>$2</literal>, etc.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">statement</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Any <command>SELECT</command>, <command>INSERT</command>, <command>UPDATE</command>,
+ <command>DELETE</command>, or <command>VALUES</command> statement.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-prepare-notes">
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ A prepared statement can be executed with either a <firstterm>generic
+ plan</firstterm> or a <firstterm>custom plan</firstterm>. A generic
+ plan is the same across all executions, while a custom plan is generated
+ for a specific execution using the parameter values given in that call.
+ Use of a generic plan avoids planning overhead, but in some situations
+ a custom plan will be much more efficient to execute because the planner
+ can make use of knowledge of the parameter values. (Of course, if the
+ prepared statement has no parameters, then this is moot and a generic
+ plan is always used.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ By default (that is, when <xref linkend="guc-plan-cache_mode"/> is set
+ to <literal>auto</literal>), the server will automatically choose
+ whether to use a generic or custom plan for a prepared statement that
+ has parameters. The current rule for this is that the first five
+ executions are done with custom plans and the average estimated cost of
+ those plans is calculated. Then a generic plan is created and its
+ estimated cost is compared to the average custom-plan cost. Subsequent
+ executions use the generic plan if its cost is not so much higher than
+ the average custom-plan cost as to make repeated replanning seem
+ preferable.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This heuristic can be overridden, forcing the server to use either
+ generic or custom plans, by setting <varname>plan_cache_mode</varname>
+ to <literal>force_generic_plan</literal>
+ or <literal>force_custom_plan</literal> respectively.
+ This setting is primarily useful if the generic plan's cost estimate
+ is badly off for some reason, allowing it to be chosen even though
+ its actual cost is much more than that of a custom plan.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To examine the query plan <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> is using
+ for a prepared statement, use <link linkend="sql-explain"><command>EXPLAIN</command></link>, for example
+<programlisting>
+EXPLAIN EXECUTE <replaceable>name</replaceable>(<replaceable>parameter_values</replaceable>);
+</programlisting>
+ If a generic plan is in use, it will contain parameter symbols
+ <literal>$<replaceable>n</replaceable></literal>, while a custom plan
+ will have the supplied parameter values substituted into it.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For more information on query planning and the statistics collected
+ by <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> for that purpose, see
+ the <xref linkend="sql-analyze"/>
+ documentation.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Although the main point of a prepared statement is to avoid repeated parse
+ analysis and planning of the statement, <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> will
+ force re-analysis and re-planning of the statement before using it
+ whenever database objects used in the statement have undergone
+ definitional (DDL) changes or their planner statistics have
+ been updated since the previous use of the prepared
+ statement. Also, if the value of <xref linkend="guc-search-path"/> changes
+ from one use to the next, the statement will be re-parsed using the new
+ <varname>search_path</varname>. (This latter behavior is new as of
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 9.3.) These rules make use of a
+ prepared statement semantically almost equivalent to re-submitting the
+ same query text over and over, but with a performance benefit if no object
+ definitions are changed, especially if the best plan remains the same
+ across uses. An example of a case where the semantic equivalence is not
+ perfect is that if the statement refers to a table by an unqualified name,
+ and then a new table of the same name is created in a schema appearing
+ earlier in the <varname>search_path</varname>, no automatic re-parse will occur
+ since no object used in the statement changed. However, if some other
+ change forces a re-parse, the new table will be referenced in subsequent
+ uses.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You can see all prepared statements available in the session by querying the
+ <link linkend="view-pg-prepared-statements"><structname>pg_prepared_statements</structname></link>
+ system view.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-prepare-examples" xreflabel="Examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+ <para>
+ Create a prepared statement for an <command>INSERT</command>
+ statement, and then execute it:
+<programlisting>
+PREPARE fooplan (int, text, bool, numeric) AS
+ INSERT INTO foo VALUES($1, $2, $3, $4);
+EXECUTE fooplan(1, 'Hunter Valley', 't', 200.00);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a prepared statement for a <command>SELECT</command>
+ statement, and then execute it:
+<programlisting>
+PREPARE usrrptplan (int) AS
+ SELECT * FROM users u, logs l WHERE u.usrid=$1 AND u.usrid=l.usrid
+ AND l.date = $2;
+EXECUTE usrrptplan(1, current_date);
+</programlisting>
+
+ In this example, the data type of the second parameter is not specified,
+ so it is inferred from the context in which <literal>$2</literal> is used.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The SQL standard includes a <command>PREPARE</command> statement,
+ but it is only for use in embedded SQL. This version of the
+ <command>PREPARE</command> statement also uses a somewhat different
+ syntax.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-deallocate"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-execute"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/prepare_transaction.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/prepare_transaction.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f4f6118
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/prepare_transaction.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,181 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/prepare_transaction.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-prepare-transaction">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-prepare-transaction">
+ <primary>PREPARE TRANSACTION</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>PREPARE TRANSACTION</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>PREPARE TRANSACTION</refname>
+ <refpurpose>prepare the current transaction for two-phase commit</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+PREPARE TRANSACTION <replaceable class="parameter">transaction_id</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>PREPARE TRANSACTION</command> prepares the current transaction
+ for two-phase commit. After this command, the transaction is no longer
+ associated with the current session; instead, its state is fully stored on
+ disk, and there is a very high probability that it can be committed
+ successfully, even if a database crash occurs before the commit is
+ requested.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Once prepared, a transaction can later be committed or rolled back
+ with <link linkend="sql-commit-prepared"><command>COMMIT PREPARED</command></link>
+ or <link linkend="sql-rollback-prepared"><command>ROLLBACK PREPARED</command></link>,
+ respectively. Those commands can be issued from any session, not
+ only the one that executed the original transaction.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ From the point of view of the issuing session, <command>PREPARE
+ TRANSACTION</command> is not unlike a <command>ROLLBACK</command> command:
+ after executing it, there is no active current transaction, and the
+ effects of the prepared transaction are no longer visible. (The effects
+ will become visible again if the transaction is committed.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the <command>PREPARE TRANSACTION</command> command fails for any
+ reason, it becomes a <command>ROLLBACK</command>: the current transaction
+ is canceled.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">transaction_id</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An arbitrary identifier that later identifies this transaction for
+ <command>COMMIT PREPARED</command> or <command>ROLLBACK PREPARED</command>.
+ The identifier must be written as a string literal, and must be
+ less than 200 bytes long. It must not be the same as the identifier
+ used for any currently prepared transaction.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>PREPARE TRANSACTION</command> is not intended for use in applications
+ or interactive sessions. Its purpose is to allow an external
+ transaction manager to perform atomic global transactions across multiple
+ databases or other transactional resources. Unless you're writing a
+ transaction manager, you probably shouldn't be using <command>PREPARE
+ TRANSACTION</command>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This command must be used inside a transaction block. Use <link
+ linkend="sql-begin"><command>BEGIN</command></link> to start one.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ It is not currently allowed to <command>PREPARE</command> a transaction that
+ has executed any operations involving temporary tables or the session's
+ temporary namespace, created any cursors <literal>WITH HOLD</literal>, or
+ executed <command>LISTEN</command>, <command>UNLISTEN</command>, or
+ <command>NOTIFY</command>.
+ Those features are too tightly
+ tied to the current session to be useful in a transaction to be prepared.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the transaction modified any run-time parameters with <command>SET</command>
+ (without the <literal>LOCAL</literal> option),
+ those effects persist after <command>PREPARE TRANSACTION</command>, and will not
+ be affected by any later <command>COMMIT PREPARED</command> or
+ <command>ROLLBACK PREPARED</command>. Thus, in this one respect
+ <command>PREPARE TRANSACTION</command> acts more like <command>COMMIT</command> than
+ <command>ROLLBACK</command>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ All currently available prepared transactions are listed in the
+ <link linkend="view-pg-prepared-xacts"><structname>pg_prepared_xacts</structname></link>
+ system view.
+ </para>
+
+ <caution>
+ <para>
+ It is unwise to leave transactions in the prepared state for a long time.
+ This will interfere with the ability of <command>VACUUM</command> to reclaim
+ storage, and in extreme cases could cause the database to shut down
+ to prevent transaction ID wraparound (see <xref
+ linkend="vacuum-for-wraparound"/>). Keep in mind also that the transaction
+ continues to hold whatever locks it held. The intended usage of the
+ feature is that a prepared transaction will normally be committed or
+ rolled back as soon as an external transaction manager has verified that
+ other databases are also prepared to commit.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If you have not set up an external transaction manager to track prepared
+ transactions and ensure they get closed out promptly, it is best to keep
+ the prepared-transaction feature disabled by setting
+ <xref linkend="guc-max-prepared-transactions"/> to zero. This will
+ prevent accidental creation of prepared transactions that might then
+ be forgotten and eventually cause problems.
+ </para>
+ </caution>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-prepare-transaction-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+ <para>
+ Prepare the current transaction for two-phase commit, using
+ <literal>foobar</literal> as the transaction identifier:
+
+<programlisting>
+PREPARE TRANSACTION 'foobar';
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>PREPARE TRANSACTION</command> is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension. It is intended for use by
+ external transaction management systems, some of which are covered by
+ standards (such as X/Open XA), but the SQL side of those systems is not
+ standardized.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-commit-prepared"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-rollback-prepared"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/psql-ref.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/psql-ref.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d14f058
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/psql-ref.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,5063 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/psql-ref.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="app-psql">
+ <indexterm zone="app-psql">
+ <primary>psql</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>psql</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname><application>psql</application></refname>
+ <refpurpose>
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> interactive terminal
+ </refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>psql</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg choice="opt"><replaceable class="parameter">dbname</replaceable>
+ <arg choice="opt"><replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></arg></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>psql</application> is a terminal-based front-end to
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>. It enables you to type in
+ queries interactively, issue them to
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>, and see the query results.
+ Alternatively, input can be from a file or from command line
+ arguments. In addition, <application>psql</application> provides a
+ number of meta-commands and various shell-like features to
+ facilitate writing scripts and automating a wide variety of tasks.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="r1-app-psql-3">
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-a</option></term>
+ <term><option>--echo-all</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print all nonempty input lines to standard output as they are read.
+ (This does not apply to lines read interactively.) This is
+ equivalent to setting the variable <varname>ECHO</varname> to
+ <literal>all</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-A</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-align</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Switches to unaligned output mode. (The default output mode is
+ <literal>aligned</literal>.) This is equivalent to
+ <command>\pset format unaligned</command>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-b</option></term>
+ <term><option>--echo-errors</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print failed SQL commands to standard error output. This is
+ equivalent to setting the variable <varname>ECHO</varname> to
+ <literal>errors</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-c <replaceable class="parameter">command</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--command=<replaceable class="parameter">command</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies that <application>psql</application> is to execute the given
+ command string, <replaceable class="parameter">command</replaceable>.
+ This option can be repeated and combined in any order with
+ the <option>-f</option> option. When either <option>-c</option>
+ or <option>-f</option> is specified, <application>psql</application>
+ does not read commands from standard input; instead it terminates
+ after processing all the <option>-c</option> and <option>-f</option>
+ options in sequence.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <replaceable class="parameter">command</replaceable> must be either
+ a command string that is completely parsable by the server (i.e.,
+ it contains no <application>psql</application>-specific features),
+ or a single backslash command. Thus you cannot mix
+ <acronym>SQL</acronym> and <application>psql</application>
+ meta-commands within a <option>-c</option> option. To achieve that,
+ you could use repeated <option>-c</option> options or pipe the string
+ into <application>psql</application>, for example:
+<programlisting>
+psql -c '\x' -c 'SELECT * FROM foo;'
+</programlisting>
+ or
+<programlisting>
+echo '\x \\ SELECT * FROM foo;' | psql
+</programlisting>
+ (<literal>\\</literal> is the separator meta-command.)
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Each <acronym>SQL</acronym> command string passed
+ to <option>-c</option> is sent to the server as a single request.
+ Because of this, the server executes it as a single transaction even
+ if the string contains multiple <acronym>SQL</acronym> commands,
+ unless there are explicit <command>BEGIN</command>/<command>COMMIT</command>
+ commands included in the string to divide it into multiple
+ transactions. (See <xref linkend="protocol-flow-multi-statement"/>
+ for more details about how the server handles multi-query strings.)
+ Also, <application>psql</application> only prints the
+ result of the last <acronym>SQL</acronym> command in the string.
+ This is different from the behavior when the same string is read from
+ a file or fed to <application>psql</application>'s standard input,
+ because then <application>psql</application> sends
+ each <acronym>SQL</acronym> command separately.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Because of this behavior, putting more than one SQL command in a
+ single <option>-c</option> string often has unexpected results.
+ It's better to use repeated <option>-c</option> commands or feed
+ multiple commands to <application>psql</application>'s standard input,
+ either using <application>echo</application> as illustrated above, or
+ via a shell here-document, for example:
+<programlisting>
+psql &lt;&lt;EOF
+\x
+SELECT * FROM foo;
+EOF
+</programlisting></para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--csv</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Switches to <acronym>CSV</acronym> (Comma-Separated Values) output
+ mode. This is equivalent to <command>\pset format csv</command>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-d <replaceable class="parameter">dbname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--dbname=<replaceable class="parameter">dbname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the name of the database to connect to. This is
+ equivalent to specifying <replaceable
+ class="parameter">dbname</replaceable> as the first non-option
+ argument on the command line. The <replaceable>dbname</replaceable>
+ can be a <link linkend="libpq-connstring">connection string</link>.
+ If so, connection string parameters will override any conflicting
+ command line options.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-e</option></term>
+ <term><option>--echo-queries</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Copy all SQL commands sent to the server to standard output as well.
+ This is equivalent
+ to setting the variable <varname>ECHO</varname> to
+ <literal>queries</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-E</option></term>
+ <term><option>--echo-hidden</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Echo the actual queries generated by <command>\d</command> and other backslash
+ commands. You can use this to study <application>psql</application>'s
+ internal operations. This is equivalent to
+ setting the variable <varname>ECHO_HIDDEN</varname> to <literal>on</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-f <replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--file=<replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Read commands from the
+ file <replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable>,
+ rather than standard input.
+ This option can be repeated and combined in any order with
+ the <option>-c</option> option. When either <option>-c</option>
+ or <option>-f</option> is specified, <application>psql</application>
+ does not read commands from standard input; instead it terminates
+ after processing all the <option>-c</option> and <option>-f</option>
+ options in sequence.
+ Except for that, this option is largely equivalent to the
+ meta-command <command>\i</command>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If <replaceable>filename</replaceable> is <literal>-</literal>
+ (hyphen), then standard input is read until an EOF indication
+ or <command>\q</command> meta-command. This can be used to intersperse
+ interactive input with input from files. Note however that Readline
+ is not used in this case (much as if <option>-n</option> had been
+ specified).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Using this option is subtly different from writing <literal>psql
+ &lt; <replaceable
+ class="parameter">filename</replaceable></literal>. In general,
+ both will do what you expect, but using <literal>-f</literal>
+ enables some nice features such as error messages with line
+ numbers. There is also a slight chance that using this option will
+ reduce the start-up overhead. On the other hand, the variant using
+ the shell's input redirection is (in theory) guaranteed to yield
+ exactly the same output you would have received had you entered
+ everything by hand.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-F <replaceable class="parameter">separator</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--field-separator=<replaceable class="parameter">separator</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Use <replaceable class="parameter">separator</replaceable> as the
+ field separator for unaligned output. This is equivalent to
+ <command>\pset fieldsep</command> or <command>\f</command>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-h <replaceable class="parameter">hostname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--host=<replaceable class="parameter">hostname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the host name of the machine on which the
+ server is running. If the value begins
+ with a slash, it is used as the directory for the Unix-domain
+ socket.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-H</option></term>
+ <term><option>--html</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Switches to <acronym>HTML</acronym> output mode. This is
+ equivalent to <command>\pset format html</command> or the
+ <command>\H</command> command.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-l</option></term>
+ <term><option>--list</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ List all available databases, then exit. Other non-connection
+ options are ignored. This is similar to the meta-command
+ <command>\list</command>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When this option is used, <application>psql</application> will connect
+ to the database <literal>postgres</literal>, unless a different database
+ is named on the command line (option <option>-d</option> or non-option
+ argument, possibly via a service entry, but not via an environment
+ variable).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-L <replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--log-file=<replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Write all query output into file <replaceable
+ class="parameter">filename</replaceable>, in addition to the
+ normal output destination.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-n</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-readline</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not use <application>Readline</application> for line editing and do
+ not use the command history.
+ This can be useful to turn off tab expansion when cutting and pasting.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-o <replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--output=<replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Put all query output into file <replaceable
+ class="parameter">filename</replaceable>. This is equivalent to
+ the command <command>\o</command>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-p <replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--port=<replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the TCP port or the local Unix-domain
+ socket file extension on which the server is listening for
+ connections. Defaults to the value of the <envar>PGPORT</envar>
+ environment variable or, if not set, to the port specified at
+ compile time, usually 5432.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-P <replaceable class="parameter">assignment</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--pset=<replaceable class="parameter">assignment</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies printing options, in the style of
+ <command>\pset</command>. Note that here you
+ have to separate name and value with an equal sign instead of a
+ space. For example, to set the output format to <application>LaTeX</application>, you could write
+ <literal>-P format=latex</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-q</option></term>
+ <term><option>--quiet</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies that <application>psql</application> should do its work
+ quietly. By default, it prints welcome messages and various
+ informational output. If this option is used, none of this
+ happens. This is useful with the <option>-c</option> option.
+ This is equivalent to setting the variable <varname>QUIET</varname>
+ to <literal>on</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-R <replaceable class="parameter">separator</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--record-separator=<replaceable class="parameter">separator</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Use <replaceable class="parameter">separator</replaceable> as the
+ record separator for unaligned output. This is equivalent to
+ <command>\pset recordsep</command>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-s</option></term>
+ <term><option>--single-step</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Run in single-step mode. That means the user is prompted before
+ each command is sent to the server, with the option to cancel
+ execution as well. Use this to debug scripts.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-S</option></term>
+ <term><option>--single-line</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Runs in single-line mode where a newline terminates an SQL command, as a
+ semicolon does.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ This mode is provided for those who insist on it, but you are not
+ necessarily encouraged to use it. In particular, if you mix
+ <acronym>SQL</acronym> and meta-commands on a line the order of
+ execution might not always be clear to the inexperienced user.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-t</option></term>
+ <term><option>--tuples-only</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Turn off printing of column names and result row count footers,
+ etc. This is equivalent to <command>\t</command> or
+ <command>\pset tuples_only</command>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-T <replaceable class="parameter">table_options</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--table-attr=<replaceable class="parameter">table_options</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies options to be placed within the
+ <acronym>HTML</acronym> <sgmltag>table</sgmltag> tag. See
+ <command>\pset tableattr</command> for details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-U <replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--username=<replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Connect to the database as the user <replaceable
+ class="parameter">username</replaceable> instead of the default.
+ (You must have permission to do so, of course.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-v <replaceable class="parameter">assignment</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--set=<replaceable class="parameter">assignment</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--variable=<replaceable class="parameter">assignment</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Perform a variable assignment, like the <command>\set</command>
+ meta-command. Note that you must separate name and value, if
+ any, by an equal sign on the command line. To unset a variable,
+ leave off the equal sign. To set a variable with an empty value,
+ use the equal sign but leave off the value. These assignments are
+ done during command line processing, so variables that reflect
+ connection state will get overwritten later.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-V</option></term>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the <application>psql</application> version and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-w</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Never issue a password prompt. If the server requires password
+ authentication and a password is not available from other sources
+ such as a <filename>.pgpass</filename> file, the connection
+ attempt will fail. This option can be useful in batch jobs and
+ scripts where no user is present to enter a password.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Note that this option will remain set for the entire session,
+ and so it affects uses of the meta-command
+ <command>\connect</command> as well as the initial connection attempt.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-W</option></term>
+ <term><option>--password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Force <application>psql</application> to prompt for a
+ password before connecting to a database, even if the password will
+ not be used.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the server requires password authentication and a password is not
+ available from other sources such as a <filename>.pgpass</filename>
+ file, <application>psql</application> will prompt for a
+ password in any case. However, <application>psql</application>
+ will waste a connection attempt finding out that the server wants a
+ password. In some cases it is worth typing <option>-W</option> to avoid
+ the extra connection attempt.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Note that this option will remain set for the entire session,
+ and so it affects uses of the meta-command
+ <command>\connect</command> as well as the initial connection attempt.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-x</option></term>
+ <term><option>--expanded</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Turn on the expanded table formatting mode. This is equivalent to
+ <command>\x</command> or <command>\pset expanded</command>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-X,</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-psqlrc</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not read the start-up file (neither the system-wide
+ <filename>psqlrc</filename> file nor the user's
+ <filename>~/.psqlrc</filename> file).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-z</option></term>
+ <term><option>--field-separator-zero</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Set the field separator for unaligned output to a zero byte. This is
+ equivalent to <command>\pset fieldsep_zero</command>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-0</option></term>
+ <term><option>--record-separator-zero</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Set the record separator for unaligned output to a zero byte. This is
+ useful for interfacing, for example, with <literal>xargs -0</literal>.
+ This is equivalent to <command>\pset recordsep_zero</command>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-1</option></term>
+ <term><option>--single-transaction</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This option can only be used in combination with one or more
+ <option>-c</option> and/or <option>-f</option> options. It causes
+ <application>psql</application> to issue a <command>BEGIN</command> command
+ before the first such option and a <command>COMMIT</command> command after
+ the last one, thereby wrapping all the commands into a single
+ transaction. This ensures that either all the commands complete
+ successfully, or no changes are applied.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the commands themselves
+ contain <command>BEGIN</command>, <command>COMMIT</command>,
+ or <command>ROLLBACK</command>, this option will not have the desired
+ effects. Also, if an individual command cannot be executed inside a
+ transaction block, specifying this option will cause the whole
+ transaction to fail.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help[=<replaceable class="parameter">topic</replaceable>]</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show help about <application>psql</application> and exit. The optional
+ <replaceable class="parameter">topic</replaceable> parameter (defaulting
+ to <literal>options</literal>) selects which part of <application>psql</application> is
+ explained: <literal>commands</literal> describes <application>psql</application>'s
+ backslash commands; <literal>options</literal> describes the command-line
+ options that can be passed to <application>psql</application>;
+ and <literal>variables</literal> shows help about <application>psql</application> configuration
+ variables.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Exit Status</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>psql</application> returns 0 to the shell if it
+ finished normally, 1 if a fatal error of its own occurs (e.g., out of memory,
+ file not found), 2 if the connection to the server went bad
+ and the session was not interactive, and 3 if an error occurred in a
+ script and the variable <varname>ON_ERROR_STOP</varname> was set.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Usage</title>
+
+ <refsect2 id="r2-app-psql-connecting">
+ <title>Connecting to a Database</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>psql</application> is a regular
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> client application. In order
+ to connect to a database you need to know the name of your target
+ database, the host name and port number of the server, and what user
+ name you want to connect as. <application>psql</application> can be
+ told about those parameters via command line options, namely
+ <option>-d</option>, <option>-h</option>, <option>-p</option>, and
+ <option>-U</option> respectively. If an argument is found that does
+ not belong to any option it will be interpreted as the database name
+ (or the user name, if the database name is already given). Not all
+ of these options are required; there are useful defaults. If you omit the host
+ name, <application>psql</application> will connect via a Unix-domain socket
+ to a server on the local host, or via TCP/IP to <literal>localhost</literal> on
+ machines that don't have Unix-domain sockets. The default port number is
+ determined at compile time.
+ Since the database server uses the same default, you will not have
+ to specify the port in most cases. The default user name is your
+ operating-system user name, as is the default database name.
+ Note that you cannot
+ just connect to any database under any user name. Your database
+ administrator should have informed you about your access rights.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When the defaults aren't quite right, you can save yourself
+ some typing by setting the environment variables
+ <envar>PGDATABASE</envar>, <envar>PGHOST</envar>,
+ <envar>PGPORT</envar> and/or <envar>PGUSER</envar> to appropriate
+ values. (For additional environment variables, see <xref
+ linkend="libpq-envars"/>.) It is also convenient to have a
+ <filename>~/.pgpass</filename> file to avoid regularly having to type in
+ passwords. See <xref linkend="libpq-pgpass"/> for more information.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ An alternative way to specify connection parameters is in a
+ <parameter>conninfo</parameter> string or
+ a <acronym>URI</acronym>, which is used instead of a database
+ name. This mechanism give you very wide control over the
+ connection. For example:
+<programlisting>
+$ <userinput>psql "service=myservice sslmode=require"</userinput>
+$ <userinput>psql postgresql://dbmaster:5433/mydb?sslmode=require</userinput>
+</programlisting>
+ This way you can also use <acronym>LDAP</acronym> for connection
+ parameter lookup as described in <xref linkend="libpq-ldap"/>.
+ See <xref linkend="libpq-paramkeywords"/> for more information on all the
+ available connection options.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the connection could not be made for any reason (e.g., insufficient
+ privileges, server is not running on the targeted host, etc.),
+ <application>psql</application> will return an error and terminate.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If both standard input and standard output are a
+ terminal, then <application>psql</application> sets the client
+ encoding to <quote>auto</quote>, which will detect the
+ appropriate client encoding from the locale settings
+ (<envar>LC_CTYPE</envar> environment variable on Unix systems).
+ If this doesn't work out as expected, the client encoding can be
+ overridden using the environment
+ variable <envar>PGCLIENTENCODING</envar>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2 id="r2-app-psql-4">
+ <title>Entering SQL Commands</title>
+
+ <para>
+ In normal operation, <application>psql</application> provides a
+ prompt with the name of the database to which
+ <application>psql</application> is currently connected, followed by
+ the string <literal>=&gt;</literal>. For example:
+<programlisting>
+$ <userinput>psql testdb</userinput>
+psql (&version;)
+Type "help" for help.
+
+testdb=&gt;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ At the prompt, the user can type in <acronym>SQL</acronym> commands.
+ Ordinarily, input lines are sent to the server when a
+ command-terminating semicolon is reached. An end of line does not
+ terminate a command. Thus commands can be spread over several lines for
+ clarity. If the command was sent and executed without error, the results
+ of the command are displayed on the screen.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If untrusted users have access to a database that has not adopted a
+ <link linkend="ddl-schemas-patterns">secure schema usage pattern</link>,
+ begin your session by removing publicly-writable schemas
+ from <varname>search_path</varname>. One can
+ add <literal>options=-csearch_path=</literal> to the connection string or
+ issue <literal>SELECT pg_catalog.set_config('search_path', '',
+ false)</literal> before other SQL commands. This consideration is not
+ specific to <application>psql</application>; it applies to every interface
+ for executing arbitrary SQL commands.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Whenever a command is executed, <application>psql</application> also polls
+ for asynchronous notification events generated by
+ <link linkend="sql-listen"><command>LISTEN</command></link> and
+ <link linkend="sql-notify"><command>NOTIFY</command></link>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ While C-style block comments are passed to the server for
+ processing and removal, SQL-standard comments are removed by
+ <application>psql</application>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2 id="app-psql-meta-commands">
+ <title>Meta-Commands</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Anything you enter in <application>psql</application> that begins
+ with an unquoted backslash is a <application>psql</application>
+ meta-command that is processed by <application>psql</application>
+ itself. These commands make
+ <application>psql</application> more useful for administration or
+ scripting. Meta-commands are often called slash or backslash commands.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The format of a <application>psql</application> command is the backslash,
+ followed immediately by a command verb, then any arguments. The arguments
+ are separated from the command verb and each other by any number of
+ whitespace characters.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To include whitespace in an argument you can quote it with
+ single quotes. To include a single quote in an argument,
+ write two single quotes within single-quoted text.
+ Anything contained in single quotes is
+ furthermore subject to C-like substitutions for
+ <literal>\n</literal> (new line), <literal>\t</literal> (tab),
+ <literal>\b</literal> (backspace), <literal>\r</literal> (carriage return),
+ <literal>\f</literal> (form feed),
+ <literal>\</literal><replaceable>digits</replaceable> (octal), and
+ <literal>\x</literal><replaceable>digits</replaceable> (hexadecimal).
+ A backslash preceding any other character within single-quoted text
+ quotes that single character, whatever it is.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If an unquoted colon (<literal>:</literal>) followed by a
+ <application>psql</application> variable name appears within an argument, it is
+ replaced by the variable's value, as described in <xref
+ linkend="app-psql-interpolation"/> below.
+ The forms <literal>:'<replaceable>variable_name</replaceable>'</literal> and
+ <literal>:"<replaceable>variable_name</replaceable>"</literal> described there
+ work as well.
+ The <literal>:{?<replaceable>variable_name</replaceable>}</literal> syntax allows
+ testing whether a variable is defined. It is substituted by
+ TRUE or FALSE.
+ Escaping the colon with a backslash protects it from substitution.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Within an argument, text that is enclosed in backquotes
+ (<literal>`</literal>) is taken as a command line that is passed to the
+ shell. The output of the command (with any trailing newline removed)
+ replaces the backquoted text. Within the text enclosed in backquotes,
+ no special quoting or other processing occurs, except that appearances
+ of <literal>:<replaceable>variable_name</replaceable></literal> where
+ <replaceable>variable_name</replaceable> is a <application>psql</application> variable name
+ are replaced by the variable's value. Also, appearances of
+ <literal>:'<replaceable>variable_name</replaceable>'</literal> are replaced by the
+ variable's value suitably quoted to become a single shell command
+ argument. (The latter form is almost always preferable, unless you are
+ very sure of what is in the variable.) Because carriage return and line
+ feed characters cannot be safely quoted on all platforms, the
+ <literal>:'<replaceable>variable_name</replaceable>'</literal> form prints an
+ error message and does not substitute the variable value when such
+ characters appear in the value.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Some commands take an <acronym>SQL</acronym> identifier (such as a
+ table name) as argument. These arguments follow the syntax rules
+ of <acronym>SQL</acronym>: Unquoted letters are forced to
+ lowercase, while double quotes (<literal>"</literal>) protect letters
+ from case conversion and allow incorporation of whitespace into
+ the identifier. Within double quotes, paired double quotes reduce
+ to a single double quote in the resulting name. For example,
+ <literal>FOO"BAR"BAZ</literal> is interpreted as <literal>fooBARbaz</literal>,
+ and <literal>"A weird"" name"</literal> becomes <literal>A weird"
+ name</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Parsing for arguments stops at the end of the line, or when another
+ unquoted backslash is found. An unquoted backslash
+ is taken as the beginning of a new meta-command. The special
+ sequence <literal>\\</literal> (two backslashes) marks the end of
+ arguments and continues parsing <acronym>SQL</acronym> commands, if
+ any. That way <acronym>SQL</acronym> and
+ <application>psql</application> commands can be freely mixed on a
+ line. But in any case, the arguments of a meta-command cannot
+ continue beyond the end of the line.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Many of the meta-commands act on the <firstterm>current query buffer</firstterm>.
+ This is simply a buffer holding whatever SQL command text has been typed
+ but not yet sent to the server for execution. This will include previous
+ input lines as well as any text appearing before the meta-command on the
+ same line.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The following meta-commands are defined:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\a</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If the current table output format is unaligned, it is switched to aligned.
+ If it is not unaligned, it is set to unaligned. This command is
+ kept for backwards compatibility. See <command>\pset</command> for a
+ more general solution.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\c</literal> or <literal>\connect [ -reuse-previous=<replaceable class="parameter">on|off</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">dbname</replaceable> [ <replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">host</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable> ] | <replaceable class="parameter">conninfo</replaceable> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Establishes a new connection to a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ server. The connection parameters to use can be specified either
+ using a positional syntax (one or more of database name, user,
+ host, and port), or using a <replaceable>conninfo</replaceable>
+ connection string as detailed in
+ <xref linkend="libpq-connstring"/>. If no arguments are given, a
+ new connection is made using the same parameters as before.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Specifying any
+ of <replaceable class="parameter">dbname</replaceable>,
+ <replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable>,
+ <replaceable class="parameter">host</replaceable> or
+ <replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable>
+ as <literal>-</literal> is equivalent to omitting that parameter.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The new connection can re-use connection parameters from the previous
+ connection; not only database name, user, host, and port, but other
+ settings such as <replaceable>sslmode</replaceable>. By default,
+ parameters are re-used in the positional syntax, but not when
+ a <replaceable>conninfo</replaceable> string is given. Passing a
+ first argument of <literal>-reuse-previous=on</literal>
+ or <literal>-reuse-previous=off</literal> overrides that default. If
+ parameters are re-used, then any parameter not explicitly specified as
+ a positional parameter or in the <replaceable>conninfo</replaceable>
+ string is taken from the existing connection's parameters. An
+ exception is that if the <replaceable>host</replaceable> setting
+ is changed from its previous value using the positional syntax,
+ any <replaceable>hostaddr</replaceable> setting present in the
+ existing connection's parameters is dropped.
+ Also, any password used for the existing connection will be re-used
+ only if the user, host, and port settings are not changed.
+ When the command neither specifies nor reuses a particular parameter,
+ the <application>libpq</application> default is used.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the new connection is successfully made, the previous
+ connection is closed.
+ If the connection attempt fails (wrong user name, access
+ denied, etc.), the previous connection will be kept if
+ <application>psql</application> is in interactive mode. But when
+ executing a non-interactive script, the old connection is closed
+ and an error is reported. That may or may not terminate the
+ script; if it does not, all database-accessing commands will fail
+ until another <literal>\connect</literal> command is successfully
+ executed. This distinction was chosen as
+ a user convenience against typos on the one hand, and a safety
+ mechanism that scripts are not accidentally acting on the
+ wrong database on the other hand.
+ Note that whenever a <literal>\connect</literal> command attempts
+ to re-use parameters, the values re-used are those of the last
+ successful connection, not of any failed attempts made subsequently.
+ However, in the case of a
+ non-interactive <literal>\connect</literal> failure, no parameters
+ are allowed to be re-used later, since the script would likely be
+ expecting the values from the failed <literal>\connect</literal>
+ to be re-used.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Examples:
+ </para>
+<programlisting>
+=&gt; \c mydb myuser host.dom 6432
+=&gt; \c service=foo
+=&gt; \c "host=localhost port=5432 dbname=mydb connect_timeout=10 sslmode=disable"
+=&gt; \c -reuse-previous=on sslmode=require -- changes only sslmode
+=&gt; \c postgresql://tom@localhost/mydb?application_name=myapp
+</programlisting>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\C [ <replaceable class="parameter">title</replaceable> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets the title of any tables being printed as the result of a
+ query or unset any such title. This command is equivalent to
+ <literal>\pset title <replaceable
+ class="parameter">title</replaceable></literal>. (The name of
+ this command derives from <quote>caption</quote>, as it was
+ previously only used to set the caption in an
+ <acronym>HTML</acronym> table.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\cd [ <replaceable>directory</replaceable> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Changes the current working directory to
+ <replaceable>directory</replaceable>. Without argument, changes
+ to the current user's home directory.
+ </para>
+
+ <tip>
+ <para>
+ To print your current working directory, use <literal>\! pwd</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </tip>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\conninfo</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Outputs information about the current database connection.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="app-psql-meta-commands-copy">
+ <term><literal>\copy { <replaceable class="parameter">table</replaceable> [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_list</replaceable> ) ] }
+ <literal>from</literal>
+ { <replaceable class="parameter">'filename'</replaceable> | program <replaceable class="parameter">'command'</replaceable> | stdin | pstdin }
+ [ [ with ] ( <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> [, ...] ) ]
+ [ where <replaceable class="parameter">condition</replaceable> ]</literal></term>
+
+ <term><literal>\copy { <replaceable class="parameter">table</replaceable> [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_list</replaceable> ) ] | ( <replaceable class="parameter">query</replaceable> ) }
+ <literal>to</literal>
+ { <replaceable class="parameter">'filename'</replaceable> | program <replaceable class="parameter">'command'</replaceable> | stdout | pstdout }
+ [ [ with ] ( <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> [, ...] ) ]</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Performs a frontend (client) copy. This is an operation that
+ runs an <acronym>SQL</acronym> <link linkend="sql-copy"><command>COPY</command></link>
+ command, but instead of the server
+ reading or writing the specified file,
+ <application>psql</application> reads or writes the file and
+ routes the data between the server and the local file system.
+ This means that file accessibility and privileges are those of
+ the local user, not the server, and no SQL superuser
+ privileges are required.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When <literal>program</literal> is specified,
+ <replaceable class="parameter">command</replaceable> is
+ executed by <application>psql</application> and the data passed from
+ or to <replaceable class="parameter">command</replaceable> is
+ routed between the server and the client.
+ Again, the execution privileges are those of
+ the local user, not the server, and no SQL superuser
+ privileges are required.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For <literal>\copy ... from stdin</literal>, data rows are read from the same
+ source that issued the command, continuing until <literal>\.</literal>
+ is read or the stream reaches <acronym>EOF</acronym>. This option is useful
+ for populating tables in-line within an SQL script file.
+ For <literal>\copy ... to stdout</literal>, output is sent to the same place
+ as <application>psql</application> command output, and
+ the <literal>COPY <replaceable>count</replaceable></literal> command status is
+ not printed (since it might be confused with a data row).
+ To read/write <application>psql</application>'s standard input or
+ output regardless of the current command source or <literal>\o</literal>
+ option, write <literal>from pstdin</literal> or <literal>to pstdout</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The syntax of this command is similar to that of the
+ <acronym>SQL</acronym> <link linkend="sql-copy"><command>COPY</command></link>
+ command. All options other than the data source/destination are
+ as specified for <command>COPY</command>.
+ Because of this, special parsing rules apply to the <command>\copy</command>
+ meta-command. Unlike most other meta-commands, the entire remainder
+ of the line is always taken to be the arguments of <command>\copy</command>,
+ and neither variable interpolation nor backquote expansion are
+ performed in the arguments.
+ </para>
+
+ <tip>
+ <para>
+ Another way to obtain the same result as <literal>\copy
+ ... to</literal> is to use the <acronym>SQL</acronym> <literal>COPY
+ ... TO STDOUT</literal> command and terminate it
+ with <literal>\g <replaceable>filename</replaceable></literal>
+ or <literal>\g |<replaceable>program</replaceable></literal>.
+ Unlike <literal>\copy</literal>, this method allows the command to
+ span multiple lines; also, variable interpolation and backquote
+ expansion can be used.
+ </para>
+ </tip>
+
+ <tip>
+ <para>
+ These operations are not as efficient as the <acronym>SQL</acronym>
+ <command>COPY</command> command with a file or program data source or
+ destination, because all data must pass through the client/server
+ connection. For large amounts of data the <acronym>SQL</acronym>
+ command might be preferable.
+ </para>
+ </tip>
+
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\copyright</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Shows the copyright and distribution terms of
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry id="app-psql-meta-commands-crosstabview">
+ <term><literal>\crosstabview [
+ <replaceable class="parameter">colV</replaceable>
+ [ <replaceable class="parameter">colH</replaceable>
+ [ <replaceable class="parameter">colD</replaceable>
+ [ <replaceable class="parameter">sortcolH</replaceable>
+ ] ] ] ] </literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Executes the current query buffer (like <literal>\g</literal>) and
+ shows the results in a crosstab grid.
+ The query must return at least three columns.
+ The output column identified by <replaceable class="parameter">colV</replaceable>
+ becomes a vertical header and the output column identified by
+ <replaceable class="parameter">colH</replaceable>
+ becomes a horizontal header.
+ <replaceable class="parameter">colD</replaceable> identifies
+ the output column to display within the grid.
+ <replaceable class="parameter">sortcolH</replaceable> identifies
+ an optional sort column for the horizontal header.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Each column specification can be a column number (starting at 1) or
+ a column name. The usual SQL case folding and quoting rules apply to
+ column names. If omitted,
+ <replaceable class="parameter">colV</replaceable> is taken as column 1
+ and <replaceable class="parameter">colH</replaceable> as column 2.
+ <replaceable class="parameter">colH</replaceable> must differ from
+ <replaceable class="parameter">colV</replaceable>.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">colD</replaceable> is not
+ specified, then there must be exactly three columns in the query
+ result, and the column that is neither
+ <replaceable class="parameter">colV</replaceable> nor
+ <replaceable class="parameter">colH</replaceable>
+ is taken to be <replaceable class="parameter">colD</replaceable>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The vertical header, displayed as the leftmost column, contains the
+ values found in column <replaceable class="parameter">colV</replaceable>, in the
+ same order as in the query results, but with duplicates removed.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The horizontal header, displayed as the first row, contains the values
+ found in column <replaceable class="parameter">colH</replaceable>,
+ with duplicates removed. By default, these appear in the same order
+ as in the query results. But if the
+ optional <replaceable class="parameter">sortcolH</replaceable> argument is given,
+ it identifies a column whose values must be integer numbers, and the
+ values from <replaceable class="parameter">colH</replaceable> will
+ appear in the horizontal header sorted according to the
+ corresponding <replaceable class="parameter">sortcolH</replaceable> values.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Inside the crosstab grid, for each distinct value <literal>x</literal>
+ of <replaceable class="parameter">colH</replaceable> and each distinct
+ value <literal>y</literal>
+ of <replaceable class="parameter">colV</replaceable>, the cell located
+ at the intersection <literal>(x,y)</literal> contains the value of
+ the <literal>colD</literal> column in the query result row for which
+ the value of <replaceable class="parameter">colH</replaceable>
+ is <literal>x</literal> and the value
+ of <replaceable class="parameter">colV</replaceable>
+ is <literal>y</literal>. If there is no such row, the cell is empty. If
+ there are multiple such rows, an error is reported.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\d[S+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ For each relation (table, view, materialized view, index, sequence,
+ or foreign table)
+ or composite type matching the
+ <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable>, show all
+ columns, their types, the tablespace (if not the default) and any
+ special attributes such as <literal>NOT NULL</literal> or defaults.
+ Associated indexes, constraints, rules, and triggers are
+ also shown. For foreign tables, the associated foreign
+ server is shown as well.
+ (<quote>Matching the pattern</quote> is defined in
+ <xref linkend="app-psql-patterns"/> below.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For some types of relation, <literal>\d</literal> shows additional information
+ for each column: column values for sequences, indexed expressions for
+ indexes, and foreign data wrapper options for foreign tables.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The command form <literal>\d+</literal> is identical, except that
+ more information is displayed: any comments associated with the
+ columns of the table are shown, as is the presence of OIDs in the
+ table, the view definition if the relation is a view, a non-default
+ <link linkend="sql-altertable-replica-identity">replica
+ identity</link> setting and the
+ <link linkend="sql-create-access-method">access method</link> name
+ if the relation has an access method.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ By default, only user-created objects are shown; supply a
+ pattern or the <literal>S</literal> modifier to include system
+ objects.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ If <command>\d</command> is used without a
+ <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable> argument, it is
+ equivalent to <command>\dtvmsE</command> which will show a list of
+ all visible tables, views, materialized views, sequences and
+ foreign tables.
+ This is purely a convenience measure.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\da[S] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists aggregate functions, together with their
+ return type and the data types they operate on. If <replaceable
+ class="parameter">pattern</replaceable>
+ is specified, only aggregates whose names match the pattern are shown.
+ By default, only user-created objects are shown; supply a
+ pattern or the <literal>S</literal> modifier to include system
+ objects.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\dA[+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists access methods. If <replaceable
+ class="parameter">pattern</replaceable> is specified, only access
+ methods whose names match the pattern are shown. If
+ <literal>+</literal> is appended to the command name, each access
+ method is listed with its associated handler function and description.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term>
+ <literal>\dAc[+]
+ [<link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">access-method-pattern</replaceable></link>
+ [<link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">input-type-pattern</replaceable></link>]]
+ </literal>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists operator classes
+ (see <xref linkend="xindex-opclass"/>).
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">access-method-pattern</replaceable>
+ is specified, only operator classes associated with access methods whose
+ names match that pattern are listed.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">input-type-pattern</replaceable>
+ is specified, only operator classes associated with input types whose
+ names match that pattern are listed.
+ If <literal>+</literal> is appended to the command name, each operator
+ class is listed with its associated operator family and owner.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term>
+ <literal>\dAf[+]
+ [<link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">access-method-pattern</replaceable></link>
+ [<link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">input-type-pattern</replaceable></link>]]
+ </literal>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists operator families
+ (see <xref linkend="xindex-opfamily"/>).
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">access-method-pattern</replaceable>
+ is specified, only operator families associated with access methods whose
+ names match that pattern are listed.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">input-type-pattern</replaceable>
+ is specified, only operator families associated with input types whose
+ names match that pattern are listed.
+ If <literal>+</literal> is appended to the command name, each operator
+ family is listed with its owner.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term>
+ <literal>\dAo[+]
+ [<link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">access-method-pattern</replaceable></link>
+ [<link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">operator-family-pattern</replaceable></link>]]
+ </literal>
+ </term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists operators associated with operator families
+ (see <xref linkend="xindex-strategies"/>).
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">access-method-pattern</replaceable>
+ is specified, only members of operator families associated with access
+ methods whose names match that pattern are listed.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">operator-family-pattern</replaceable>
+ is specified, only members of operator families whose names match that
+ pattern are listed.
+ If <literal>+</literal> is appended to the command name, each operator
+ is listed with its sort operator family (if it is an ordering operator).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term>
+ <literal>\dAp[+]
+ [<link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">access-method-pattern</replaceable></link>
+ [<link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">operator-family-pattern</replaceable></link>]]
+ </literal>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists support functions associated with operator families
+ (see <xref linkend="xindex-support"/>).
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">access-method-pattern</replaceable>
+ is specified, only functions of operator families associated with
+ access methods whose names match that pattern are listed.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">operator-family-pattern</replaceable>
+ is specified, only functions of operator families whose names match
+ that pattern are listed.
+ If <literal>+</literal> is appended to the command name, functions are
+ displayed verbosely, with their actual parameter lists.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\db[+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists tablespaces. If <replaceable
+ class="parameter">pattern</replaceable>
+ is specified, only tablespaces whose names match the pattern are shown.
+ If <literal>+</literal> is appended to the command name, each tablespace
+ is listed with its associated options, on-disk size, permissions and
+ description.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\dc[S+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists conversions between character-set encodings.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable>
+ is specified, only conversions whose names match the pattern are
+ listed.
+ By default, only user-created objects are shown; supply a
+ pattern or the <literal>S</literal> modifier to include system
+ objects.
+ If <literal>+</literal> is appended to the command name, each object
+ is listed with its associated description.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\dC[+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists type casts.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable>
+ is specified, only casts whose source or target types match the
+ pattern are listed.
+ If <literal>+</literal> is appended to the command name, each object
+ is listed with its associated description.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\dd[S] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Shows the descriptions of objects of type <literal>constraint</literal>,
+ <literal>operator class</literal>, <literal>operator family</literal>,
+ <literal>rule</literal>, and <literal>trigger</literal>. All
+ other comments may be viewed by the respective backslash commands for
+ those object types.
+ </para>
+
+ <para><literal>\dd</literal> displays descriptions for objects matching the
+ <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable>, or of visible
+ objects of the appropriate type if no argument is given. But in either
+ case, only objects that have a description are listed.
+ By default, only user-created objects are shown; supply a
+ pattern or the <literal>S</literal> modifier to include system
+ objects.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Descriptions for objects can be created with the <link
+ linkend="sql-comment"><command>COMMENT</command></link>
+ <acronym>SQL</acronym> command.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\dD[S+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists domains. If <replaceable
+ class="parameter">pattern</replaceable>
+ is specified, only domains whose names match the pattern are shown.
+ By default, only user-created objects are shown; supply a
+ pattern or the <literal>S</literal> modifier to include system
+ objects.
+ If <literal>+</literal> is appended to the command name, each object
+ is listed with its associated permissions and description.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\ddp [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists default access privilege settings. An entry is shown for
+ each role (and schema, if applicable) for which the default
+ privilege settings have been changed from the built-in defaults.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable> is
+ specified, only entries whose role name or schema name matches
+ the pattern are listed.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <link linkend="sql-alterdefaultprivileges"><command>ALTER DEFAULT
+ PRIVILEGES</command></link> command is used to set default access
+ privileges. The meaning of the privilege display is explained in
+ <xref linkend="ddl-priv"/>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\dE[S+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>\di[S+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>\dm[S+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>\ds[S+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>\dt[S+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>\dv[S+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ In this group of commands, the letters <literal>E</literal>,
+ <literal>i</literal>, <literal>m</literal>, <literal>s</literal>,
+ <literal>t</literal>, and <literal>v</literal>
+ stand for foreign table, index, materialized view,
+ sequence, table, and view,
+ respectively.
+ You can specify any or all of
+ these letters, in any order, to obtain a listing of objects
+ of these types. For example, <literal>\dti</literal> lists
+ tables and indexes. If <literal>+</literal> is
+ appended to the command name, each object is listed with its
+ persistence status (permanent, temporary, or unlogged),
+ physical size on disk, and associated description if any.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable> is
+ specified, only objects whose names match the pattern are listed.
+ By default, only user-created objects are shown; supply a
+ pattern or the <literal>S</literal> modifier to include system
+ objects.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\des[+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists foreign servers (mnemonic: <quote>external
+ servers</quote>).
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable> is
+ specified, only those servers whose name matches the pattern
+ are listed. If the form <literal>\des+</literal> is used, a
+ full description of each server is shown, including the
+ server's access privileges, type, version, options, and description.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\det[+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists foreign tables (mnemonic: <quote>external tables</quote>).
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable> is
+ specified, only entries whose table name or schema name matches
+ the pattern are listed. If the form <literal>\det+</literal>
+ is used, generic options and the foreign table description
+ are also displayed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\deu[+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists user mappings (mnemonic: <quote>external
+ users</quote>).
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable> is
+ specified, only those mappings whose user names match the
+ pattern are listed. If the form <literal>\deu+</literal> is
+ used, additional information about each mapping is shown.
+ </para>
+
+ <caution>
+ <para>
+ <literal>\deu+</literal> might also display the user name and
+ password of the remote user, so care should be taken not to
+ disclose them.
+ </para>
+ </caution>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\dew[+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists foreign-data wrappers (mnemonic: <quote>external
+ wrappers</quote>).
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable> is
+ specified, only those foreign-data wrappers whose name matches
+ the pattern are listed. If the form <literal>\dew+</literal>
+ is used, the access privileges, options, and description of the
+ foreign-data wrapper are also shown.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\df[anptwS+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> [ <replaceable class="parameter">arg_pattern</replaceable> ... ] ]</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists functions, together with their result data types, argument data
+ types, and function types, which are classified as <quote>agg</quote>
+ (aggregate), <quote>normal</quote>, <quote>procedure</quote>, <quote>trigger</quote>, or <quote>window</quote>.
+ To display only functions
+ of specific type(s), add the corresponding letters <literal>a</literal>,
+ <literal>n</literal>, <literal>p</literal>, <literal>t</literal>, or <literal>w</literal> to the command.
+ If <replaceable
+ class="parameter">pattern</replaceable> is specified, only
+ functions whose names match the pattern are shown.
+ Any additional arguments are type-name patterns, which are matched
+ to the type names of the first, second, and so on arguments of the
+ function. (Matching functions can have more arguments than what
+ you specify. To prevent that, write a dash <literal>-</literal> as
+ the last <replaceable class="parameter">arg_pattern</replaceable>.)
+ By default, only user-created
+ objects are shown; supply a pattern or the <literal>S</literal>
+ modifier to include system objects.
+ If the form <literal>\df+</literal> is used, additional information
+ about each function is shown, including volatility,
+ parallel safety, owner, security classification, access privileges,
+ language, source code and description.
+ </para>
+
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\dF[+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists text search configurations.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable> is specified,
+ only configurations whose names match the pattern are shown.
+ If the form <literal>\dF+</literal> is used, a full description of
+ each configuration is shown, including the underlying text search
+ parser and the dictionary list for each parser token type.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\dFd[+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists text search dictionaries.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable> is specified,
+ only dictionaries whose names match the pattern are shown.
+ If the form <literal>\dFd+</literal> is used, additional information
+ is shown about each selected dictionary, including the underlying
+ text search template and the option values.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\dFp[+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists text search parsers.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable> is specified,
+ only parsers whose names match the pattern are shown.
+ If the form <literal>\dFp+</literal> is used, a full description of
+ each parser is shown, including the underlying functions and the
+ list of recognized token types.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\dFt[+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists text search templates.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable> is specified,
+ only templates whose names match the pattern are shown.
+ If the form <literal>\dFt+</literal> is used, additional information
+ is shown about each template, including the underlying function names.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\dg[S+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists database roles.
+ (Since the concepts of <quote>users</quote> and <quote>groups</quote> have been
+ unified into <quote>roles</quote>, this command is now equivalent to
+ <literal>\du</literal>.)
+ By default, only user-created roles are shown; supply the
+ <literal>S</literal> modifier to include system roles.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable> is specified,
+ only those roles whose names match the pattern are listed.
+ If the form <literal>\dg+</literal> is used, additional information
+ is shown about each role; currently this adds the comment for each
+ role.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\dl</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This is an alias for <command>\lo_list</command>, which shows a
+ list of large objects.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\dL[S+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists procedural languages. If <replaceable
+ class="parameter">pattern</replaceable>
+ is specified, only languages whose names match the pattern are listed.
+ By default, only user-created languages
+ are shown; supply the <literal>S</literal> modifier to include system
+ objects. If <literal>+</literal> is appended to the command name, each
+ language is listed with its call handler, validator, access privileges,
+ and whether it is a system object.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\dn[S+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists schemas (namespaces). If <replaceable
+ class="parameter">pattern</replaceable>
+ is specified, only schemas whose names match the pattern are listed.
+ By default, only user-created objects are shown; supply a
+ pattern or the <literal>S</literal> modifier to include system objects.
+ If <literal>+</literal> is appended to the command name, each object
+ is listed with its associated permissions and description, if any.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\do[S+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> [ <replaceable class="parameter">arg_pattern</replaceable> [ <replaceable class="parameter">arg_pattern</replaceable> ] ] ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists operators with their operand and result types.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable> is
+ specified, only operators whose names match the pattern are listed.
+ If one <replaceable class="parameter">arg_pattern</replaceable> is
+ specified, only prefix operators whose right argument's type name
+ matches that pattern are listed.
+ If two <replaceable class="parameter">arg_pattern</replaceable>s
+ are specified, only binary operators whose argument type names match
+ those patterns are listed. (Alternatively, write <literal>-</literal>
+ for the unused argument of a unary operator.)
+ By default, only user-created objects are shown; supply a
+ pattern or the <literal>S</literal> modifier to include system
+ objects.
+ If <literal>+</literal> is appended to the command name,
+ additional information about each operator is shown, currently just
+ the name of the underlying function.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\dO[S+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists collations.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable> is
+ specified, only collations whose names match the pattern are
+ listed. By default, only user-created objects are shown;
+ supply a pattern or the <literal>S</literal> modifier to
+ include system objects. If <literal>+</literal> is appended
+ to the command name, each collation is listed with its associated
+ description, if any.
+ Note that only collations usable with the current database's encoding
+ are shown, so the results may vary in different databases of the
+ same installation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\dp [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists tables, views and sequences with their
+ associated access privileges.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable> is
+ specified, only tables, views and sequences whose names match the
+ pattern are listed.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <link linkend="sql-grant"><command>GRANT</command></link> and
+ <link linkend="sql-revoke"><command>REVOKE</command></link>
+ commands are used to set access privileges. The meaning of the
+ privilege display is explained in
+ <xref linkend="ddl-priv"/>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\dP[itn+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists partitioned relations.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable>
+ is specified, only entries whose name matches the pattern are listed.
+ The modifiers <literal>t</literal> (tables) and <literal>i</literal>
+ (indexes) can be appended to the command, filtering the kind of
+ relations to list. By default, partitioned tables and indexes are
+ listed.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the modifier <literal>n</literal> (<quote>nested</quote>) is used,
+ or a pattern is specified, then non-root partitioned relations are
+ included, and a column is shown displaying the parent of each
+ partitioned relation.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If <literal>+</literal> is appended to the command name, the sum of the
+ sizes of each relation's partitions is also displayed, along with the
+ relation's description.
+ If <literal>n</literal> is combined with <literal>+</literal>, two
+ sizes are shown: one including the total size of directly-attached
+ leaf partitions, and another showing the total size of all partitions,
+ including indirectly attached sub-partitions.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\drds [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">role-pattern</replaceable></link> [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">database-pattern</replaceable></link> ] ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists defined configuration settings. These settings can be
+ role-specific, database-specific, or both.
+ <replaceable>role-pattern</replaceable> and
+ <replaceable>database-pattern</replaceable> are used to select
+ specific roles and databases to list, respectively. If omitted, or if
+ <literal>*</literal> is specified, all settings are listed, including those
+ not role-specific or database-specific, respectively.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <link linkend="sql-alterrole"><command>ALTER ROLE</command></link> and
+ <link linkend="sql-alterdatabase"><command>ALTER DATABASE</command></link>
+ commands are used to define per-role and per-database configuration
+ settings.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\dRp[+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists replication publications.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable> is
+ specified, only those publications whose names match the pattern are
+ listed.
+ If <literal>+</literal> is appended to the command name, the tables
+ associated with each publication are shown as well.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\dRs[+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists replication subscriptions.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable> is
+ specified, only those subscriptions whose names match the pattern are
+ listed.
+ If <literal>+</literal> is appended to the command name, additional
+ properties of the subscriptions are shown.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\dT[S+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists data types.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable> is
+ specified, only types whose names match the pattern are listed.
+ If <literal>+</literal> is appended to the command name, each type is
+ listed with its internal name and size, its allowed values
+ if it is an <type>enum</type> type, and its associated permissions.
+ By default, only user-created objects are shown; supply a
+ pattern or the <literal>S</literal> modifier to include system
+ objects.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\du[S+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists database roles.
+ (Since the concepts of <quote>users</quote> and <quote>groups</quote> have been
+ unified into <quote>roles</quote>, this command is now equivalent to
+ <literal>\dg</literal>.)
+ By default, only user-created roles are shown; supply the
+ <literal>S</literal> modifier to include system roles.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable> is specified,
+ only those roles whose names match the pattern are listed.
+ If the form <literal>\du+</literal> is used, additional information
+ is shown about each role; currently this adds the comment for each
+ role.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\dx[+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists installed extensions.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable>
+ is specified, only those extensions whose names match the pattern
+ are listed.
+ If the form <literal>\dx+</literal> is used, all the objects belonging
+ to each matching extension are listed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\dX [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists extended statistics.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable>
+ is specified, only those extended statistics whose names match the
+ pattern are listed.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The status of each kind of extended statistics is shown in a column
+ named after its statistic kind (e.g. Ndistinct).
+ <literal>defined</literal> means that it was requested when creating
+ the statistics, and NULL means it wasn't requested.
+ You can use <structname>pg_stats_ext</structname> if you'd like to
+ know whether <link linkend="sql-analyze"><command>ANALYZE</command></link>
+ was run and statistics are available to the planner.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\dy[+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists event triggers.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable>
+ is specified, only those event triggers whose names match the pattern
+ are listed.
+ If <literal>+</literal> is appended to the command name, each object
+ is listed with its associated description.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\e</literal> or <literal>\edit</literal> <literal> <optional> <replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable> </optional> <optional> <replaceable class="parameter">line_number</replaceable> </optional> </literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable> is
+ specified, the file is edited; after the editor exits, the file's
+ content is copied into the current query buffer. If no <replaceable
+ class="parameter">filename</replaceable> is given, the current query
+ buffer is copied to a temporary file which is then edited in the same
+ fashion. Or, if the current query buffer is empty, the most recently
+ executed query is copied to a temporary file and edited in the same
+ fashion.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If you edit a file or the previous query, and you quit the editor without
+ modifying the file, the query buffer is cleared.
+ Otherwise, the new contents of the query buffer are re-parsed according to
+ the normal rules of <application>psql</application>, treating the
+ whole buffer as a single line. Any complete queries are immediately
+ executed; that is, if the query buffer contains or ends with a
+ semicolon, everything up to that point is executed and removed from
+ the query buffer. Whatever remains in the query buffer is
+ redisplayed. Type semicolon or <literal>\g</literal> to send it,
+ or <literal>\r</literal> to cancel it by clearing the query buffer.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Treating the buffer as a single line primarily affects meta-commands:
+ whatever is in the buffer after a meta-command will be taken as
+ argument(s) to the meta-command, even if it spans multiple lines.
+ (Thus you cannot make meta-command-using scripts this way.
+ Use <command>\i</command> for that.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a line number is specified, <application>psql</application> will
+ position the cursor on the specified line of the file or query buffer.
+ Note that if a single all-digits argument is given,
+ <application>psql</application> assumes it is a line number,
+ not a file name.
+ </para>
+
+ <tip>
+ <para>
+ See <xref linkend="app-psql-environment"/>, below, for how to
+ configure and customize your editor.
+ </para>
+ </tip>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\echo <replaceable class="parameter">text</replaceable> [ ... ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Prints the evaluated arguments to standard output, separated by
+ spaces and followed by a newline. This can be useful to
+ intersperse information in the output of scripts. For example:
+<programlisting>
+=&gt; <userinput>\echo `date`</userinput>
+Tue Oct 26 21:40:57 CEST 1999
+</programlisting>
+ If the first argument is an unquoted <literal>-n</literal> the trailing
+ newline is not written (nor is the first argument).
+ </para>
+
+ <tip>
+ <para>
+ If you use the <command>\o</command> command to redirect your
+ query output you might wish to use <command>\qecho</command>
+ instead of this command. See also <command>\warn</command>.
+ </para>
+ </tip>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\ef <optional> <replaceable class="parameter">function_description</replaceable> <optional> <replaceable class="parameter">line_number</replaceable> </optional> </optional> </literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This command fetches and edits the definition of the named function or procedure,
+ in the form of a <command>CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION</command> or
+ <command>CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE</command> command.
+ Editing is done in the same way as for <literal>\edit</literal>.
+ If you quit the editor without saving, the statement is discarded.
+ If you save and exit the editor, the updated command is executed immediately
+ if you added a semicolon to it. Otherwise it is redisplayed;
+ type semicolon or <literal>\g</literal> to send it, or <literal>\r</literal>
+ to cancel.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The target function can be specified by name alone, or by name
+ and arguments, for example <literal>foo(integer, text)</literal>.
+ The argument types must be given if there is more
+ than one function of the same name.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If no function is specified, a blank <command>CREATE FUNCTION</command>
+ template is presented for editing.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a line number is specified, <application>psql</application> will
+ position the cursor on the specified line of the function body.
+ (Note that the function body typically does not begin on the first
+ line of the file.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Unlike most other meta-commands, the entire remainder of the line is
+ always taken to be the argument(s) of <command>\ef</command>, and neither
+ variable interpolation nor backquote expansion are performed in the
+ arguments.
+ </para>
+
+ <tip>
+ <para>
+ See <xref linkend="app-psql-environment"/>, below, for how to
+ configure and customize your editor.
+ </para>
+ </tip>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\encoding [ <replaceable class="parameter">encoding</replaceable> ]</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets the client character set encoding. Without an argument, this command
+ shows the current encoding.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\errverbose</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Repeats the most recent server error message at maximum
+ verbosity, as though <varname>VERBOSITY</varname> were set
+ to <literal>verbose</literal> and <varname>SHOW_CONTEXT</varname> were
+ set to <literal>always</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\ev <optional> <replaceable class="parameter">view_name</replaceable> <optional> <replaceable class="parameter">line_number</replaceable> </optional> </optional> </literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This command fetches and edits the definition of the named view,
+ in the form of a <command>CREATE OR REPLACE VIEW</command> command.
+ Editing is done in the same way as for <literal>\edit</literal>.
+ If you quit the editor without saving, the statement is discarded.
+ If you save and exit the editor, the updated command is executed immediately
+ if you added a semicolon to it. Otherwise it is redisplayed;
+ type semicolon or <literal>\g</literal> to send it, or <literal>\r</literal>
+ to cancel.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If no view is specified, a blank <command>CREATE VIEW</command>
+ template is presented for editing.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a line number is specified, <application>psql</application> will
+ position the cursor on the specified line of the view definition.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Unlike most other meta-commands, the entire remainder of the line is
+ always taken to be the argument(s) of <command>\ev</command>, and neither
+ variable interpolation nor backquote expansion are performed in the
+ arguments.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\f [ <replaceable class="parameter">string</replaceable> ]</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets the field separator for unaligned query output. The default
+ is the vertical bar (<literal>|</literal>). It is equivalent to
+ <command>\pset fieldsep</command>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\g [ (<replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable>=<replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> [...]) ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable> ]</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>\g [ (<replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable>=<replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> [...]) ] [ |<replaceable class="parameter">command</replaceable> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sends the current query buffer to the server for execution.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ If parentheses appear after <literal>\g</literal>, they surround a
+ space-separated list
+ of <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable><literal>=</literal><replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>
+ formatting-option clauses, which are interpreted in the same way
+ as <literal>\pset</literal>
+ <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable>
+ <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> commands, but take
+ effect only for the duration of this query. In this list, spaces are
+ not allowed around <literal>=</literal> signs, but are required
+ between option clauses.
+ If <literal>=</literal><replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>
+ is omitted, the
+ named <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> is changed
+ in the same way as for
+ <literal>\pset</literal> <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable>
+ with no explicit <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ If a <replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable>
+ or <literal>|</literal><replaceable class="parameter">command</replaceable>
+ argument is given, the query's output is written to the named
+ file or piped to the given shell command, instead of displaying it as
+ usual. The file or command is written to only if the query
+ successfully returns zero or more tuples, not if the query fails or
+ is a non-data-returning SQL command.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ If the current query buffer is empty, the most recently sent query is
+ re-executed instead. Except for that behavior, <literal>\g</literal>
+ without any arguments is essentially equivalent to a semicolon.
+ With arguments, <literal>\g</literal> provides
+ a <quote>one-shot</quote> alternative to the <command>\o</command>
+ command, and additionally allows one-shot adjustments of the
+ output formatting options normally set by <literal>\pset</literal>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ When the last argument begins with <literal>|</literal>, the entire
+ remainder of the line is taken to be
+ the <replaceable class="parameter">command</replaceable> to execute,
+ and neither variable interpolation nor backquote expansion are
+ performed in it. The rest of the line is simply passed literally to
+ the shell.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\gdesc</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Shows the description (that is, the column names and data types)
+ of the result of the current query buffer. The query is not
+ actually executed; however, if it contains some type of syntax
+ error, that error will be reported in the normal way.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the current query buffer is empty, the most recently sent query
+ is described instead.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\gexec</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sends the current query buffer to the server, then treats
+ each column of each row of the query's output (if any) as an SQL
+ statement to be executed. For example, to create an index on each
+ column of <structname>my_table</structname>:
+<programlisting>
+=&gt; <userinput>SELECT format('create index on my_table(%I)', attname)</userinput>
+-&gt; <userinput>FROM pg_attribute</userinput>
+-&gt; <userinput>WHERE attrelid = 'my_table'::regclass AND attnum &gt; 0</userinput>
+-&gt; <userinput>ORDER BY attnum</userinput>
+-&gt; <userinput>\gexec</userinput>
+CREATE INDEX
+CREATE INDEX
+CREATE INDEX
+CREATE INDEX
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The generated queries are executed in the order in which the rows
+ are returned, and left-to-right within each row if there is more
+ than one column. NULL fields are ignored. The generated queries
+ are sent literally to the server for processing, so they cannot be
+ <application>psql</application> meta-commands nor contain <application>psql</application>
+ variable references. If any individual query fails, execution of
+ the remaining queries continues
+ unless <varname>ON_ERROR_STOP</varname> is set. Execution of each
+ query is subject to <varname>ECHO</varname> processing.
+ (Setting <varname>ECHO</varname> to <literal>all</literal>
+ or <literal>queries</literal> is often advisable when
+ using <command>\gexec</command>.) Query logging, single-step mode,
+ timing, and other query execution features apply to each generated
+ query as well.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ If the current query buffer is empty, the most recently sent query
+ is re-executed instead.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\gset [ <replaceable class="parameter">prefix</replaceable> ]</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sends the current query buffer to the server and stores the
+ query's output into <application>psql</application> variables
+ (see <xref linkend="app-psql-variables"/> below).
+ The query to be executed must return exactly one row. Each column of
+ the row is stored into a separate variable, named the same as the
+ column. For example:
+<programlisting>
+=&gt; <userinput>SELECT 'hello' AS var1, 10 AS var2</userinput>
+-&gt; <userinput>\gset</userinput>
+=&gt; <userinput>\echo :var1 :var2</userinput>
+hello 10
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ If you specify a <replaceable class="parameter">prefix</replaceable>,
+ that string is prepended to the query's column names to create the
+ variable names to use:
+<programlisting>
+=&gt; <userinput>SELECT 'hello' AS var1, 10 AS var2</userinput>
+-&gt; <userinput>\gset result_</userinput>
+=&gt; <userinput>\echo :result_var1 :result_var2</userinput>
+hello 10
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ If a column result is NULL, the corresponding variable is unset
+ rather than being set.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ If the query fails or does not return one row,
+ no variables are changed.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ If the current query buffer is empty, the most recently sent query
+ is re-executed instead.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\gx [ (<replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable>=<replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> [...]) ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable> ]</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>\gx [ (<replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable>=<replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> [...]) ] [ |<replaceable class="parameter">command</replaceable> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ <literal>\gx</literal> is equivalent to <literal>\g</literal>, except
+ that it forces expanded output mode for this query, as
+ if <literal>expanded=on</literal> were included in the list of
+ <literal>\pset</literal> options. See also <literal>\x</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\h</literal> or <literal>\help</literal> <literal>[ <replaceable class="parameter">command</replaceable> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Gives syntax help on the specified <acronym>SQL</acronym>
+ command. If <replaceable class="parameter">command</replaceable>
+ is not specified, then <application>psql</application> will list
+ all the commands for which syntax help is available. If
+ <replaceable class="parameter">command</replaceable> is an
+ asterisk (<literal>*</literal>), then syntax help on all
+ <acronym>SQL</acronym> commands is shown.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Unlike most other meta-commands, the entire remainder of the line is
+ always taken to be the argument(s) of <command>\help</command>, and neither
+ variable interpolation nor backquote expansion are performed in the
+ arguments.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ To simplify typing, commands that consists of several words do
+ not have to be quoted. Thus it is fine to type <userinput>\help
+ alter table</userinput>.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\H</literal> or <literal>\html</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Turns on <acronym>HTML</acronym> query output format. If the
+ <acronym>HTML</acronym> format is already on, it is switched
+ back to the default aligned text format. This command is for
+ compatibility and convenience, but see <command>\pset</command>
+ about setting other output options.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\i</literal> or <literal>\include</literal> <replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Reads input from the file <replaceable
+ class="parameter">filename</replaceable> and executes it as
+ though it had been typed on the keyboard.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ If <replaceable>filename</replaceable> is <literal>-</literal>
+ (hyphen), then standard input is read until an EOF indication
+ or <command>\q</command> meta-command. This can be used to intersperse
+ interactive input with input from files. Note that Readline behavior
+ will be used only if it is active at the outermost level.
+ </para>
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ If you want to see the lines on the screen as they are read you
+ must set the variable <varname>ECHO</varname> to
+ <literal>all</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry id="psql-metacommand-if">
+ <term><literal>\if</literal> <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable></term>
+ <term><literal>\elif</literal> <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable></term>
+ <term><literal>\else</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>\endif</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This group of commands implements nestable conditional blocks.
+ A conditional block must begin with an <command>\if</command> and end
+ with an <command>\endif</command>. In between there may be any number
+ of <command>\elif</command> clauses, which may optionally be followed
+ by a single <command>\else</command> clause. Ordinary queries and
+ other types of backslash commands may (and usually do) appear between
+ the commands forming a conditional block.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The <command>\if</command> and <command>\elif</command> commands read
+ their argument(s) and evaluate them as a Boolean expression. If the
+ expression yields <literal>true</literal> then processing continues
+ normally; otherwise, lines are skipped until a
+ matching <command>\elif</command>, <command>\else</command>,
+ or <command>\endif</command> is reached. Once
+ an <command>\if</command> or <command>\elif</command> test has
+ succeeded, the arguments of later <command>\elif</command> commands in
+ the same block are not evaluated but are treated as false. Lines
+ following an <command>\else</command> are processed only if no earlier
+ matching <command>\if</command> or <command>\elif</command> succeeded.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> argument
+ of an <command>\if</command> or <command>\elif</command> command
+ is subject to variable interpolation and backquote expansion, just
+ like any other backslash command argument. After that it is evaluated
+ like the value of an on/off option variable. So a valid value
+ is any unambiguous case-insensitive match for one of:
+ <literal>true</literal>, <literal>false</literal>, <literal>1</literal>,
+ <literal>0</literal>, <literal>on</literal>, <literal>off</literal>,
+ <literal>yes</literal>, <literal>no</literal>. For example,
+ <literal>t</literal>, <literal>T</literal>, and <literal>tR</literal>
+ will all be considered to be <literal>true</literal>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Expressions that do not properly evaluate to true or false will
+ generate a warning and be treated as false.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Lines being skipped are parsed normally to identify queries and
+ backslash commands, but queries are not sent to the server, and
+ backslash commands other than conditionals
+ (<command>\if</command>, <command>\elif</command>,
+ <command>\else</command>, <command>\endif</command>) are
+ ignored. Conditional commands are checked only for valid nesting.
+ Variable references in skipped lines are not expanded, and backquote
+ expansion is not performed either.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ All the backslash commands of a given conditional block must appear in
+ the same source file. If EOF is reached on the main input file or an
+ <command>\include</command>-ed file before all local
+ <command>\if</command>-blocks have been closed,
+ then <application>psql</application> will raise an error.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Here is an example:
+ </para>
+<programlisting>
+-- check for the existence of two separate records in the database and store
+-- the results in separate psql variables
+SELECT
+ EXISTS(SELECT 1 FROM customer WHERE customer_id = 123) as is_customer,
+ EXISTS(SELECT 1 FROM employee WHERE employee_id = 456) as is_employee
+\gset
+\if :is_customer
+ SELECT * FROM customer WHERE customer_id = 123;
+\elif :is_employee
+ \echo 'is not a customer but is an employee'
+ SELECT * FROM employee WHERE employee_id = 456;
+\else
+ \if yes
+ \echo 'not a customer or employee'
+ \else
+ \echo 'this will never print'
+ \endif
+\endif
+</programlisting>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\ir</literal> or <literal>\include_relative</literal> <replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>\ir</literal> command is similar to <literal>\i</literal>, but resolves
+ relative file names differently. When executing in interactive mode,
+ the two commands behave identically. However, when invoked from a
+ script, <literal>\ir</literal> interprets file names relative to the
+ directory in which the script is located, rather than the current
+ working directory.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\l[+]</literal> or <literal>\list[+] [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ List the databases in the server and show their names, owners,
+ character set encodings, and access privileges.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable> is specified,
+ only databases whose names match the pattern are listed.
+ If <literal>+</literal> is appended to the command name, database
+ sizes, default tablespaces, and descriptions are also displayed.
+ (Size information is only available for databases that the current
+ user can connect to.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\lo_export <replaceable class="parameter">loid</replaceable> <replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable></literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Reads the large object with <acronym>OID</acronym> <replaceable
+ class="parameter">loid</replaceable> from the database and
+ writes it to <replaceable
+ class="parameter">filename</replaceable>. Note that this is
+ subtly different from the server function
+ <function>lo_export</function>, which acts with the permissions
+ of the user that the database server runs as and on the server's
+ file system.
+ </para>
+ <tip>
+ <para>
+ Use <command>\lo_list</command> to find out the large object's
+ <acronym>OID</acronym>.
+ </para>
+ </tip>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\lo_import <replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable> [ <replaceable class="parameter">comment</replaceable> ]</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Stores the file into a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ large object. Optionally, it associates the given
+ comment with the object. Example:
+<programlisting>
+foo=&gt; <userinput>\lo_import '/home/peter/pictures/photo.xcf' 'a picture of me'</userinput>
+lo_import 152801
+</programlisting>
+ The response indicates that the large object received object
+ ID 152801, which can be used to access the newly-created large
+ object in the future. For the sake of readability, it is
+ recommended to always associate a human-readable comment with
+ every object. Both OIDs and comments can be viewed with the
+ <command>\lo_list</command> command.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Note that this command is subtly different from the server-side
+ <function>lo_import</function> because it acts as the local user
+ on the local file system, rather than the server's user and file
+ system.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\lo_list</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Shows a list of all <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ large objects currently stored in the database,
+ along with any comments provided for them.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\lo_unlink <replaceable class="parameter">loid</replaceable></literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Deletes the large object with <acronym>OID</acronym>
+ <replaceable class="parameter">loid</replaceable> from the
+ database.
+ </para>
+
+ <tip>
+ <para>
+ Use <command>\lo_list</command> to find out the large object's
+ <acronym>OID</acronym>.
+ </para>
+ </tip>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\o</literal> or <literal>\out [ <replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable> ]</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>\o</literal> or <literal>\out [ |<replaceable class="parameter">command</replaceable> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Arranges to save future query results to the file <replaceable
+ class="parameter">filename</replaceable> or pipe future results
+ to the shell command <replaceable
+ class="parameter">command</replaceable>. If no argument is
+ specified, the query output is reset to the standard output.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the argument begins with <literal>|</literal>, then the entire remainder
+ of the line is taken to be
+ the <replaceable class="parameter">command</replaceable> to execute,
+ and neither variable interpolation nor backquote expansion are
+ performed in it. The rest of the line is simply passed literally to
+ the shell.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <quote>Query results</quote> includes all tables, command
+ responses, and notices obtained from the database server, as
+ well as output of various backslash commands that query the
+ database (such as <command>\d</command>); but not error
+ messages.
+ </para>
+
+ <tip>
+ <para>
+ To intersperse text output in between query results, use
+ <command>\qecho</command>.
+ </para>
+ </tip>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\p</literal> or <literal>\print</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the current query buffer to the standard output.
+ If the current query buffer is empty, the most recently executed query
+ is printed instead.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\password [ <replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Changes the password of the specified user (by default, the current
+ user). This command prompts for the new password, encrypts it, and
+ sends it to the server as an <command>ALTER ROLE</command> command. This
+ makes sure that the new password does not appear in cleartext in the
+ command history, the server log, or elsewhere.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\prompt [ <replaceable class="parameter">text</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Prompts the user to supply text, which is assigned to the variable
+ <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>.
+ An optional prompt string, <replaceable
+ class="parameter">text</replaceable>, can be specified. (For multiword
+ prompts, surround the text with single quotes.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ By default, <literal>\prompt</literal> uses the terminal for input and
+ output. However, if the <option>-f</option> command line switch was
+ used, <literal>\prompt</literal> uses standard input and standard output.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\pset [ <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> [ <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> ] ]</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This command sets options affecting the output of query result tables.
+ <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable>
+ indicates which option is to be set. The semantics of
+ <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> vary depending
+ on the selected option. For some options, omitting <replaceable
+ class="parameter">value</replaceable> causes the option to be toggled
+ or unset, as described under the particular option. If no such
+ behavior is mentioned, then omitting
+ <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> just results in
+ the current setting being displayed.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>\pset</command> without any arguments displays the current status
+ of all printing options.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Adjustable printing options are:
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>border</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> must be a
+ number. In general, the higher
+ the number the more borders and lines the tables will have,
+ but details depend on the particular format.
+ In <acronym>HTML</acronym> format, this will translate directly
+ into the <literal>border=...</literal> attribute.
+ In most other formats only values 0 (no border), 1 (internal
+ dividing lines), and 2 (table frame) make sense, and values above 2
+ will be treated the same as <literal>border = 2</literal>.
+ The <literal>latex</literal> and <literal>latex-longtable</literal>
+ formats additionally allow a value of 3 to add dividing lines
+ between data rows.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>columns</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets the target width for the <literal>wrapped</literal> format, and also
+ the width limit for determining whether output is wide enough to
+ require the pager or switch to the vertical display in expanded auto
+ mode.
+ Zero (the default) causes the target width to be controlled by the
+ environment variable <envar>COLUMNS</envar>, or the detected screen width
+ if <envar>COLUMNS</envar> is not set.
+ In addition, if <literal>columns</literal> is zero then the
+ <literal>wrapped</literal> format only affects screen output.
+ If <literal>columns</literal> is nonzero then file and pipe output is
+ wrapped to that width as well.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>csv_fieldsep</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the field separator to be used in
+ <acronym>CSV</acronym> output format. If the separator character
+ appears in a field's value, that field is output within double
+ quotes, following standard <acronym>CSV</acronym> rules.
+ The default is a comma.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>expanded</literal> (or <literal>x</literal>)</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> is specified it
+ must be either <literal>on</literal> or <literal>off</literal>, which
+ will enable or disable expanded mode, or <literal>auto</literal>.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> is omitted the
+ command toggles between the on and off settings. When expanded mode
+ is enabled, query results are displayed in two columns, with the
+ column name on the left and the data on the right. This mode is
+ useful if the data wouldn't fit on the screen in the
+ normal <quote>horizontal</quote> mode. In the auto setting, the
+ expanded mode is used whenever the query output has more than one
+ column and is wider than the screen; otherwise, the regular mode is
+ used. The auto setting is only
+ effective in the aligned and wrapped formats. In other formats, it
+ always behaves as if the expanded mode is off.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>fieldsep</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the field separator to be used in unaligned output
+ format. That way one can create, for example, tab-separated
+ output, which other programs might prefer. To
+ set a tab as field separator, type <literal>\pset fieldsep
+ '\t'</literal>. The default field separator is
+ <literal>'|'</literal> (a vertical bar).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>fieldsep_zero</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets the field separator to use in unaligned output format to a zero
+ byte.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>footer</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> is specified
+ it must be either <literal>on</literal> or <literal>off</literal>
+ which will enable or disable display of the table footer
+ (the <literal>(<replaceable>n</replaceable> rows)</literal> count).
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> is omitted the
+ command toggles footer display on or off.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>format</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets the output format to one of <literal>aligned</literal>,
+ <literal>asciidoc</literal>,
+ <literal>csv</literal>,
+ <literal>html</literal>,
+ <literal>latex</literal>,
+ <literal>latex-longtable</literal>, <literal>troff-ms</literal>,
+ <literal>unaligned</literal>, or <literal>wrapped</literal>.
+ Unique abbreviations are allowed.
+ </para>
+
+ <para><literal>aligned</literal> format is the standard,
+ human-readable, nicely formatted text output; this is the default.
+ </para>
+
+ <para><literal>unaligned</literal> format writes all columns of a row on one
+ line, separated by the currently active field separator. This
+ is useful for creating output that might be intended to be read
+ in by other programs, for example, tab-separated or comma-separated
+ format. However, the field separator character is not treated
+ specially if it appears in a column's value;
+ so <acronym>CSV</acronym> format may be better suited for such
+ purposes.
+ </para>
+
+ <para><literal>csv</literal> format
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary>CSV (Comma-Separated Values) format</primary>
+ <secondary>in psql</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+ writes column values separated by commas, applying the quoting
+ rules described in
+ <ulink url="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4180">RFC 4180</ulink>.
+ This output is compatible with the CSV format of the server's
+ <command>COPY</command> command.
+ A header line with column names is generated unless
+ the <literal>tuples_only</literal> parameter is
+ <literal>on</literal>. Titles and footers are not printed.
+ Each row is terminated by the system-dependent end-of-line character,
+ which is typically a single newline (<literal>\n</literal>) for
+ Unix-like systems or a carriage return and newline sequence
+ (<literal>\r\n</literal>) for Microsoft Windows.
+ Field separator characters other than comma can be selected with
+ <command>\pset csv_fieldsep</command>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para><literal>wrapped</literal> format is like <literal>aligned</literal> but wraps
+ wide data values across lines to make the output fit in the target
+ column width. The target width is determined as described under
+ the <literal>columns</literal> option. Note that <application>psql</application> will
+ not attempt to wrap column header titles; therefore,
+ <literal>wrapped</literal> format behaves the same as <literal>aligned</literal>
+ if the total width needed for column headers exceeds the target.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>asciidoc</literal>, <literal>html</literal>,
+ <literal>latex</literal>, <literal>latex-longtable</literal>, and
+ <literal>troff-ms</literal> formats put out tables that are intended
+ to be included in documents using the respective mark-up
+ language. They are not complete documents! This might not be
+ necessary in <acronym>HTML</acronym>, but in
+ <application>LaTeX</application> you must have a complete
+ document wrapper.
+ The <literal>latex</literal> format
+ uses <application>LaTeX</application>'s <literal>tabular</literal>
+ environment.
+ The <literal>latex-longtable</literal> format
+ requires the <application>LaTeX</application>
+ <literal>longtable</literal> and <literal>booktabs</literal> packages.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>linestyle</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets the border line drawing style to one
+ of <literal>ascii</literal>, <literal>old-ascii</literal>,
+ or <literal>unicode</literal>.
+ Unique abbreviations are allowed. (That would mean one
+ letter is enough.)
+ The default setting is <literal>ascii</literal>.
+ This option only affects the <literal>aligned</literal> and
+ <literal>wrapped</literal> output formats.
+ </para>
+
+ <para><literal>ascii</literal> style uses plain <acronym>ASCII</acronym>
+ characters. Newlines in data are shown using
+ a <literal>+</literal> symbol in the right-hand margin.
+ When the <literal>wrapped</literal> format wraps data from
+ one line to the next without a newline character, a dot
+ (<literal>.</literal>) is shown in the right-hand margin of the first line,
+ and again in the left-hand margin of the following line.
+ </para>
+
+ <para><literal>old-ascii</literal> style uses plain <acronym>ASCII</acronym>
+ characters, using the formatting style used
+ in <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 8.4 and earlier.
+ Newlines in data are shown using a <literal>:</literal>
+ symbol in place of the left-hand column separator.
+ When the data is wrapped from one line
+ to the next without a newline character, a <literal>;</literal>
+ symbol is used in place of the left-hand column separator.
+ </para>
+
+ <para><literal>unicode</literal> style uses Unicode box-drawing characters.
+ Newlines in data are shown using a carriage return symbol
+ in the right-hand margin. When the data is wrapped from one line
+ to the next without a newline character, an ellipsis symbol
+ is shown in the right-hand margin of the first line, and
+ again in the left-hand margin of the following line.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When the <literal>border</literal> setting is greater than zero,
+ the <literal>linestyle</literal> option also determines the
+ characters with which the border lines are drawn.
+ Plain <acronym>ASCII</acronym> characters work everywhere, but
+ Unicode characters look nicer on displays that recognize them.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>null</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets the string to be printed in place of a null value.
+ The default is to print nothing, which can easily be mistaken for
+ an empty string. For example, one might prefer <literal>\pset null
+ '(null)'</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>numericlocale</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> is specified
+ it must be either <literal>on</literal> or <literal>off</literal>
+ which will enable or disable display of a locale-specific character
+ to separate groups of digits to the left of the decimal marker.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> is omitted the
+ command toggles between regular and locale-specific numeric output.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>pager</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Controls use of a pager program for query and <application>psql</application>
+ help output. If the environment variable <envar>PSQL_PAGER</envar>
+ or <envar>PAGER</envar> is set, the output is piped to the
+ specified program. Otherwise a platform-dependent default program
+ (such as <filename>more</filename>) is used.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When the <literal>pager</literal> option is <literal>off</literal>, the pager
+ program is not used. When the <literal>pager</literal> option is
+ <literal>on</literal>, the pager is used when appropriate, i.e., when the
+ output is to a terminal and will not fit on the screen.
+ The <literal>pager</literal> option can also be set to <literal>always</literal>,
+ which causes the pager to be used for all terminal output regardless
+ of whether it fits on the screen. <literal>\pset pager</literal>
+ without a <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>
+ toggles pager use on and off.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>pager_min_lines</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If <literal>pager_min_lines</literal> is set to a number greater than the
+ page height, the pager program will not be called unless there are
+ at least this many lines of output to show. The default setting
+ is 0.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>recordsep</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the record (line) separator to use in unaligned
+ output format. The default is a newline character.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>recordsep_zero</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets the record separator to use in unaligned output format to a zero
+ byte.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>tableattr</literal> (or <literal>T</literal>)</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ In <acronym>HTML</acronym> format, this specifies attributes
+ to be placed inside the <sgmltag>table</sgmltag> tag. This
+ could for example be <literal>cellpadding</literal> or
+ <literal>bgcolor</literal>. Note that you probably don't want
+ to specify <literal>border</literal> here, as that is already
+ taken care of by <literal>\pset border</literal>.
+ If no
+ <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> is given,
+ the table attributes are unset.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ In <literal>latex-longtable</literal> format, this controls
+ the proportional width of each column containing a left-aligned
+ data type. It is specified as a whitespace-separated list of values,
+ e.g., <literal>'0.2 0.2 0.6'</literal>. Unspecified output columns
+ use the last specified value.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>title</literal> (or <literal>C</literal>)</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets the table title for any subsequently printed tables. This
+ can be used to give your output descriptive tags. If no
+ <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> is given,
+ the title is unset.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>tuples_only</literal> (or <literal>t</literal>)</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> is specified
+ it must be either <literal>on</literal> or <literal>off</literal>
+ which will enable or disable tuples-only mode.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> is omitted the
+ command toggles between regular and tuples-only output.
+ Regular output includes extra information such
+ as column headers, titles, and various footers. In tuples-only
+ mode, only actual table data is shown.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>unicode_border_linestyle</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets the border drawing style for the <literal>unicode</literal>
+ line style to one of <literal>single</literal>
+ or <literal>double</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>unicode_column_linestyle</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets the column drawing style for the <literal>unicode</literal>
+ line style to one of <literal>single</literal>
+ or <literal>double</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>unicode_header_linestyle</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets the header drawing style for the <literal>unicode</literal>
+ line style to one of <literal>single</literal>
+ or <literal>double</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Illustrations of how these different formats look can be seen in
+ <xref linkend="app-psql-examples"/>, below.
+ </para>
+
+ <tip>
+ <para>
+ There are various shortcut commands for <command>\pset</command>. See
+ <command>\a</command>, <command>\C</command>, <command>\f</command>,
+ <command>\H</command>, <command>\t</command>, <command>\T</command>,
+ and <command>\x</command>.
+ </para>
+ </tip>
+
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\q</literal> or <literal>\quit</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Quits the <application>psql</application> program.
+ In a script file, only execution of that script is terminated.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\qecho <replaceable class="parameter">text</replaceable> [ ... ] </literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This command is identical to <command>\echo</command> except
+ that the output will be written to the query output channel, as
+ set by <command>\o</command>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\r</literal> or <literal>\reset</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Resets (clears) the query buffer.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\s [ <replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print <application>psql</application>'s command line history
+ to <replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable>.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable> is omitted,
+ the history is written to the standard output (using the pager if
+ appropriate). This command is not available
+ if <application>psql</application> was built
+ without <application>Readline</application> support.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\set [ <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> [ ... ] ] ]</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets the <application>psql</application> variable <replaceable
+ class="parameter">name</replaceable> to <replaceable
+ class="parameter">value</replaceable>, or if more than one value
+ is given, to the concatenation of all of them. If only one
+ argument is given, the variable is set to an empty-string value. To
+ unset a variable, use the <command>\unset</command> command.
+ </para>
+
+ <para><command>\set</command> without any arguments displays the names and values
+ of all currently-set <application>psql</application> variables.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Valid variable names can contain letters, digits, and
+ underscores. See <xref linkend="app-psql-variables"/> below for details.
+ Variable names are case-sensitive.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Certain variables are special, in that they
+ control <application>psql</application>'s behavior or are
+ automatically set to reflect connection state. These variables are
+ documented in <xref linkend="app-psql-variables"/>, below.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ This command is unrelated to the <acronym>SQL</acronym>
+ command <link linkend="sql-set"><command>SET</command></link>.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\setenv <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> ]</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets the environment variable <replaceable
+ class="parameter">name</replaceable> to <replaceable
+ class="parameter">value</replaceable>, or if the
+ <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> is
+ not supplied, unsets the environment variable. Example:
+<programlisting>
+testdb=&gt; <userinput>\setenv PAGER less</userinput>
+testdb=&gt; <userinput>\setenv LESS -imx4F</userinput>
+</programlisting></para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\sf[+] <replaceable class="parameter">function_description</replaceable> </literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This command fetches and shows the definition of the named function or procedure,
+ in the form of a <command>CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION</command> or
+ <command>CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE</command> command.
+ The definition is printed to the current query output channel,
+ as set by <command>\o</command>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The target function can be specified by name alone, or by name
+ and arguments, for example <literal>foo(integer, text)</literal>.
+ The argument types must be given if there is more
+ than one function of the same name.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If <literal>+</literal> is appended to the command name, then the
+ output lines are numbered, with the first line of the function body
+ being line 1.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Unlike most other meta-commands, the entire remainder of the line is
+ always taken to be the argument(s) of <command>\sf</command>, and neither
+ variable interpolation nor backquote expansion are performed in the
+ arguments.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\sv[+] <replaceable class="parameter">view_name</replaceable> </literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This command fetches and shows the definition of the named view,
+ in the form of a <command>CREATE OR REPLACE VIEW</command> command.
+ The definition is printed to the current query output channel,
+ as set by <command>\o</command>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If <literal>+</literal> is appended to the command name, then the
+ output lines are numbered from 1.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Unlike most other meta-commands, the entire remainder of the line is
+ always taken to be the argument(s) of <command>\sv</command>, and neither
+ variable interpolation nor backquote expansion are performed in the
+ arguments.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\t</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Toggles the display of output column name headings and row count
+ footer. This command is equivalent to <literal>\pset
+ tuples_only</literal> and is provided for convenience.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\T <replaceable class="parameter">table_options</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies attributes to be placed within the
+ <sgmltag>table</sgmltag> tag in <acronym>HTML</acronym>
+ output format. This command is equivalent to <literal>\pset
+ tableattr <replaceable
+ class="parameter">table_options</replaceable></literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\timing [ <replaceable class="parameter">on</replaceable> | <replaceable class="parameter">off</replaceable> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ With a parameter, turns displaying of how long each SQL statement
+ takes on or off. Without a parameter, toggles the display between
+ on and off. The display is in milliseconds; intervals longer than
+ 1 second are also shown in minutes:seconds format, with hours and
+ days fields added if needed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\unset <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Unsets (deletes) the <application>psql</application> variable <replaceable
+ class="parameter">name</replaceable>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Most variables that control <application>psql</application>'s behavior
+ cannot be unset; instead, an <literal>\unset</literal> command is interpreted
+ as setting them to their default values.
+ See <xref linkend="app-psql-variables"/> below.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\w</literal> or <literal>\write</literal> <replaceable class="parameter">filename</replaceable></term>
+ <term><literal>\w</literal> or <literal>\write</literal> <literal>|</literal><replaceable class="parameter">command</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Writes the current query buffer to the file <replaceable
+ class="parameter">filename</replaceable> or pipes it to the shell
+ command <replaceable class="parameter">command</replaceable>.
+ If the current query buffer is empty, the most recently executed query
+ is written instead.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the argument begins with <literal>|</literal>, then the entire remainder
+ of the line is taken to be
+ the <replaceable class="parameter">command</replaceable> to execute,
+ and neither variable interpolation nor backquote expansion are
+ performed in it. The rest of the line is simply passed literally to
+ the shell.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\warn <replaceable class="parameter">text</replaceable> [ ... ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This command is identical to <command>\echo</command> except
+ that the output will be written to <application>psql</application>'s
+ standard error channel, rather than standard output.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\watch [ <replaceable class="parameter">seconds</replaceable> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Repeatedly execute the current query buffer (as <literal>\g</literal> does)
+ until interrupted or the query fails. Wait the specified number of
+ seconds (default 2) between executions. Each query result is
+ displayed with a header that includes the <literal>\pset title</literal>
+ string (if any), the time as of query start, and the delay interval.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ If the current query buffer is empty, the most recently sent query
+ is re-executed instead.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\x [ <replaceable class="parameter">on</replaceable> | <replaceable class="parameter">off</replaceable> | <replaceable class="parameter">auto</replaceable> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets or toggles expanded table formatting mode. As such it is equivalent to
+ <literal>\pset expanded</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\z [ <link linkend="app-psql-patterns"><replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable></link> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Lists tables, views and sequences with their
+ associated access privileges.
+ If a <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable> is
+ specified, only tables, views and sequences whose names match the
+ pattern are listed.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This is an alias for <command>\dp</command> (<quote>display
+ privileges</quote>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\! [ <replaceable class="parameter">command</replaceable> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ With no argument, escapes to a sub-shell; <application>psql</application>
+ resumes when the sub-shell exits. With an argument, executes the
+ shell command <replaceable class="parameter">command</replaceable>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Unlike most other meta-commands, the entire remainder of the line is
+ always taken to be the argument(s) of <command>\!</command>, and neither
+ variable interpolation nor backquote expansion are performed in the
+ arguments. The rest of the line is simply passed literally to the
+ shell.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\? [ <replaceable class="parameter">topic</replaceable> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Shows help information. The optional
+ <replaceable class="parameter">topic</replaceable> parameter
+ (defaulting to <literal>commands</literal>) selects which part of <application>psql</application> is
+ explained: <literal>commands</literal> describes <application>psql</application>'s
+ backslash commands; <literal>options</literal> describes the command-line
+ options that can be passed to <application>psql</application>;
+ and <literal>variables</literal> shows help about <application>psql</application> configuration
+ variables.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>\;</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Backslash-semicolon is not a meta-command in the same way as the
+ preceding commands; rather, it simply causes a semicolon to be
+ added to the query buffer without any further processing.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Normally, <application>psql</application> will dispatch an SQL command to the
+ server as soon as it reaches the command-ending semicolon, even if
+ more input remains on the current line. Thus for example entering
+<programlisting>
+select 1; select 2; select 3;
+</programlisting>
+ will result in the three SQL commands being individually sent to
+ the server, with each one's results being displayed before
+ continuing to the next command. However, a semicolon entered
+ as <literal>\;</literal> will not trigger command processing, so that the
+ command before it and the one after are effectively combined and
+ sent to the server in one request. So for example
+<programlisting>
+select 1\; select 2\; select 3;
+</programlisting>
+ results in sending the three SQL commands to the server in a single
+ request, when the non-backslashed semicolon is reached.
+ The server executes such a request as a single transaction,
+ unless there are explicit <command>BEGIN</command>/<command>COMMIT</command>
+ commands included in the string to divide it into multiple
+ transactions. (See <xref linkend="protocol-flow-multi-statement"/>
+ for more details about how the server handles multi-query strings.)
+ <application>psql</application> prints only the last query result
+ it receives for each request; in this example, although all
+ three <command>SELECT</command>s are indeed executed, <application>psql</application>
+ only prints the <literal>3</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <refsect3 id="app-psql-patterns" xreflabel="Patterns">
+ <title>Patterns</title>
+
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary>patterns</primary>
+ <secondary>in psql and pg_dump</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <para>
+ The various <literal>\d</literal> commands accept a <replaceable
+ class="parameter">pattern</replaceable> parameter to specify the
+ object name(s) to be displayed. In the simplest case, a pattern
+ is just the exact name of the object. The characters within a
+ pattern are normally folded to lower case, just as in SQL names;
+ for example, <literal>\dt FOO</literal> will display the table named
+ <literal>foo</literal>. As in SQL names, placing double quotes around
+ a pattern stops folding to lower case. Should you need to include
+ an actual double quote character in a pattern, write it as a pair
+ of double quotes within a double-quote sequence; again this is in
+ accord with the rules for SQL quoted identifiers. For example,
+ <literal>\dt "FOO""BAR"</literal> will display the table named
+ <literal>FOO"BAR</literal> (not <literal>foo"bar</literal>). Unlike the normal
+ rules for SQL names, you can put double quotes around just part
+ of a pattern, for instance <literal>\dt FOO"FOO"BAR</literal> will display
+ the table named <literal>fooFOObar</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Whenever the <replaceable class="parameter">pattern</replaceable> parameter
+ is omitted completely, the <literal>\d</literal> commands display all objects
+ that are visible in the current schema search path &mdash; this is
+ equivalent to using <literal>*</literal> as the pattern.
+ (An object is said to be <firstterm>visible</firstterm> if its
+ containing schema is in the search path and no object of the same
+ kind and name appears earlier in the search path. This is equivalent to the
+ statement that the object can be referenced by name without explicit
+ schema qualification.)
+ To see all objects in the database regardless of visibility,
+ use <literal>*.*</literal> as the pattern.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Within a pattern, <literal>*</literal> matches any sequence of characters
+ (including no characters) and <literal>?</literal> matches any single character.
+ (This notation is comparable to Unix shell file name patterns.)
+ For example, <literal>\dt int*</literal> displays tables whose names
+ begin with <literal>int</literal>. But within double quotes, <literal>*</literal>
+ and <literal>?</literal> lose these special meanings and are just matched
+ literally.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A relation pattern that contains a dot (<literal>.</literal>) is interpreted as a schema
+ name pattern followed by an object name pattern. For example,
+ <literal>\dt foo*.*bar*</literal> displays all tables whose table name
+ includes <literal>bar</literal> that are in schemas whose schema name
+ starts with <literal>foo</literal>. When no dot appears, then the pattern
+ matches only objects that are visible in the current schema search path.
+ Again, a dot within double quotes loses its special meaning and is matched
+ literally. A relation pattern that contains two dots (<literal>.</literal>)
+ is interpreted as a database name followed by a schema name pattern followed
+ by an object name pattern. The database name portion will not be treated as
+ a pattern and must match the name of the currently connected database, else
+ an error will be raised.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A schema pattern that contains a dot (<literal>.</literal>) is interpreted
+ as a database name followed by a schema name pattern. For example,
+ <literal>\dn mydb.*foo*</literal> displays all schemas whose schema name
+ includes <literal>foo</literal>. The database name portion will not be
+ treated as a pattern and must match the name of the currently connected
+ database, else an error will be raised.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Advanced users can use regular-expression notations such as character
+ classes, for example <literal>[0-9]</literal> to match any digit. All regular
+ expression special characters work as specified in
+ <xref linkend="functions-posix-regexp"/>, except for <literal>.</literal> which
+ is taken as a separator as mentioned above, <literal>*</literal> which is
+ translated to the regular-expression notation <literal>.*</literal>,
+ <literal>?</literal> which is translated to <literal>.</literal>, and
+ <literal>$</literal> which is matched literally. You can emulate
+ these pattern characters at need by writing
+ <literal>?</literal> for <literal>.</literal>,
+ <literal>(<replaceable class="parameter">R</replaceable>+|)</literal> for
+ <literal><replaceable class="parameter">R</replaceable>*</literal>, or
+ <literal>(<replaceable class="parameter">R</replaceable>|)</literal> for
+ <literal><replaceable class="parameter">R</replaceable>?</literal>.
+ <literal>$</literal> is not needed as a regular-expression character since
+ the pattern must match the whole name, unlike the usual
+ interpretation of regular expressions (in other words, <literal>$</literal>
+ is automatically appended to your pattern). Write <literal>*</literal> at the
+ beginning and/or end if you don't wish the pattern to be anchored.
+ Note that within double quotes, all regular expression special characters
+ lose their special meanings and are matched literally. Also, the regular
+ expression special characters are matched literally in operator name
+ patterns (i.e., the argument of <literal>\do</literal>).
+ </para>
+ </refsect3>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Advanced Features</title>
+
+ <refsect3 id="app-psql-variables" xreflabel="Variables">
+ <title>Variables</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>psql</application> provides variable substitution
+ features similar to common Unix command shells.
+ Variables are simply name/value pairs, where the value
+ can be any string of any length. The name must consist of letters
+ (including non-Latin letters), digits, and underscores.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To set a variable, use the <application>psql</application> meta-command
+ <command>\set</command>. For example,
+<programlisting>
+testdb=&gt; <userinput>\set foo bar</userinput>
+</programlisting>
+ sets the variable <literal>foo</literal> to the value
+ <literal>bar</literal>. To retrieve the content of the variable, precede
+ the name with a colon, for example:
+<programlisting>
+testdb=&gt; <userinput>\echo :foo</userinput>
+bar
+</programlisting>
+ This works in both regular SQL commands and meta-commands; there is
+ more detail in <xref linkend="app-psql-interpolation"/>, below.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If you call <command>\set</command> without a second argument, the
+ variable is set to an empty-string value. To unset (i.e., delete)
+ a variable, use the command <command>\unset</command>. To show the
+ values of all variables, call <command>\set</command> without any argument.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ The arguments of <command>\set</command> are subject to the same
+ substitution rules as with other commands. Thus you can construct
+ interesting references such as <literal>\set :foo
+ 'something'</literal> and get <quote>soft links</quote> or
+ <quote>variable variables</quote> of <productname>Perl</productname>
+ or <productname><acronym>PHP</acronym></productname> fame,
+ respectively. Unfortunately (or fortunately?), there is no way to do
+ anything useful with these constructs. On the other hand,
+ <literal>\set bar :foo</literal> is a perfectly valid way to copy a
+ variable.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+
+ <para>
+ A number of these variables are treated specially
+ by <application>psql</application>. They represent certain option
+ settings that can be changed at run time by altering the value of
+ the variable, or in some cases represent changeable state of
+ <application>psql</application>.
+ By convention, all specially treated variables' names
+ consist of all upper-case ASCII letters (and possibly digits and
+ underscores). To ensure maximum compatibility in the future, avoid
+ using such variable names for your own purposes.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Variables that control <application>psql</application>'s behavior
+ generally cannot be unset or set to invalid values. An <literal>\unset</literal>
+ command is allowed but is interpreted as setting the variable to its
+ default value. A <literal>\set</literal> command without a second argument is
+ interpreted as setting the variable to <literal>on</literal>, for control
+ variables that accept that value, and is rejected for others. Also,
+ control variables that accept the values <literal>on</literal>
+ and <literal>off</literal> will also accept other common spellings of Boolean
+ values, such as <literal>true</literal> and <literal>false</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The specially treated variables are:
+ </para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term>
+ <varname>AUTOCOMMIT</varname>
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary>autocommit</primary>
+ <secondary>psql</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ When <literal>on</literal> (the default), each SQL command is automatically
+ committed upon successful completion. To postpone commit in this
+ mode, you must enter a <command>BEGIN</command> or <command>START
+ TRANSACTION</command> SQL command. When <literal>off</literal> or unset, SQL
+ commands are not committed until you explicitly issue
+ <command>COMMIT</command> or <command>END</command>. The autocommit-off
+ mode works by issuing an implicit <command>BEGIN</command> for you, just
+ before any command that is not already in a transaction block and
+ is not itself a <command>BEGIN</command> or other transaction-control
+ command, nor a command that cannot be executed inside a transaction
+ block (such as <command>VACUUM</command>).
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ In autocommit-off mode, you must explicitly abandon any failed
+ transaction by entering <command>ABORT</command> or <command>ROLLBACK</command>.
+ Also keep in mind that if you exit the session
+ without committing, your work will be lost.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ The autocommit-on mode is <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s traditional
+ behavior, but autocommit-off is closer to the SQL spec. If you
+ prefer autocommit-off, you might wish to set it in the system-wide
+ <filename>psqlrc</filename> file or your
+ <filename>~/.psqlrc</filename> file.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>COMP_KEYWORD_CASE</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Determines which letter case to use when completing an SQL key word.
+ If set to <literal>lower</literal> or <literal>upper</literal>, the
+ completed word will be in lower or upper case, respectively. If set
+ to <literal>preserve-lower</literal>
+ or <literal>preserve-upper</literal> (the default), the completed word
+ will be in the case of the word already entered, but words being
+ completed without anything entered will be in lower or upper case,
+ respectively.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>DBNAME</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the database you are currently connected to. This is
+ set every time you connect to a database (including program
+ start-up), but can be changed or unset.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>ECHO</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If set to <literal>all</literal>, all nonempty input lines are printed
+ to standard output as they are read. (This does not apply to lines
+ read interactively.) To select this behavior on program
+ start-up, use the switch <option>-a</option>. If set to
+ <literal>queries</literal>,
+ <application>psql</application> prints each query to standard output
+ as it is sent to the server. The switch to select this behavior is
+ <option>-e</option>. If set to <literal>errors</literal>, then only
+ failed queries are displayed on standard error output. The switch
+ for this behavior is <option>-b</option>. If set to
+ <literal>none</literal> (the default), then no queries are displayed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>ECHO_HIDDEN</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ When this variable is set to <literal>on</literal> and a backslash command
+ queries the database, the query is first shown.
+ This feature helps you to study
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> internals and provide
+ similar functionality in your own programs. (To select this behavior
+ on program start-up, use the switch <option>-E</option>.) If you set
+ this variable to the value <literal>noexec</literal>, the queries are
+ just shown but are not actually sent to the server and executed.
+ The default value is <literal>off</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>ENCODING</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The current client character set encoding.
+ This is set every time you connect to a database (including
+ program start-up), and when you change the encoding
+ with <literal>\encoding</literal>, but it can be changed or unset.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>ERROR</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ <literal>true</literal> if the last SQL query failed, <literal>false</literal> if
+ it succeeded. See also <varname>SQLSTATE</varname>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>FETCH_COUNT</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If this variable is set to an integer value greater than zero,
+ the results of <command>SELECT</command> queries are fetched
+ and displayed in groups of that many rows, rather than the
+ default behavior of collecting the entire result set before
+ display. Therefore only a
+ limited amount of memory is used, regardless of the size of
+ the result set. Settings of 100 to 1000 are commonly used
+ when enabling this feature.
+ Keep in mind that when using this feature, a query might
+ fail after having already displayed some rows.
+ </para>
+
+ <tip>
+ <para>
+ Although you can use any output format with this feature,
+ the default <literal>aligned</literal> format tends to look bad
+ because each group of <varname>FETCH_COUNT</varname> rows
+ will be formatted separately, leading to varying column
+ widths across the row groups. The other output formats work better.
+ </para>
+ </tip>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>HIDE_TABLEAM</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If this variable is set to <literal>true</literal>, a table's access
+ method details are not displayed. This is mainly useful for
+ regression tests.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>HIDE_TOAST_COMPRESSION</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If this variable is set to <literal>true</literal>, column
+ compression method details are not displayed. This is mainly
+ useful for regression tests.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>HISTCONTROL</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If this variable is set to <literal>ignorespace</literal>,
+ lines which begin with a space are not entered into the history
+ list. If set to a value of <literal>ignoredups</literal>, lines
+ matching the previous history line are not entered. A value of
+ <literal>ignoreboth</literal> combines the two options. If
+ set to <literal>none</literal> (the default), all lines
+ read in interactive mode are saved on the history list.
+ </para>
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ This feature was shamelessly plagiarized from
+ <application>Bash</application>.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>HISTFILE</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The file name that will be used to store the history list. If unset,
+ the file name is taken from the <envar>PSQL_HISTORY</envar>
+ environment variable. If that is not set either, the default
+ is <filename>~/.psql_history</filename>,
+ or <filename>%APPDATA%\postgresql\psql_history</filename> on Windows.
+ For example, putting:
+<programlisting>
+\set HISTFILE ~/.psql_history-:DBNAME
+</programlisting>
+ in <filename>~/.psqlrc</filename> will cause
+ <application>psql</application> to maintain a separate history for
+ each database.
+ </para>
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ This feature was shamelessly plagiarized from
+ <application>Bash</application>.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>HISTSIZE</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The maximum number of commands to store in the command history
+ (default 500). If set to a negative value, no limit is applied.
+ </para>
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ This feature was shamelessly plagiarized from
+ <application>Bash</application>.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>HOST</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The database server host you are currently connected to. This is
+ set every time you connect to a database (including program
+ start-up), but can be changed or unset.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>IGNOREEOF</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If set to 1 or less, sending an <acronym>EOF</acronym> character (usually
+ <keycombo action="simul"><keycap>Control</keycap><keycap>D</keycap></keycombo>)
+ to an interactive session of <application>psql</application>
+ will terminate the application. If set to a larger numeric value,
+ that many consecutive <acronym>EOF</acronym> characters must be typed to
+ make an interactive session terminate. If the variable is set to a
+ non-numeric value, it is interpreted as 10. The default is 0.
+ </para>
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ This feature was shamelessly plagiarized from
+ <application>Bash</application>.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>LASTOID</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The value of the last affected OID, as returned from an
+ <command>INSERT</command> or <command>\lo_import</command>
+ command. This variable is only guaranteed to be valid until
+ after the result of the next <acronym>SQL</acronym> command has
+ been displayed.
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> servers since version 12 do not
+ support OID system columns anymore, thus LASTOID will always be 0
+ following <command>INSERT</command> when targeting such servers.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>LAST_ERROR_MESSAGE</varname></term>
+ <term><varname>LAST_ERROR_SQLSTATE</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The primary error message and associated SQLSTATE code for the most
+ recent failed query in the current <application>psql</application> session, or
+ an empty string and <literal>00000</literal> if no error has occurred in
+ the current session.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term>
+ <varname>ON_ERROR_ROLLBACK</varname>
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary>rollback</primary>
+ <secondary>psql</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ When set to <literal>on</literal>, if a statement in a transaction block
+ generates an error, the error is ignored and the transaction
+ continues. When set to <literal>interactive</literal>, such errors are only
+ ignored in interactive sessions, and not when reading script
+ files. When set to <literal>off</literal> (the default), a statement in a
+ transaction block that generates an error aborts the entire
+ transaction. The error rollback mode works by issuing an
+ implicit <command>SAVEPOINT</command> for you, just before each command
+ that is in a transaction block, and then rolling back to the
+ savepoint if the command fails.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>ON_ERROR_STOP</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ By default, command processing continues after an error. When this
+ variable is set to <literal>on</literal>, processing will instead stop
+ immediately. In interactive mode,
+ <application>psql</application> will return to the command prompt;
+ otherwise, <application>psql</application> will exit, returning
+ error code 3 to distinguish this case from fatal error
+ conditions, which are reported using error code 1. In either case,
+ any currently running scripts (the top-level script, if any, and any
+ other scripts which it may have in invoked) will be terminated
+ immediately. If the top-level command string contained multiple SQL
+ commands, processing will stop with the current command.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>PORT</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The database server port to which you are currently connected.
+ This is set every time you connect to a database (including
+ program start-up), but can be changed or unset.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>PROMPT1</varname></term>
+ <term><varname>PROMPT2</varname></term>
+ <term><varname>PROMPT3</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These specify what the prompts <application>psql</application>
+ issues should look like. See <xref
+ linkend="app-psql-prompting"/> below.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>QUIET</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Setting this variable to <literal>on</literal> is equivalent to the command
+ line option <option>-q</option>. It is probably not too useful in
+ interactive mode.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>ROW_COUNT</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The number of rows returned or affected by the last SQL query, or 0
+ if the query failed or did not report a row count.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>SERVER_VERSION_NAME</varname></term>
+ <term><varname>SERVER_VERSION_NUM</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The server's version number as a string, for
+ example <literal>9.6.2</literal>, <literal>10.1</literal> or <literal>11beta1</literal>,
+ and in numeric form, for
+ example <literal>90602</literal> or <literal>100001</literal>.
+ These are set every time you connect to a database
+ (including program start-up), but can be changed or unset.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>SHOW_CONTEXT</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This variable can be set to the
+ values <literal>never</literal>, <literal>errors</literal>, or <literal>always</literal>
+ to control whether <literal>CONTEXT</literal> fields are displayed in
+ messages from the server. The default is <literal>errors</literal> (meaning
+ that context will be shown in error messages, but not in notice or
+ warning messages). This setting has no effect
+ when <varname>VERBOSITY</varname> is set to <literal>terse</literal>
+ or <literal>sqlstate</literal>.
+ (See also <command>\errverbose</command>, for use when you want a verbose
+ version of the error you just got.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>SINGLELINE</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Setting this variable to <literal>on</literal> is equivalent to the command
+ line option <option>-S</option>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>SINGLESTEP</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Setting this variable to <literal>on</literal> is equivalent to the command
+ line option <option>-s</option>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>SQLSTATE</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The error code (see <xref linkend="errcodes-appendix"/>) associated
+ with the last SQL query's failure, or <literal>00000</literal> if it
+ succeeded.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>USER</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The database user you are currently connected as. This is set
+ every time you connect to a database (including program
+ start-up), but can be changed or unset.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>VERBOSITY</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This variable can be set to the values <literal>default</literal>,
+ <literal>verbose</literal>, <literal>terse</literal>,
+ or <literal>sqlstate</literal> to control the verbosity of error
+ reports.
+ (See also <command>\errverbose</command>, for use when you want a verbose
+ version of the error you just got.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>VERSION</varname></term>
+ <term><varname>VERSION_NAME</varname></term>
+ <term><varname>VERSION_NUM</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These variables are set at program start-up to reflect
+ <application>psql</application>'s version, respectively as a verbose string,
+ a short string (e.g., <literal>9.6.2</literal>, <literal>10.1</literal>,
+ or <literal>11beta1</literal>), and a number (e.g., <literal>90602</literal>
+ or <literal>100001</literal>). They can be changed or unset.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+
+ </refsect3>
+
+ <refsect3 id="app-psql-interpolation" xreflabel="SQL Interpolation">
+ <title><acronym>SQL</acronym> Interpolation</title>
+
+ <para>
+ A key feature of <application>psql</application>
+ variables is that you can substitute (<quote>interpolate</quote>)
+ them into regular <acronym>SQL</acronym> statements, as well as the
+ arguments of meta-commands. Furthermore,
+ <application>psql</application> provides facilities for
+ ensuring that variable values used as SQL literals and identifiers are
+ properly quoted. The syntax for interpolating a value without
+ any quoting is to prepend the variable name with a colon
+ (<literal>:</literal>). For example,
+<programlisting>
+testdb=&gt; <userinput>\set foo 'my_table'</userinput>
+testdb=&gt; <userinput>SELECT * FROM :foo;</userinput>
+</programlisting>
+ would query the table <literal>my_table</literal>. Note that this
+ may be unsafe: the value of the variable is copied literally, so it can
+ contain unbalanced quotes, or even backslash commands. You must make sure
+ that it makes sense where you put it.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When a value is to be used as an SQL literal or identifier, it is
+ safest to arrange for it to be quoted. To quote the value of
+ a variable as an SQL literal, write a colon followed by the variable
+ name in single quotes. To quote the value as an SQL identifier, write
+ a colon followed by the variable name in double quotes.
+ These constructs deal correctly with quotes and other special
+ characters embedded within the variable value.
+ The previous example would be more safely written this way:
+<programlisting>
+testdb=&gt; <userinput>\set foo 'my_table'</userinput>
+testdb=&gt; <userinput>SELECT * FROM :"foo";</userinput>
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Variable interpolation will not be performed within quoted
+ <acronym>SQL</acronym> literals and identifiers. Therefore, a
+ construction such as <literal>':foo'</literal> doesn't work to produce a quoted
+ literal from a variable's value (and it would be unsafe if it did work,
+ since it wouldn't correctly handle quotes embedded in the value).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ One example use of this mechanism is to
+ copy the contents of a file into a table column.
+ First load the file into a variable and then interpolate the variable's
+ value as a quoted string:
+<programlisting>
+testdb=&gt; <userinput>\set content `cat my_file.txt`</userinput>
+testdb=&gt; <userinput>INSERT INTO my_table VALUES (:'content');</userinput>
+</programlisting>
+ (Note that this still won't work if <filename>my_file.txt</filename> contains NUL bytes.
+ <application>psql</application> does not support embedded NUL bytes in variable values.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Since colons can legally appear in SQL commands, an apparent attempt
+ at interpolation (that is, <literal>:name</literal>,
+ <literal>:'name'</literal>, or <literal>:"name"</literal>) is not
+ replaced unless the named variable is currently set. In any case, you
+ can escape a colon with a backslash to protect it from substitution.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>:{?<replaceable>name</replaceable>}</literal> special syntax returns TRUE
+ or FALSE depending on whether the variable exists or not, and is thus
+ always substituted, unless the colon is backslash-escaped.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The colon syntax for variables is standard <acronym>SQL</acronym> for
+ embedded query languages, such as <application>ECPG</application>.
+ The colon syntaxes for array slices and type casts are
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extensions, which can sometimes
+ conflict with the standard usage. The colon-quote syntax for escaping a
+ variable's value as an SQL literal or identifier is a
+ <application>psql</application> extension.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect3>
+
+ <refsect3 id="app-psql-prompting" xreflabel="Prompting">
+ <title>Prompting</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The prompts <application>psql</application> issues can be customized
+ to your preference. The three variables <varname>PROMPT1</varname>,
+ <varname>PROMPT2</varname>, and <varname>PROMPT3</varname> contain strings
+ and special escape sequences that describe the appearance of the
+ prompt. Prompt 1 is the normal prompt that is issued when
+ <application>psql</application> requests a new command. Prompt 2 is
+ issued when more input is expected during command entry, for example
+ because the command was not terminated with a semicolon or a quote
+ was not closed.
+ Prompt 3 is issued when you are running an <acronym>SQL</acronym>
+ <command>COPY FROM STDIN</command> command and you need to type in
+ a row value on the terminal.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The value of the selected prompt variable is printed literally,
+ except where a percent sign (<literal>%</literal>) is encountered.
+ Depending on the next character, certain other text is substituted
+ instead. Defined substitutions are:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>%M</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The full host name (with domain name) of the database server,
+ or <literal>[local]</literal> if the connection is over a Unix
+ domain socket, or
+ <literal>[local:<replaceable>/dir/name</replaceable>]</literal>,
+ if the Unix domain socket is not at the compiled in default
+ location.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>%m</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The host name of the database server, truncated at the
+ first dot, or <literal>[local]</literal> if the connection is
+ over a Unix domain socket.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>%&gt;</literal></term>
+ <listitem><para>The port number at which the database server is listening.</para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>%n</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The database session user name. (The expansion of this
+ value might change during a database session as the result
+ of the command <command>SET SESSION
+ AUTHORIZATION</command>.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>%/</literal></term>
+ <listitem><para>The name of the current database.</para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>%~</literal></term>
+ <listitem><para>Like <literal>%/</literal>, but the output is <literal>~</literal>
+ (tilde) if the database is your default database.</para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>%#</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If the session user is a database superuser, then a
+ <literal>#</literal>, otherwise a <literal>&gt;</literal>.
+ (The expansion of this value might change during a database
+ session as the result of the command <command>SET SESSION
+ AUTHORIZATION</command>.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>%p</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>The process ID of the backend currently connected to.</para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>%R</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ In prompt 1 normally <literal>=</literal>,
+ but <literal>@</literal> if the session is in an inactive branch of a
+ conditional block, or <literal>^</literal> if in single-line mode,
+ or <literal>!</literal> if the session is disconnected from the
+ database (which can happen if <command>\connect</command> fails).
+ In prompt 2 <literal>%R</literal> is replaced by a character that
+ depends on why <application>psql</application> expects more input:
+ <literal>-</literal> if the command simply wasn't terminated yet,
+ but <literal>*</literal> if there is an unfinished
+ <literal>/* ... */</literal> comment,
+ a single quote if there is an unfinished quoted string,
+ a double quote if there is an unfinished quoted identifier,
+ a dollar sign if there is an unfinished dollar-quoted string,
+ or <literal>(</literal> if there is an unmatched left parenthesis.
+ In prompt 3 <literal>%R</literal> doesn't produce anything.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>%x</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Transaction status: an empty string when not in a transaction
+ block, or <literal>*</literal> when in a transaction block, or
+ <literal>!</literal> when in a failed transaction block, or <literal>?</literal>
+ when the transaction state is indeterminate (for example, because
+ there is no connection).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>%l</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The line number inside the current statement, starting from <literal>1</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>%</literal><replaceable class="parameter">digits</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The character with the indicated octal code is substituted.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>%:</literal><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable><literal>:</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The value of the <application>psql</application> variable
+ <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>. See
+ <xref linkend="app-psql-variables"/>, above, for details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>%`</literal><replaceable class="parameter">command</replaceable><literal>`</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The output of <replaceable
+ class="parameter">command</replaceable>, similar to ordinary
+ <quote>back-tick</quote> substitution.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>%[</literal> ... <literal>%]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Prompts can contain terminal control characters which, for
+ example, change the color, background, or style of the prompt
+ text, or change the title of the terminal window. In order for
+ the line editing features of <application>Readline</application> to work properly, these
+ non-printing control characters must be designated as invisible
+ by surrounding them with <literal>%[</literal> and
+ <literal>%]</literal>. Multiple pairs of these can occur within
+ the prompt. For example:
+<programlisting>
+testdb=&gt; \set PROMPT1 '%[%033[1;33;40m%]%n@%/%R%[%033[0m%]%# '
+</programlisting>
+ results in a boldfaced (<literal>1;</literal>) yellow-on-black
+ (<literal>33;40</literal>) prompt on VT100-compatible, color-capable
+ terminals.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>%w</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Whitespace of the same width as the most recent output of
+ <varname>PROMPT1</varname>. This can be used as a
+ <varname>PROMPT2</varname> setting, so that multi-line statements are
+ aligned with the first line, but there is no visible secondary prompt.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+
+ To insert a percent sign into your prompt, write
+ <literal>%%</literal>. The default prompts are
+ <literal>'%/%R%x%# '</literal> for prompts 1 and 2, and
+ <literal>'&gt;&gt; '</literal> for prompt 3.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ This feature was shamelessly plagiarized from
+ <application>tcsh</application>.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+
+ </refsect3>
+
+ <refsect3>
+ <title>Command-Line Editing</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>psql</application> supports the <application>Readline</application>
+ library for convenient line editing and retrieval. The command
+ history is automatically saved when <application>psql</application>
+ exits and is reloaded when
+ <application>psql</application> starts up. Tab-completion is also
+ supported, although the completion logic makes no claim to be an
+ <acronym>SQL</acronym> parser. The queries generated by tab-completion
+ can also interfere with other SQL commands, e.g., <literal>SET
+ TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL</literal>.
+ If for some reason you do not like the tab completion, you
+ can turn it off by putting this in a file named
+ <filename>.inputrc</filename> in your home directory:
+<programlisting>
+$if psql
+set disable-completion on
+$endif
+</programlisting>
+ (This is not a <application>psql</application> but a
+ <application>Readline</application> feature. Read its documentation
+ for further details.)
+ </para>
+ </refsect3>
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1 id="app-psql-environment" xreflabel="Environment">
+ <title>Environment</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>COLUMNS</envar></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If <literal>\pset columns</literal> is zero, controls the
+ width for the <literal>wrapped</literal> format and width for determining
+ if wide output requires the pager or should be switched to the
+ vertical format in expanded auto mode.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PGDATABASE</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGHOST</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGPORT</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGUSER</envar></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Default connection parameters (see <xref linkend="libpq-envars"/>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PG_COLOR</envar></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether to use color in diagnostic messages. Possible values
+ are <literal>always</literal>, <literal>auto</literal> and
+ <literal>never</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PSQL_EDITOR</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>EDITOR</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>VISUAL</envar></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Editor used by the <command>\e</command>, <command>\ef</command>,
+ and <command>\ev</command> commands.
+ These variables are examined in the order listed;
+ the first that is set is used.
+ If none of them is set, the default is to use <filename>vi</filename>
+ on Unix systems or <filename>notepad.exe</filename> on Windows systems.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PSQL_EDITOR_LINENUMBER_ARG</envar></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ When <command>\e</command>, <command>\ef</command>, or
+ <command>\ev</command> is used
+ with a line number argument, this variable specifies the
+ command-line argument used to pass the starting line number to
+ the user's editor. For editors such as <productname>Emacs</productname> or
+ <productname>vi</productname>, this is a plus sign. Include a trailing
+ space in the value of the variable if there needs to be space
+ between the option name and the line number. Examples:
+<programlisting>
+PSQL_EDITOR_LINENUMBER_ARG='+'
+PSQL_EDITOR_LINENUMBER_ARG='--line '
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The default is <literal>+</literal> on Unix systems
+ (corresponding to the default editor <filename>vi</filename>,
+ and useful for many other common editors); but there is no
+ default on Windows systems.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PSQL_HISTORY</envar></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Alternative location for the command history file. Tilde (<literal>~</literal>) expansion is performed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PSQL_PAGER</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PAGER</envar></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If a query's results do not fit on the screen, they are piped
+ through this command. Typical values are <literal>more</literal>
+ or <literal>less</literal>.
+ Use of the pager can be disabled by setting <envar>PSQL_PAGER</envar>
+ or <envar>PAGER</envar> to an empty string, or by adjusting the
+ pager-related options of the <command>\pset</command> command.
+ These variables are examined in the order listed;
+ the first that is set is used.
+ If none of them is set, the default is to use <literal>more</literal> on most
+ platforms, but <literal>less</literal> on Cygwin.
+ </para>
+
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PSQLRC</envar></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Alternative location of the user's <filename>.psqlrc</filename> file. Tilde (<literal>~</literal>) expansion is performed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>SHELL</envar></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Command executed by the <command>\!</command> command.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>TMPDIR</envar></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Directory for storing temporary files. The default is
+ <filename>/tmp</filename>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ This utility, like most other <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> utilities,
+ also uses the environment variables supported by <application>libpq</application>
+ (see <xref linkend="libpq-envars"/>).
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Files</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><filename>psqlrc</filename> and <filename>~/.psqlrc</filename></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Unless it is passed an <option>-X</option> option,
+ <application>psql</application> attempts to read and execute commands
+ from the system-wide startup file (<filename>psqlrc</filename>) and then
+ the user's personal startup file (<filename>~/.psqlrc</filename>), after
+ connecting to the database but before accepting normal commands.
+ These files can be used to set up the client and/or the server to taste,
+ typically with <command>\set</command> and <command>SET</command>
+ commands.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The system-wide startup file is named <filename>psqlrc</filename> and is
+ sought in the installation's <quote>system configuration</quote> directory,
+ which is most reliably identified by running <literal>pg_config
+ --sysconfdir</literal>. By default this directory will be <filename>../etc/</filename>
+ relative to the directory containing
+ the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> executables. The name of this
+ directory can be set explicitly via the <envar>PGSYSCONFDIR</envar>
+ environment variable.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The user's personal startup file is named <filename>.psqlrc</filename>
+ and is sought in the invoking user's home directory. On Windows, which
+ lacks such a concept, the personal startup file is named
+ <filename>%APPDATA%\postgresql\psqlrc.conf</filename>.
+ The location of the user's startup file can be set explicitly via
+ the <envar>PSQLRC</envar> environment variable.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Both the system-wide startup file and the user's personal startup file
+ can be made <application>psql</application>-version-specific
+ by appending a dash and the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ major or minor release number to the file name,
+ for example <filename>~/.psqlrc-9.2</filename> or
+ <filename>~/.psqlrc-9.2.5</filename>. The most specific
+ version-matching file will be read in preference to a
+ non-version-specific file.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><filename>.psql_history</filename></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The command-line history is stored in the file
+ <filename>~/.psql_history</filename>, or
+ <filename>%APPDATA%\postgresql\psql_history</filename> on Windows.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The location of the history file can be set explicitly via
+ the <varname>HISTFILE</varname> <application>psql</application> variable or
+ the <envar>PSQL_HISTORY</envar> environment variable.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para><application>psql</application> works best with servers of the same
+ or an older major version. Backslash commands are particularly likely
+ to fail if the server is of a newer version than <application>psql</application>
+ itself. However, backslash commands of the <literal>\d</literal> family should
+ work with servers of versions back to 7.4, though not necessarily with
+ servers newer than <application>psql</application> itself. The general
+ functionality of running SQL commands and displaying query results
+ should also work with servers of a newer major version, but this cannot
+ be guaranteed in all cases.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ If you want to use <application>psql</application> to connect to several
+ servers of different major versions, it is recommended that you use the
+ newest version of <application>psql</application>. Alternatively, you
+ can keep around a copy of <application>psql</application> from each
+ major version and be sure to use the version that matches the
+ respective server. But in practice, this additional complication should
+ not be necessary.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Before <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 9.6,
+ the <option>-c</option> option implied <option>-X</option>
+ (<option>--no-psqlrc</option>); this is no longer the case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Before <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 8.4,
+ <application>psql</application> allowed the
+ first argument of a single-letter backslash command to start
+ directly after the command, without intervening whitespace.
+ Now, some whitespace is required.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes for Windows Users</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>psql</application> is built as a <quote>console
+ application</quote>. Since the Windows console windows use a different
+ encoding than the rest of the system, you must take special care
+ when using 8-bit characters within <application>psql</application>.
+ If <application>psql</application> detects a problematic
+ console code page, it will warn you at startup. To change the
+ console code page, two things are necessary:
+
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Set the code page by entering <userinput>cmd.exe /c chcp
+ 1252</userinput>. (1252 is a code page that is appropriate for
+ German; replace it with your value.) If you are using Cygwin,
+ you can put this command in <filename>/etc/profile</filename>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Set the console font to <literal>Lucida Console</literal>, because the
+ raster font does not work with the ANSI code page.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist></para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1 id="app-psql-examples" xreflabel="Examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The first example shows how to spread a command over several lines of
+ input. Notice the changing prompt:
+<programlisting>
+testdb=&gt; <userinput>CREATE TABLE my_table (</userinput>
+testdb(&gt; <userinput> first integer not null default 0,</userinput>
+testdb(&gt; <userinput> second text)</userinput>
+testdb-&gt; <userinput>;</userinput>
+CREATE TABLE
+</programlisting>
+ Now look at the table definition again:
+<programlisting>
+testdb=&gt; <userinput>\d my_table</userinput>
+ Table "public.my_table"
+ Column | Type | Collation | Nullable | Default
+--------+---------+-----------+----------+---------
+ first | integer | | not null | 0
+ second | text | | |
+</programlisting>
+ Now we change the prompt to something more interesting:
+<programlisting>
+testdb=&gt; <userinput>\set PROMPT1 '%n@%m %~%R%# '</userinput>
+peter@localhost testdb=&gt;
+</programlisting>
+ Let's assume you have filled the table with data and want to take a
+ look at it:
+<programlisting>
+peter@localhost testdb=&gt; SELECT * FROM my_table;
+ first | second
+-------+--------
+ 1 | one
+ 2 | two
+ 3 | three
+ 4 | four
+(4 rows)
+</programlisting>
+ You can display tables in different ways by using the
+ <command>\pset</command> command:
+<programlisting>
+peter@localhost testdb=&gt; <userinput>\pset border 2</userinput>
+Border style is 2.
+peter@localhost testdb=&gt; <userinput>SELECT * FROM my_table;</userinput>
++-------+--------+
+| first | second |
++-------+--------+
+| 1 | one |
+| 2 | two |
+| 3 | three |
+| 4 | four |
++-------+--------+
+(4 rows)
+
+peter@localhost testdb=&gt; <userinput>\pset border 0</userinput>
+Border style is 0.
+peter@localhost testdb=&gt; <userinput>SELECT * FROM my_table;</userinput>
+first second
+----- ------
+ 1 one
+ 2 two
+ 3 three
+ 4 four
+(4 rows)
+
+peter@localhost testdb=&gt; <userinput>\pset border 1</userinput>
+Border style is 1.
+peter@localhost testdb=&gt; <userinput>\pset format csv</userinput>
+Output format is csv.
+peter@localhost testdb=&gt; <userinput>\pset tuples_only</userinput>
+Tuples only is on.
+peter@localhost testdb=&gt; <userinput>SELECT second, first FROM my_table;</userinput>
+one,1
+two,2
+three,3
+four,4
+peter@localhost testdb=&gt; <userinput>\pset format unaligned</userinput>
+Output format is unaligned.
+peter@localhost testdb=&gt; <userinput>\pset fieldsep '\t'</userinput>
+Field separator is " ".
+peter@localhost testdb=&gt; <userinput>SELECT second, first FROM my_table;</userinput>
+one 1
+two 2
+three 3
+four 4
+</programlisting>
+ Alternatively, use the short commands:
+<programlisting>
+peter@localhost testdb=&gt; <userinput>\a \t \x</userinput>
+Output format is aligned.
+Tuples only is off.
+Expanded display is on.
+peter@localhost testdb=&gt; <userinput>SELECT * FROM my_table;</userinput>
+-[ RECORD 1 ]-
+first | 1
+second | one
+-[ RECORD 2 ]-
+first | 2
+second | two
+-[ RECORD 3 ]-
+first | 3
+second | three
+-[ RECORD 4 ]-
+first | 4
+second | four
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Also, these output format options can be set for just one query by using
+ <literal>\g</literal>:
+<programlisting>
+peter@localhost testdb=&gt; <userinput>SELECT * FROM my_table</userinput>
+peter@localhost testdb-&gt; <userinput>\g (format=aligned tuples_only=off expanded=on)</userinput>
+-[ RECORD 1 ]-
+first | 1
+second | one
+-[ RECORD 2 ]-
+first | 2
+second | two
+-[ RECORD 3 ]-
+first | 3
+second | three
+-[ RECORD 4 ]-
+first | 4
+second | four
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Here is an example of using the <command>\df</command> command to
+ find only functions with names matching <literal>int*pl</literal>
+ and whose second argument is of type <type>bigint</type>:
+<programlisting>
+testdb=&gt; <userinput>\df int*pl * bigint</userinput>
+ List of functions
+ Schema | Name | Result data type | Argument data types | Type
+------------+---------+------------------+---------------------+------
+ pg_catalog | int28pl | bigint | smallint, bigint | func
+ pg_catalog | int48pl | bigint | integer, bigint | func
+ pg_catalog | int8pl | bigint | bigint, bigint | func
+(3 rows)
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When suitable, query results can be shown in a crosstab representation
+ with the <command>\crosstabview</command> command:
+<programlisting>
+testdb=&gt; <userinput>SELECT first, second, first &gt; 2 AS gt2 FROM my_table;</userinput>
+ first | second | gt2
+-------+--------+-----
+ 1 | one | f
+ 2 | two | f
+ 3 | three | t
+ 4 | four | t
+(4 rows)
+
+testdb=&gt; <userinput>\crosstabview first second</userinput>
+ first | one | two | three | four
+-------+-----+-----+-------+------
+ 1 | f | | |
+ 2 | | f | |
+ 3 | | | t |
+ 4 | | | | t
+(4 rows)
+</programlisting>
+
+This second example shows a multiplication table with rows sorted in reverse
+numerical order and columns with an independent, ascending numerical order.
+<programlisting>
+testdb=&gt; <userinput>SELECT t1.first as "A", t2.first+100 AS "B", t1.first*(t2.first+100) as "AxB",</userinput>
+testdb(&gt; <userinput>row_number() over(order by t2.first) AS ord</userinput>
+testdb(&gt; <userinput>FROM my_table t1 CROSS JOIN my_table t2 ORDER BY 1 DESC</userinput>
+testdb(&gt; <userinput>\crosstabview "A" "B" "AxB" ord</userinput>
+ A | 101 | 102 | 103 | 104
+---+-----+-----+-----+-----
+ 4 | 404 | 408 | 412 | 416
+ 3 | 303 | 306 | 309 | 312
+ 2 | 202 | 204 | 206 | 208
+ 1 | 101 | 102 | 103 | 104
+(4 rows)
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/reassign_owned.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/reassign_owned.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ab692bd
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/reassign_owned.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,123 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/reassign_owned.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-reassign-owned">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-reassign-owned">
+ <primary>REASSIGN OWNED</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>REASSIGN OWNED</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>REASSIGN OWNED</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change the ownership of database objects owned by a database role</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+REASSIGN OWNED BY { <replaceable class="parameter">old_role</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER } [, ...]
+ TO { <replaceable class="parameter">new_role</replaceable> | CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER }
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>REASSIGN OWNED</command> instructs the system to change
+ the ownership of database objects owned by any of the
+ <replaceable class="parameter">old_roles</replaceable> to
+ <replaceable class="parameter">new_role</replaceable>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">old_role</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a role. The ownership of all the objects within the
+ current database, and of all shared objects (databases, tablespaces),
+ owned by this role will be reassigned to
+ <replaceable class="parameter">new_role</replaceable>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_role</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the role that will be made the new owner of the
+ affected objects.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>REASSIGN OWNED</command> is often used to prepare for the
+ removal of one or more roles. Because <command>REASSIGN
+ OWNED</command> does not affect objects within other databases,
+ it is usually necessary to execute this command in each database
+ that contains objects owned by a role that is to be removed.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>REASSIGN OWNED</command> requires membership on both the
+ source role(s) and the target role.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <link linkend="sql-drop-owned"><command>DROP OWNED</command></link> command is an alternative that
+ simply drops all the database objects owned by one or more roles.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>REASSIGN OWNED</command> command does not affect any
+ privileges granted to
+ the <replaceable class="parameter">old_roles</replaceable> on objects
+ that are not owned by them. Likewise, it does not affect default
+ privileges created with <command>ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES</command>.
+ Use <command>DROP OWNED</command> to revoke such privileges.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ See <xref linkend="role-removal"/> for more discussion.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>REASSIGN OWNED</command> command is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-drop-owned"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-droprole"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterdatabase"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/refresh_materialized_view.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/refresh_materialized_view.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..675d609
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/refresh_materialized_view.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,143 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/refresh_materialized_view.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-refreshmaterializedview">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-refreshmaterializedview">
+ <primary>REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW</refname>
+ <refpurpose>replace the contents of a materialized view</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW [ CONCURRENTLY ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+ [ WITH [ NO ] DATA ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW</command> completely replaces the
+ contents of a materialized view. To execute this command you must be the
+ owner of the materialized view. The old contents are discarded. If
+ <literal>WITH DATA</literal> is specified (or defaults) the backing query
+ is executed to provide the new data, and the materialized view is left in a
+ scannable state. If <literal>WITH NO DATA</literal> is specified no new
+ data is generated and the materialized view is left in an unscannable
+ state.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>CONCURRENTLY</literal> and <literal>WITH NO DATA</literal> may not
+ be specified together.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CONCURRENTLY</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refresh the materialized view without locking out concurrent selects on
+ the materialized view. Without this option a refresh which affects a
+ lot of rows will tend to use fewer resources and complete more quickly,
+ but could block other connections which are trying to read from the
+ materialized view. This option may be faster in cases where a small
+ number of rows are affected.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ This option is only allowed if there is at least one
+ <literal>UNIQUE</literal> index on the materialized view which uses only
+ column names and includes all rows; that is, it must not be an
+ expression index or include a <literal>WHERE</literal> clause.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ This option may not be used when the materialized view is not already
+ populated.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Even with this option only one <literal>REFRESH</literal> at a time may
+ run against any one materialized view.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the materialized view to
+ refresh.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ If there is an <literal>ORDER BY</literal> clause in the materialized
+ view's defining query, the original contents of the materialized view
+ will be ordered that way; but <command>REFRESH MATERIALIZED
+ VIEW</command> does not guarantee to preserve that ordering.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This command will replace the contents of the materialized view called
+ <literal>order_summary</literal> using the query from the materialized
+ view's definition, and leave it in a scannable state:
+<programlisting>
+REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW order_summary;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This command will free storage associated with the materialized view
+ <literal>annual_statistics_basis</literal> and leave it in an unscannable
+ state:
+<programlisting>
+REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW annual_statistics_basis WITH NO DATA;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW</command> is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-creatematerializedview"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-altermaterializedview"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropmaterializedview"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/reindex.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/reindex.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..22dbb52
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/reindex.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,555 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/reindex.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-reindex">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-reindex">
+ <primary>REINDEX</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>REINDEX</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>REINDEX</refname>
+ <refpurpose>rebuild indexes</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+REINDEX [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> [, ...] ) ] { INDEX | TABLE | SCHEMA | DATABASE | SYSTEM } [ CONCURRENTLY ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> can be one of:</phrase>
+
+ CONCURRENTLY [ <replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable> ]
+ TABLESPACE <replaceable class="parameter">new_tablespace</replaceable>
+ VERBOSE [ <replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable> ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>REINDEX</command> rebuilds an index using the data
+ stored in the index's table, replacing the old copy of the index. There are
+ several scenarios in which to use <command>REINDEX</command>:
+
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An index has become corrupted, and no longer contains valid
+ data. Although in theory this should never happen, in
+ practice indexes can become corrupted due to software bugs or
+ hardware failures. <command>REINDEX</command> provides a
+ recovery method.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An index has become <quote>bloated</quote>, that is it contains many
+ empty or nearly-empty pages. This can occur with B-tree indexes in
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> under certain uncommon access
+ patterns. <command>REINDEX</command> provides a way to reduce
+ the space consumption of the index by writing a new version of
+ the index without the dead pages. See <xref
+ linkend="routine-reindex"/> for more information.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ You have altered a storage parameter (such as fillfactor)
+ for an index, and wish to ensure that the change has taken full effect.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If an index build fails with the <literal>CONCURRENTLY</literal> option,
+ this index is left as <quote>invalid</quote>. Such indexes are useless
+ but it can be convenient to use <command>REINDEX</command> to rebuild
+ them. Note that only <command>REINDEX INDEX</command> is able
+ to perform a concurrent build on an invalid index.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ </itemizedlist></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>INDEX</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Recreate the specified index. This form of <command>REINDEX</command>
+ cannot be executed inside a transaction block when used with a
+ partitioned index.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>TABLE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Recreate all indexes of the specified table. If the table has a
+ secondary <quote>TOAST</quote> table, that is reindexed as well.
+ This form of <command>REINDEX</command> cannot be executed inside a
+ transaction block when used with a partitioned table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SCHEMA</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Recreate all indexes of the specified schema. If a table of this
+ schema has a secondary <quote>TOAST</quote> table, that is reindexed as
+ well. Indexes on shared system catalogs are also processed.
+ This form of <command>REINDEX</command> cannot be executed inside a
+ transaction block.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DATABASE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Recreate all indexes within the current database.
+ Indexes on shared system catalogs are also processed.
+ This form of <command>REINDEX</command> cannot be executed inside a
+ transaction block.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SYSTEM</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Recreate all indexes on system catalogs within the current database.
+ Indexes on shared system catalogs are included.
+ Indexes on user tables are not processed.
+ This form of <command>REINDEX</command> cannot be executed inside a
+ transaction block.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the specific index, table, or database to be
+ reindexed. Index and table names can be schema-qualified.
+ Presently, <command>REINDEX DATABASE</command> and <command>REINDEX SYSTEM</command>
+ can only reindex the current database, so their parameter must match
+ the current database's name.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CONCURRENTLY</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ When this option is used, <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> will rebuild the
+ index without taking any locks that prevent concurrent inserts,
+ updates, or deletes on the table; whereas a standard index rebuild
+ locks out writes (but not reads) on the table until it's done.
+ There are several caveats to be aware of when using this option
+ &mdash; see <xref linkend="sql-reindex-concurrently"/> below.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ For temporary tables, <command>REINDEX</command> is always
+ non-concurrent, as no other session can access them, and
+ non-concurrent reindex is cheaper.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>TABLESPACE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies that indexes will be rebuilt on a new tablespace.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>VERBOSE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Prints a progress report as each index is reindexed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether the selected option should be turned on or off.
+ You can write <literal>TRUE</literal>, <literal>ON</literal>, or
+ <literal>1</literal> to enable the option, and <literal>FALSE</literal>,
+ <literal>OFF</literal>, or <literal>0</literal> to disable it. The
+ <replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable> value can also
+ be omitted, in which case <literal>TRUE</literal> is assumed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_tablespace</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The tablespace where indexes will be rebuilt.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ If you suspect corruption of an index on a user table, you can
+ simply rebuild that index, or all indexes on the table, using
+ <command>REINDEX INDEX</command> or <command>REINDEX TABLE</command>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Things are more difficult if you need to recover from corruption of
+ an index on a system table. In this case it's important for the
+ system to not have used any of the suspect indexes itself.
+ (Indeed, in this sort of scenario you might find that server
+ processes are crashing immediately at start-up, due to reliance on
+ the corrupted indexes.) To recover safely, the server must be started
+ with the <option>-P</option> option, which prevents it from using
+ indexes for system catalog lookups.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ One way to do this is to shut down the server and start a single-user
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> server
+ with the <option>-P</option> option included on its command line.
+ Then, <command>REINDEX DATABASE</command>, <command>REINDEX SYSTEM</command>,
+ <command>REINDEX TABLE</command>, or <command>REINDEX INDEX</command> can be
+ issued, depending on how much you want to reconstruct. If in
+ doubt, use <command>REINDEX SYSTEM</command> to select
+ reconstruction of all system indexes in the database. Then quit
+ the single-user server session and restart the regular server.
+ See the <xref linkend="app-postgres"/> reference page for more
+ information about how to interact with the single-user server
+ interface.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Alternatively, a regular server session can be started with
+ <option>-P</option> included in its command line options.
+ The method for doing this varies across clients, but in all
+ <application>libpq</application>-based clients, it is possible to set
+ the <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> environment variable to <literal>-P</literal>
+ before starting the client. Note that while this method does not
+ require locking out other clients, it might still be wise to prevent
+ other users from connecting to the damaged database until repairs
+ have been completed.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>REINDEX</command> is similar to a drop and recreate of the index
+ in that the index contents are rebuilt from scratch. However, the locking
+ considerations are rather different. <command>REINDEX</command> locks out writes
+ but not reads of the index's parent table. It also takes an
+ <literal>ACCESS EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock on the specific index being processed,
+ which will block reads that attempt to use that index. In contrast,
+ <command>DROP INDEX</command> momentarily takes an
+ <literal>ACCESS EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock on the parent table, blocking both
+ writes and reads. The subsequent <command>CREATE INDEX</command> locks out
+ writes but not reads; since the index is not there, no read will attempt to
+ use it, meaning that there will be no blocking but reads might be forced
+ into expensive sequential scans.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Reindexing a single index or table requires being the owner of that
+ index or table. Reindexing a schema or database requires being the
+ owner of that schema or database. Note specifically that it's thus
+ possible for non-superusers to rebuild indexes of tables owned by
+ other users. However, as a special exception, when
+ <command>REINDEX DATABASE</command>, <command>REINDEX SCHEMA</command>
+ or <command>REINDEX SYSTEM</command> is issued by a non-superuser,
+ indexes on shared catalogs will be skipped unless the user owns the
+ catalog (which typically won't be the case). Of course, superusers
+ can always reindex anything.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Reindexing partitioned indexes or partitioned tables is supported
+ with <command>REINDEX INDEX</command> or <command>REINDEX TABLE</command>,
+ respectively. Each partition of the specified partitioned relation is
+ reindexed in a separate transaction. Those commands cannot be used inside
+ a transaction block when working on a partitioned table or index.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When using the <literal>TABLESPACE</literal> clause with
+ <command>REINDEX</command> on a partitioned index or table, only the
+ tablespace references of the leaf partitions are updated. As partitioned
+ indexes are not updated, it is recommended to separately use
+ <command>ALTER TABLE ONLY</command> on them so as any new partitions
+ attached inherit the new tablespace. On failure, it may not have moved
+ all the indexes to the new tablespace. Re-running the command will rebuild
+ all the leaf partitions and move previously-unprocessed indexes to the new
+ tablespace.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If <literal>SCHEMA</literal>, <literal>DATABASE</literal> or
+ <literal>SYSTEM</literal> is used with <literal>TABLESPACE</literal>,
+ system relations are skipped and a single <literal>WARNING</literal>
+ will be generated. Indexes on TOAST tables are rebuilt, but not moved
+ to the new tablespace.
+ </para>
+
+ <refsect2 id="sql-reindex-concurrently" xreflabel="Rebuilding Indexes Concurrently">
+ <title>Rebuilding Indexes Concurrently</title>
+
+ <indexterm zone="sql-reindex-concurrently">
+ <primary>index</primary>
+ <secondary>rebuilding concurrently</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <para>
+ Rebuilding an index can interfere with regular operation of a database.
+ Normally <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> locks the table whose index is rebuilt
+ against writes and performs the entire index build with a single scan of the
+ table. Other transactions can still read the table, but if they try to
+ insert, update, or delete rows in the table they will block until the
+ index rebuild is finished. This could have a severe effect if the system is
+ a live production database. Very large tables can take many hours to be
+ indexed, and even for smaller tables, an index rebuild can lock out writers
+ for periods that are unacceptably long for a production system.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> supports rebuilding indexes with minimum locking
+ of writes. This method is invoked by specifying the
+ <literal>CONCURRENTLY</literal> option of <command>REINDEX</command>. When this option
+ is used, <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> must perform two scans of the table
+ for each index that needs to be rebuilt and wait for termination of
+ all existing transactions that could potentially use the index.
+ This method requires more total work than a standard index
+ rebuild and takes significantly longer to complete as it needs to wait
+ for unfinished transactions that might modify the index. However, since
+ it allows normal operations to continue while the index is being rebuilt, this
+ method is useful for rebuilding indexes in a production environment. Of
+ course, the extra CPU, memory and I/O load imposed by the index rebuild
+ may slow down other operations.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The following steps occur in a concurrent reindex. Each step is run in a
+ separate transaction. If there are multiple indexes to be rebuilt, then
+ each step loops through all the indexes before moving to the next step.
+
+ <orderedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A new transient index definition is added to the catalog
+ <literal>pg_index</literal>. This definition will be used to replace
+ the old index. A <literal>SHARE UPDATE EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock at
+ session level is taken on the indexes being reindexed as well as their
+ associated tables to prevent any schema modification while processing.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A first pass to build the index is done for each new index. Once the
+ index is built, its flag <literal>pg_index.indisready</literal> is
+ switched to <quote>true</quote> to make it ready for inserts, making it
+ visible to other sessions once the transaction that performed the build
+ is finished. This step is done in a separate transaction for each
+ index.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Then a second pass is performed to add tuples that were added while the
+ first pass was running. This step is also done in a separate
+ transaction for each index.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ All the constraints that refer to the index are changed to refer to the
+ new index definition, and the names of the indexes are changed. At
+ this point, <literal>pg_index.indisvalid</literal> is switched to
+ <quote>true</quote> for the new index and to <quote>false</quote> for
+ the old, and a cache invalidation is done causing all sessions that
+ referenced the old index to be invalidated.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The old indexes have <literal>pg_index.indisready</literal> switched to
+ <quote>false</quote> to prevent any new tuple insertions, after waiting
+ for running queries that might reference the old index to complete.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The old indexes are dropped. The <literal>SHARE UPDATE
+ EXCLUSIVE</literal> session locks for the indexes and the table are
+ released.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </orderedlist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a problem arises while rebuilding the indexes, such as a
+ uniqueness violation in a unique index, the <command>REINDEX</command>
+ command will fail but leave behind an <quote>invalid</quote> new index in addition to
+ the pre-existing one. This index will be ignored for querying purposes
+ because it might be incomplete; however it will still consume update
+ overhead. The <application>psql</application> <command>\d</command> command will report
+ such an index as <literal>INVALID</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+postgres=# \d tab
+ Table "public.tab"
+ Column | Type | Modifiers
+--------+---------+-----------
+ col | integer |
+Indexes:
+ "idx" btree (col)
+ "idx_ccnew" btree (col) INVALID
+</programlisting>
+
+ If the index marked <literal>INVALID</literal> is suffixed
+ <literal>ccnew</literal>, then it corresponds to the transient
+ index created during the concurrent operation, and the recommended
+ recovery method is to drop it using <literal>DROP INDEX</literal>,
+ then attempt <command>REINDEX CONCURRENTLY</command> again.
+ If the invalid index is instead suffixed <literal>ccold</literal>,
+ it corresponds to the original index which could not be dropped;
+ the recommended recovery method is to just drop said index, since the
+ rebuild proper has been successful.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Regular index builds permit other regular index builds on the same table
+ to occur simultaneously, but only one concurrent index build can occur on a
+ table at a time. In both cases, no other types of schema modification on
+ the table are allowed meanwhile. Another difference is that a regular
+ <command>REINDEX TABLE</command> or <command>REINDEX INDEX</command>
+ command can be performed within a transaction block, but <command>REINDEX
+ CONCURRENTLY</command> cannot.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Like any long-running transaction, <command>REINDEX</command> on a table
+ can affect which tuples can be removed by concurrent
+ <command>VACUUM</command> on any other table.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>REINDEX SYSTEM</command> does not support
+ <command>CONCURRENTLY</command> since system catalogs cannot be reindexed
+ concurrently.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Furthermore, indexes for exclusion constraints cannot be reindexed
+ concurrently. If such an index is named directly in this command, an
+ error is raised. If a table or database with exclusion constraint indexes
+ is reindexed concurrently, those indexes will be skipped. (It is possible
+ to reindex such indexes without the <command>CONCURRENTLY</command> option.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Each backend running <command>REINDEX</command> will report its progress
+ in the <structname>pg_stat_progress_create_index</structname> view. See
+ <xref linkend="create-index-progress-reporting"/> for details.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Rebuild a single index:
+
+<programlisting>
+REINDEX INDEX my_index;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Rebuild all the indexes on the table <literal>my_table</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+REINDEX TABLE my_table;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Rebuild all indexes in a particular database, without trusting the
+ system indexes to be valid already:
+
+<programlisting>
+$ <userinput>export PGOPTIONS="-P"</userinput>
+$ <userinput>psql broken_db</userinput>
+...
+broken_db=&gt; REINDEX DATABASE broken_db;
+broken_db=&gt; \q
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ <para>
+ Rebuild indexes for a table, without blocking read and write operations
+ on involved relations while reindexing is in progress:
+
+<programlisting>
+REINDEX TABLE CONCURRENTLY my_broken_table;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>REINDEX</command> command in the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createindex"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-dropindex"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="app-reindexdb"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="create-index-progress-reporting"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/reindexdb.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/reindexdb.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8cb8bf4
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/reindexdb.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,476 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/reindexdb.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="app-reindexdb">
+ <indexterm zone="app-reindexdb">
+ <primary>reindexdb</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>reindexdb</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>reindexdb</refname>
+ <refpurpose>reindex a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>reindexdb</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>connection-option</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+
+ <arg choice="plain" rep="repeat">
+ <arg choice="opt">
+ <group choice="plain">
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>-S</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>--schema</option></arg>
+ </group>
+ <replaceable>schema</replaceable>
+ </arg>
+ </arg>
+
+ <arg choice="plain" rep="repeat">
+ <arg choice="opt">
+ <group choice="plain">
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>-t</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>--table</option></arg>
+ </group>
+ <replaceable>table</replaceable>
+ </arg>
+ </arg>
+
+ <arg choice="plain" rep="repeat">
+ <arg choice="opt">
+ <group choice="plain">
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>-i</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>--index</option></arg>
+ </group>
+ <replaceable>index</replaceable>
+ </arg>
+ </arg>
+
+ <arg choice="opt"><replaceable>dbname</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>reindexdb</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>connection-option</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+
+ <group choice="plain">
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>-a</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>--all</option></arg>
+ </group>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>reindexdb</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>connection-option</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+
+ <group choice="plain">
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>-s</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>--system</option></arg>
+ </group>
+ <arg choice="opt"><replaceable>dbname</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>reindexdb</application> is a utility for rebuilding indexes
+ in a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>reindexdb</application> is a wrapper around the SQL
+ command <link linkend="sql-reindex"><command>REINDEX</command></link>.
+ There is no effective difference between reindexing databases via
+ this utility and via other methods for accessing the server.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>reindexdb</application> accepts the following command-line arguments:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-a</option></term>
+ <term><option>--all</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Reindex all databases.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--concurrently</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Use the <literal>CONCURRENTLY</literal> option. See
+ <xref linkend="sql-reindex"/>, where all the caveats of this option
+ are explained in detail.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option><optional>-d</optional> <replaceable class="parameter">dbname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option><optional>--dbname=</optional><replaceable class="parameter">dbname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the name of the database to be reindexed,
+ when <option>-a</option>/<option>--all</option> is not used.
+ If this is not specified, the database name is read
+ from the environment variable <envar>PGDATABASE</envar>. If
+ that is not set, the user name specified for the connection is
+ used. The <replaceable>dbname</replaceable> can be a <link
+ linkend="libpq-connstring">connection string</link>. If so,
+ connection string parameters will override any conflicting command
+ line options.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-e</option></term>
+ <term><option>--echo</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Echo the commands that <application>reindexdb</application> generates
+ and sends to the server.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-i <replaceable class="parameter">index</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--index=<replaceable class="parameter">index</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Recreate <replaceable class="parameter">index</replaceable> only.
+ Multiple indexes can be recreated by writing multiple
+ <option>-i</option> switches.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-j <replaceable class="parameter">njobs</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--jobs=<replaceable class="parameter">njobs</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Execute the reindex commands in parallel by running
+ <replaceable class="parameter">njobs</replaceable>
+ commands simultaneously. This option may reduce the processing time
+ but it also increases the load on the database server.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <application>reindexdb</application> will open
+ <replaceable class="parameter">njobs</replaceable> connections to the
+ database, so make sure your <xref linkend="guc-max-connections"/>
+ setting is high enough to accommodate all connections.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Note that this option is incompatible with the <option>--index</option>
+ and <option>--system</option> options.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-q</option></term>
+ <term><option>--quiet</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not display progress messages.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-s</option></term>
+ <term><option>--system</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Reindex database's system catalogs only.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-S <replaceable class="parameter">schema</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--schema=<replaceable class="parameter">schema</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Reindex <replaceable class="parameter">schema</replaceable> only.
+ Multiple schemas can be reindexed by writing multiple
+ <option>-S</option> switches.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-t <replaceable class="parameter">table</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--table=<replaceable class="parameter">table</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Reindex <replaceable class="parameter">table</replaceable> only.
+ Multiple tables can be reindexed by writing multiple
+ <option>-t</option> switches.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--tablespace=<replaceable class="parameter">tablespace</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the tablespace where indexes are rebuilt. (This name is
+ processed as a double-quoted identifier.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-v</option></term>
+ <term><option>--verbose</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print detailed information during processing.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-V</option></term>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the <application>reindexdb</application> version and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show help about <application>reindexdb</application> command line
+ arguments, and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>reindexdb</application> also accepts
+ the following command-line arguments for connection parameters:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-h <replaceable class="parameter">host</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--host=<replaceable class="parameter">host</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the host name of the machine on which the server is
+ running. If the value begins with a slash, it is used as the
+ directory for the Unix domain socket.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-p <replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--port=<replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the TCP port or local Unix domain socket file
+ extension on which the server
+ is listening for connections.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-U <replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--username=<replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ User name to connect as.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-w</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Never issue a password prompt. If the server requires
+ password authentication and a password is not available by
+ other means such as a <filename>.pgpass</filename> file, the
+ connection attempt will fail. This option can be useful in
+ batch jobs and scripts where no user is present to enter a
+ password.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-W</option></term>
+ <term><option>--password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Force <application>reindexdb</application> to prompt for a
+ password before connecting to a database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This option is never essential, since
+ <application>reindexdb</application> will automatically prompt
+ for a password if the server demands password authentication.
+ However, <application>reindexdb</application> will waste a
+ connection attempt finding out that the server wants a password.
+ In some cases it is worth typing <option>-W</option> to avoid the extra
+ connection attempt.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--maintenance-db=<replaceable class="parameter">dbname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the name of the database to connect to to discover which
+ databases should be reindexed,
+ when <option>-a</option>/<option>--all</option> is used.
+ If not specified, the <literal>postgres</literal> database will be used,
+ or if that does not exist, <literal>template1</literal> will be used.
+ This can be a <link linkend="libpq-connstring">connection
+ string</link>. If so, connection string parameters will override any
+ conflicting command line options. Also, connection string parameters
+ other than the database name itself will be re-used when connecting
+ to other databases.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Environment</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PGDATABASE</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGHOST</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGPORT</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGUSER</envar></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Default connection parameters
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PG_COLOR</envar></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether to use color in diagnostic messages. Possible values
+ are <literal>always</literal>, <literal>auto</literal> and
+ <literal>never</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ This utility, like most other <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> utilities,
+ also uses the environment variables supported by <application>libpq</application>
+ (see <xref linkend="libpq-envars"/>).
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Diagnostics</title>
+
+ <para>
+ In case of difficulty, see <xref linkend="sql-reindex"/>
+ and <xref linkend="app-psql"/> for
+ discussions of potential problems and error messages.
+ The database server must be running at the
+ targeted host. Also, any default connection settings and environment
+ variables used by the <application>libpq</application> front-end
+ library will apply.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>reindexdb</application> might need to connect several
+ times to the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> server, asking
+ for a password each time. It is convenient to have a
+ <filename>~/.pgpass</filename> file in such cases. See <xref
+ linkend="libpq-pgpass"/> for more information.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To reindex the database <literal>test</literal>:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$ </prompt><userinput>reindexdb test</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To reindex the table <literal>foo</literal> and the index
+ <literal>bar</literal> in a database named <literal>abcd</literal>:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$ </prompt><userinput>reindexdb --table=foo --index=bar abcd</userinput>
+</screen></para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-reindex"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/release_savepoint.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/release_savepoint.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..daf8eb9
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/release_savepoint.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,131 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/release_savepoint.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-release-savepoint">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-release-savepoint">
+ <primary>RELEASE SAVEPOINT</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <indexterm zone="sql-release-savepoint">
+ <primary>savepoints</primary>
+ <secondary>releasing</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>RELEASE SAVEPOINT</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>RELEASE SAVEPOINT</refname>
+ <refpurpose>destroy a previously defined savepoint</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+RELEASE [ SAVEPOINT ] <replaceable>savepoint_name</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>RELEASE SAVEPOINT</command> destroys a savepoint previously defined
+ in the current transaction.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Destroying a savepoint makes it unavailable as a rollback point,
+ but it has no other user visible behavior. It does not undo the
+ effects of commands executed after the savepoint was established.
+ (To do that, see <xref linkend="sql-rollback-to"/>.)
+ Destroying a savepoint when
+ it is no longer needed allows the system to reclaim some resources
+ earlier than transaction end.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>RELEASE SAVEPOINT</command> also destroys all savepoints that were
+ established after the named savepoint was established.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>savepoint_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the savepoint to destroy.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Specifying a savepoint name that was not previously defined is an error.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ It is not possible to release a savepoint when the transaction is in
+ an aborted state.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If multiple savepoints have the same name, only the most recently defined
+ unreleased one is released. Repeated commands will release progressively
+ older savepoints.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To establish and later destroy a savepoint:
+<programlisting>
+BEGIN;
+ INSERT INTO table1 VALUES (3);
+ SAVEPOINT my_savepoint;
+ INSERT INTO table1 VALUES (4);
+ RELEASE SAVEPOINT my_savepoint;
+COMMIT;
+</programlisting>
+ The above transaction will insert both 3 and 4.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This command conforms to the <acronym>SQL</acronym> standard. The standard
+ specifies that the key word <literal>SAVEPOINT</literal> is
+ mandatory, but <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> allows it to
+ be omitted.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-begin"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-commit"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-rollback"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-rollback-to"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-savepoint"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/reset.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/reset.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9559907
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/reset.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,113 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/reset.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-reset">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-reset">
+ <primary>RESET</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>RESET</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>RESET</refname>
+ <refpurpose>restore the value of a run-time parameter to the default value</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+RESET <replaceable class="parameter">configuration_parameter</replaceable>
+RESET ALL
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>RESET</command> restores run-time parameters to their
+ default values. <command>RESET</command> is an alternative
+ spelling for
+<synopsis>
+SET <replaceable class="parameter">configuration_parameter</replaceable> TO DEFAULT
+</synopsis>
+ Refer to <xref linkend="sql-set"/> for
+ details.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The default value is defined as the value that the parameter would
+ have had, if no <command>SET</command> had ever been issued for it in the
+ current session. The actual source of this value might be a
+ compiled-in default, the configuration file, command-line options,
+ or per-database or per-user default settings. This is subtly different
+ from defining it as <quote>the value that the parameter had at session
+ start</quote>, because if the value came from the configuration file, it
+ will be reset to whatever is specified by the configuration file now.
+ See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for details.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The transactional behavior of <command>RESET</command> is the same as
+ <command>SET</command>: its effects will be undone by transaction rollback.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">configuration_parameter</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Name of a settable run-time parameter. Available parameters are
+ documented in <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> and on the
+ <xref linkend="sql-set"/> reference page.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ALL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Resets all settable run-time parameters to default values.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Set the <varname>timezone</varname> configuration variable to its default value:
+<screen>
+RESET timezone;
+</screen></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>RESET</command> is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-set"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-show"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/revoke.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/revoke.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3014c86
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/revoke.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,325 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/revoke.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-revoke">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-revoke">
+ <primary>REVOKE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>REVOKE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>REVOKE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>remove access privileges</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+REVOKE [ GRANT OPTION FOR ]
+ { { SELECT | INSERT | UPDATE | DELETE | TRUNCATE | REFERENCES | TRIGGER }
+ [, ...] | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON { [ TABLE ] <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ | ALL TABLES IN SCHEMA <replaceable>schema_name</replaceable> [, ...] }
+ FROM <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [, ...]
+ [ GRANTED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ]
+ [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+
+REVOKE [ GRANT OPTION FOR ]
+ { { SELECT | INSERT | UPDATE | REFERENCES } ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ...] )
+ [, ...] | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ...] ) }
+ ON [ TABLE ] <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ FROM <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [, ...]
+ [ GRANTED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ]
+ [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+
+REVOKE [ GRANT OPTION FOR ]
+ { { USAGE | SELECT | UPDATE }
+ [, ...] | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON { SEQUENCE <replaceable class="parameter">sequence_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ | ALL SEQUENCES IN SCHEMA <replaceable>schema_name</replaceable> [, ...] }
+ FROM <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [, ...]
+ [ GRANTED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ]
+ [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+
+REVOKE [ GRANT OPTION FOR ]
+ { { CREATE | CONNECT | TEMPORARY | TEMP } [, ...] | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON DATABASE <replaceable>database_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ FROM <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [, ...]
+ [ GRANTED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ]
+ [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+
+REVOKE [ GRANT OPTION FOR ]
+ { USAGE | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON DOMAIN <replaceable>domain_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ FROM <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [, ...]
+ [ GRANTED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ]
+ [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+
+REVOKE [ GRANT OPTION FOR ]
+ { USAGE | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER <replaceable>fdw_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ FROM <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [, ...]
+ [ GRANTED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ]
+ [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+
+REVOKE [ GRANT OPTION FOR ]
+ { USAGE | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON FOREIGN SERVER <replaceable>server_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ FROM <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [, ...]
+ [ GRANTED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ]
+ [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+
+REVOKE [ GRANT OPTION FOR ]
+ { EXECUTE | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON { { FUNCTION | PROCEDURE | ROUTINE } <replaceable>function_name</replaceable> [ ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">arg_name</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">arg_type</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) ] [, ...]
+ | ALL { FUNCTIONS | PROCEDURES | ROUTINES } IN SCHEMA <replaceable>schema_name</replaceable> [, ...] }
+ FROM <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [, ...]
+ [ GRANTED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ]
+ [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+
+REVOKE [ GRANT OPTION FOR ]
+ { USAGE | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON LANGUAGE <replaceable>lang_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ FROM <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [, ...]
+ [ GRANTED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ]
+ [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+
+REVOKE [ GRANT OPTION FOR ]
+ { { SELECT | UPDATE } [, ...] | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON LARGE OBJECT <replaceable class="parameter">loid</replaceable> [, ...]
+ FROM <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [, ...]
+ [ GRANTED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ]
+ [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+
+REVOKE [ GRANT OPTION FOR ]
+ { { CREATE | USAGE } [, ...] | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON SCHEMA <replaceable>schema_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ FROM <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [, ...]
+ [ GRANTED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ]
+ [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+
+REVOKE [ GRANT OPTION FOR ]
+ { CREATE | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON TABLESPACE <replaceable>tablespace_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ FROM <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [, ...]
+ [ GRANTED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ]
+ [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+
+REVOKE [ GRANT OPTION FOR ]
+ { USAGE | ALL [ PRIVILEGES ] }
+ ON TYPE <replaceable>type_name</replaceable> [, ...]
+ FROM <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [, ...]
+ [ GRANTED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ]
+ [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+
+REVOKE [ ADMIN OPTION FOR ]
+ <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable> [, ...] FROM <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> [, ...]
+ [ GRANTED BY <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> ]
+ [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable> can be:</phrase>
+
+ [ GROUP ] <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable>
+ | PUBLIC
+ | CURRENT_ROLE
+ | CURRENT_USER
+ | SESSION_USER
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-revoke-description">
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>REVOKE</command> command revokes previously granted
+ privileges from one or more roles. The key word
+ <literal>PUBLIC</literal> refers to the implicitly defined group of
+ all roles.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ See the description of the <link linkend="sql-grant"><command>GRANT</command></link> command for
+ the meaning of the privilege types.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Note that any particular role will have the sum
+ of privileges granted directly to it, privileges granted to any role it
+ is presently a member of, and privileges granted to
+ <literal>PUBLIC</literal>. Thus, for example, revoking <literal>SELECT</literal> privilege
+ from <literal>PUBLIC</literal> does not necessarily mean that all roles
+ have lost <literal>SELECT</literal> privilege on the object: those who have it granted
+ directly or via another role will still have it. Similarly, revoking
+ <literal>SELECT</literal> from a user might not prevent that user from using
+ <literal>SELECT</literal> if <literal>PUBLIC</literal> or another membership
+ role still has <literal>SELECT</literal> rights.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If <literal>GRANT OPTION FOR</literal> is specified, only the grant
+ option for the privilege is revoked, not the privilege itself.
+ Otherwise, both the privilege and the grant option are revoked.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a user holds a privilege with grant option and has granted it to
+ other users then the privileges held by those other users are
+ called dependent privileges. If the privilege or the grant option
+ held by the first user is being revoked and dependent privileges
+ exist, those dependent privileges are also revoked if
+ <literal>CASCADE</literal> is specified; if it is not, the revoke action
+ will fail. This recursive revocation only affects privileges that
+ were granted through a chain of users that is traceable to the user
+ that is the subject of this <literal>REVOKE</literal> command.
+ Thus, the affected users might effectively keep the privilege if it
+ was also granted through other users.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When revoking privileges on a table, the corresponding column privileges
+ (if any) are automatically revoked on each column of the table, as well.
+ On the other hand, if a role has been granted privileges on a table, then
+ revoking the same privileges from individual columns will have no effect.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When revoking membership in a role, <literal>GRANT OPTION</literal> is instead
+ called <literal>ADMIN OPTION</literal>, but the behavior is similar.
+ This form of the command also allows a <literal>GRANTED BY</literal>
+ option, but that option is currently ignored (except for checking
+ the existence of the named role).
+ Note also that this form of the command does not
+ allow the noise word <literal>GROUP</literal>
+ in <replaceable class="parameter">role_specification</replaceable>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-revoke-notes">
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ A user can only revoke privileges that were granted directly by
+ that user. If, for example, user A has granted a privilege with
+ grant option to user B, and user B has in turn granted it to user
+ C, then user A cannot revoke the privilege directly from C.
+ Instead, user A could revoke the grant option from user B and use
+ the <literal>CASCADE</literal> option so that the privilege is
+ in turn revoked from user C. For another example, if both A and B
+ have granted the same privilege to C, A can revoke their own grant
+ but not B's grant, so C will still effectively have the privilege.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When a non-owner of an object attempts to <command>REVOKE</command> privileges
+ on the object, the command will fail outright if the user has no
+ privileges whatsoever on the object. As long as some privilege is
+ available, the command will proceed, but it will revoke only those
+ privileges for which the user has grant options. The <command>REVOKE ALL
+ PRIVILEGES</command> forms will issue a warning message if no grant options are
+ held, while the other forms will issue a warning if grant options for
+ any of the privileges specifically named in the command are not held.
+ (In principle these statements apply to the object owner as well, but
+ since the owner is always treated as holding all grant options, the
+ cases can never occur.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a superuser chooses to issue a <command>GRANT</command> or <command>REVOKE</command>
+ command, the command is performed as though it were issued by the
+ owner of the affected object. Since all privileges ultimately come
+ from the object owner (possibly indirectly via chains of grant options),
+ it is possible for a superuser to revoke all privileges, but this might
+ require use of <literal>CASCADE</literal> as stated above.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>REVOKE</command> can also be done by a role
+ that is not the owner of the affected object, but is a member of the role
+ that owns the object, or is a member of a role that holds privileges
+ <literal>WITH GRANT OPTION</literal> on the object. In this case the
+ command is performed as though it were issued by the containing role that
+ actually owns the object or holds the privileges
+ <literal>WITH GRANT OPTION</literal>. For example, if table
+ <literal>t1</literal> is owned by role <literal>g1</literal>, of which role
+ <literal>u1</literal> is a member, then <literal>u1</literal> can revoke privileges
+ on <literal>t1</literal> that are recorded as being granted by <literal>g1</literal>.
+ This would include grants made by <literal>u1</literal> as well as by other
+ members of role <literal>g1</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the role executing <command>REVOKE</command> holds privileges
+ indirectly via more than one role membership path, it is unspecified
+ which containing role will be used to perform the command. In such cases
+ it is best practice to use <command>SET ROLE</command> to become the specific
+ role you want to do the <command>REVOKE</command> as. Failure to do so might
+ lead to revoking privileges other than the ones you intended, or not
+ revoking anything at all.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ See <xref linkend="ddl-priv"/> for more information about specific
+ privilege types, as well as how to inspect objects' privileges.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-revoke-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Revoke insert privilege for the public on table
+ <literal>films</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+REVOKE INSERT ON films FROM PUBLIC;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Revoke all privileges from user <literal>manuel</literal> on view
+ <literal>kinds</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+REVOKE ALL PRIVILEGES ON kinds FROM manuel;
+</programlisting>
+
+ Note that this actually means <quote>revoke all privileges that I
+ granted</quote>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Revoke membership in role <literal>admins</literal> from user <literal>joe</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+REVOKE admins FROM joe;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-revoke-compatibility">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The compatibility notes of the <link linkend="sql-grant"><command>GRANT</command></link> command
+ apply analogously to <command>REVOKE</command>.
+ The keyword <literal>RESTRICT</literal> or <literal>CASCADE</literal>
+ is required according to the standard, but <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ assumes <literal>RESTRICT</literal> by default.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-grant"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-alterdefaultprivileges"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/rollback.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/rollback.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..142f71e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/rollback.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,112 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/rollback.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-rollback">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-rollback">
+ <primary>ROLLBACK</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ROLLBACK</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ROLLBACK</refname>
+ <refpurpose>abort the current transaction</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ROLLBACK [ WORK | TRANSACTION ] [ AND [ NO ] CHAIN ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ROLLBACK</command> rolls back the current transaction and causes
+ all the updates made by the transaction to be discarded.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <indexterm zone="sql-rollback-chain">
+ <primary>chained transactions</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>WORK</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>TRANSACTION</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Optional key words. They have no effect.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry id="sql-rollback-chain">
+ <term><literal>AND CHAIN</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If <literal>AND CHAIN</literal> is specified, a new transaction is
+ immediately started with the same transaction characteristics (see <xref
+ linkend="sql-set-transaction"/>) as the just finished one. Otherwise,
+ no new transaction is started.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Use <link linkend="sql-commit"><command>COMMIT</command></link> to
+ successfully terminate a transaction.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Issuing <command>ROLLBACK</command> outside of a transaction
+ block emits a warning and otherwise has no effect. <command>ROLLBACK AND
+ CHAIN</command> outside of a transaction block is an error.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To abort all changes:
+<programlisting>
+ROLLBACK;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The command <command>ROLLBACK</command> conforms to the SQL standard. The
+ form <literal>ROLLBACK TRANSACTION</literal> is a PostgreSQL extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-begin"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-commit"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-rollback-to"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/rollback_prepared.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/rollback_prepared.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..175a3e9
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/rollback_prepared.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,107 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/rollback_prepared.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-rollback-prepared">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-rollback-prepared">
+ <primary>ROLLBACK PREPARED</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ROLLBACK PREPARED</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ROLLBACK PREPARED</refname>
+ <refpurpose>cancel a transaction that was earlier prepared for two-phase commit</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ROLLBACK PREPARED <replaceable class="parameter">transaction_id</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ROLLBACK PREPARED</command> rolls back a transaction that is in
+ prepared state.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">transaction_id</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The transaction identifier of the transaction that is to be
+ rolled back.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To roll back a prepared transaction, you must be either the same user that
+ executed the transaction originally, or a superuser. But you do not
+ have to be in the same session that executed the transaction.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This command cannot be executed inside a transaction block. The prepared
+ transaction is rolled back immediately.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ All currently available prepared transactions are listed in the
+ <link linkend="view-pg-prepared-xacts"><structname>pg_prepared_xacts</structname></link>
+ system view.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="sql-rollback-prepared-examples">
+ <title>Examples</title>
+ <para>
+ Roll back the transaction identified by the transaction
+ identifier <literal>foobar</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+ROLLBACK PREPARED 'foobar';
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ROLLBACK PREPARED</command> is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension. It is intended for use by
+ external transaction management systems, some of which are covered by
+ standards (such as X/Open XA), but the SQL side of those systems is not
+ standardized.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-prepare-transaction"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-commit-prepared"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/rollback_to.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/rollback_to.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3d5a241
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/rollback_to.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,158 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/rollback_to.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-rollback-to">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-rollback-to">
+ <primary>ROLLBACK TO SAVEPOINT</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <indexterm zone="sql-rollback-to">
+ <primary>savepoints</primary>
+ <secondary>rolling back</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>ROLLBACK TO SAVEPOINT</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>ROLLBACK TO SAVEPOINT</refname>
+ <refpurpose>roll back to a savepoint</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+ROLLBACK [ WORK | TRANSACTION ] TO [ SAVEPOINT ] <replaceable>savepoint_name</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Roll back all commands that were executed after the savepoint was
+ established. The savepoint remains valid and can be rolled back to
+ again later, if needed.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>ROLLBACK TO SAVEPOINT</command> implicitly destroys all savepoints that
+ were established after the named savepoint.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">savepoint_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The savepoint to roll back to.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Use <link linkend="sql-release-savepoint"><command>RELEASE SAVEPOINT</command></link> to destroy a savepoint
+ without discarding the effects of commands executed after it was
+ established.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Specifying a savepoint name that has not been established is an error.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Cursors have somewhat non-transactional behavior with respect to
+ savepoints. Any cursor that is opened inside a savepoint will be closed
+ when the savepoint is rolled back. If a previously opened cursor is
+ affected by a <command>FETCH</command> or <command>MOVE</command> command inside a
+ savepoint that is later rolled back, the cursor remains at the
+ position that <command>FETCH</command> left it pointing to (that is, the cursor
+ motion caused by <command>FETCH</command> is not rolled back).
+ Closing a cursor is not undone by rolling back, either.
+ However, other side-effects caused by the cursor's query (such as
+ side-effects of volatile functions called by the query) <emphasis>are</emphasis>
+ rolled back if they occur during a savepoint that is later rolled back.
+ A cursor whose execution causes a transaction to abort is put in a
+ cannot-execute state, so while the transaction can be restored using
+ <command>ROLLBACK TO SAVEPOINT</command>, the cursor can no longer be used.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To undo the effects of the commands executed after <literal>my_savepoint</literal>
+ was established:
+<programlisting>
+ROLLBACK TO SAVEPOINT my_savepoint;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Cursor positions are not affected by savepoint rollback:
+<programlisting>
+BEGIN;
+
+DECLARE foo CURSOR FOR SELECT 1 UNION SELECT 2;
+
+SAVEPOINT foo;
+
+FETCH 1 FROM foo;
+ ?column?
+----------
+ 1
+
+ROLLBACK TO SAVEPOINT foo;
+
+FETCH 1 FROM foo;
+ ?column?
+----------
+ 2
+
+COMMIT;
+</programlisting></para>
+
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <acronym>SQL</acronym> standard specifies that the key word
+ <literal>SAVEPOINT</literal> is mandatory, but <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ and <productname>Oracle</productname> allow it to be omitted. SQL allows
+ only <literal>WORK</literal>, not <literal>TRANSACTION</literal>, as a noise word
+ after <literal>ROLLBACK</literal>. Also, SQL has an optional clause
+ <literal>AND [ NO ] CHAIN</literal> which is not currently supported by
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>. Otherwise, this command conforms to
+ the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-begin"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-commit"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-release-savepoint"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-rollback"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-savepoint"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/savepoint.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/savepoint.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f84ac3d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/savepoint.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,165 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/savepoint.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-savepoint">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-savepoint">
+ <primary>SAVEPOINT</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <indexterm zone="sql-savepoint">
+ <primary>savepoints</primary>
+ <secondary>defining</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>SAVEPOINT</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>SAVEPOINT</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new savepoint within the current transaction</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+SAVEPOINT <replaceable>savepoint_name</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>SAVEPOINT</command> establishes a new savepoint within
+ the current transaction.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A savepoint is a special mark inside a transaction that allows all commands
+ that are executed after it was established to be rolled back, restoring
+ the transaction state to what it was at the time of the savepoint.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable>savepoint_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name to give to the new savepoint. If savepoints with the
+ same name already exist, they will be inaccessible until newer
+ identically-named savepoints are released.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Use <link linkend="sql-rollback-to"><command>ROLLBACK TO</command></link> to
+ rollback to a savepoint. Use <link linkend="sql-release-savepoint"><command>RELEASE SAVEPOINT</command></link>
+ to destroy a savepoint, keeping
+ the effects of commands executed after it was established.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Savepoints can only be established when inside a transaction block.
+ There can be multiple savepoints defined within a transaction.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To establish a savepoint and later undo the effects of all commands executed
+ after it was established:
+<programlisting>
+BEGIN;
+ INSERT INTO table1 VALUES (1);
+ SAVEPOINT my_savepoint;
+ INSERT INTO table1 VALUES (2);
+ ROLLBACK TO SAVEPOINT my_savepoint;
+ INSERT INTO table1 VALUES (3);
+COMMIT;
+</programlisting>
+ The above transaction will insert the values 1 and 3, but not 2.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To establish and later destroy a savepoint:
+<programlisting>
+BEGIN;
+ INSERT INTO table1 VALUES (3);
+ SAVEPOINT my_savepoint;
+ INSERT INTO table1 VALUES (4);
+ RELEASE SAVEPOINT my_savepoint;
+COMMIT;
+</programlisting>
+ The above transaction will insert both 3 and 4.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To use a single savepoint name:
+<programlisting>
+BEGIN;
+ INSERT INTO table1 VALUES (1);
+ SAVEPOINT my_savepoint;
+ INSERT INTO table1 VALUES (2);
+ SAVEPOINT my_savepoint;
+ INSERT INTO table1 VALUES (3);
+
+ -- rollback to the second savepoint
+ ROLLBACK TO SAVEPOINT my_savepoint;
+ SELECT * FROM table1; -- shows rows 1 and 2
+
+ -- release the second savepoint
+ RELEASE SAVEPOINT my_savepoint;
+
+ -- rollback to the first savepoint
+ ROLLBACK TO SAVEPOINT my_savepoint;
+ SELECT * FROM table1; -- shows only row 1
+COMMIT;
+</programlisting>
+ The above transaction shows row 3 being rolled back first, then row 2.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ SQL requires a savepoint to be destroyed automatically when another
+ savepoint with the same name is established. In
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>, the old savepoint is kept, though only the more
+ recent one will be used when rolling back or releasing. (Releasing the
+ newer savepoint with <command>RELEASE SAVEPOINT</command> will cause the older one
+ to again become accessible to <command>ROLLBACK TO SAVEPOINT</command> and
+ <command>RELEASE SAVEPOINT</command>.) Otherwise, <command>SAVEPOINT</command> is
+ fully SQL conforming.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-begin"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-commit"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-release-savepoint"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-rollback"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-rollback-to"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/security_label.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/security_label.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..20a839f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/security_label.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,218 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/security_label.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-security-label">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-security-label">
+ <primary>SECURITY LABEL</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>SECURITY LABEL</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>SECURITY LABEL</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define or change a security label applied to an object</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+SECURITY LABEL [ FOR <replaceable class="parameter">provider</replaceable> ] ON
+{
+ TABLE <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ COLUMN <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable>.<replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> |
+ AGGREGATE <replaceable class="parameter">aggregate_name</replaceable> ( <replaceable>aggregate_signature</replaceable> ) |
+ DATABASE <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ DOMAIN <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ EVENT TRIGGER <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ FOREIGN TABLE <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable>
+ FUNCTION <replaceable class="parameter">function_name</replaceable> [ ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) ] |
+ LARGE OBJECT <replaceable class="parameter">large_object_oid</replaceable> |
+ MATERIALIZED VIEW <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ [ PROCEDURAL ] LANGUAGE <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ PROCEDURE <replaceable class="parameter">procedure_name</replaceable> [ ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) ] |
+ PUBLICATION <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ ROLE <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ ROUTINE <replaceable class="parameter">routine_name</replaceable> [ ( [ [ <replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) ] |
+ SCHEMA <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ SEQUENCE <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ SUBSCRIPTION <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ TABLESPACE <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ TYPE <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable> |
+ VIEW <replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable>
+} IS '<replaceable class="parameter">label</replaceable>'
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable>aggregate_signature</replaceable> is:</phrase>
+
+* |
+[ <replaceable>argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable>argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable>argtype</replaceable> [ , ... ] |
+[ [ <replaceable>argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable>argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable>argtype</replaceable> [ , ... ] ] ORDER BY [ <replaceable>argmode</replaceable> ] [ <replaceable>argname</replaceable> ] <replaceable>argtype</replaceable> [ , ... ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>SECURITY LABEL</command> applies a security label to a database
+ object. An arbitrary number of security labels, one per label provider, can
+ be associated with a given database object. Label providers are loadable
+ modules which register themselves by using the function
+ <function>register_label_provider</function>.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ <function>register_label_provider</function> is not an SQL function; it can
+ only be called from C code loaded into the backend.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+
+ <para>
+ The label provider determines whether a given label is valid and whether
+ it is permissible to assign that label to a given object. The meaning of a
+ given label is likewise at the discretion of the label provider.
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> places no restrictions on whether or how a
+ label provider must interpret security labels; it merely provides a
+ mechanism for storing them. In practice, this facility is intended to allow
+ integration with label-based mandatory access control (MAC) systems such as
+ <productname>SELinux</productname>. Such systems make all access control decisions
+ based on object labels, rather than traditional discretionary access control
+ (DAC) concepts such as users and groups.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">object_name</replaceable></term>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">table_name.column_name</replaceable></term>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">aggregate_name</replaceable></term>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">function_name</replaceable></term>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">procedure_name</replaceable></term>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">routine_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the object to be labeled. Names of objects that reside in
+ schemas (tables, functions, etc.) can be schema-qualified.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">provider</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the provider with which this label is to be associated. The
+ named provider must be loaded and must consent to the proposed labeling
+ operation. If exactly one provider is loaded, the provider name may be
+ omitted for brevity.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argmode</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The mode of a function, procedure, or aggregate
+ argument: <literal>IN</literal>, <literal>OUT</literal>,
+ <literal>INOUT</literal>, or <literal>VARIADIC</literal>.
+ If omitted, the default is <literal>IN</literal>.
+ Note that <command>SECURITY LABEL</command> does not actually
+ pay any attention to <literal>OUT</literal> arguments, since only the input
+ arguments are needed to determine the function's identity.
+ So it is sufficient to list the <literal>IN</literal>, <literal>INOUT</literal>,
+ and <literal>VARIADIC</literal> arguments.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argname</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a function, procedure, or aggregate argument.
+ Note that <command>SECURITY LABEL</command> does not actually
+ pay any attention to argument names, since only the argument data
+ types are needed to determine the function's identity.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">argtype</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The data type of a function, procedure, or aggregate argument.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">large_object_oid</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The OID of the large object.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>PROCEDURAL</literal></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This is a noise word.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">label</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The new security label, written as a string literal; or <literal>NULL</literal>
+ to drop the security label.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The following example shows how the security label of a table might
+ be changed.
+
+<programlisting>
+SECURITY LABEL FOR selinux ON TABLE mytable IS 'system_u:object_r:sepgsql_table_t:s0';
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>SECURITY LABEL</command> command in the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sepgsql"/></member>
+ <member><filename>src/test/modules/dummy_seclabel</filename></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/select.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/select.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..16bbab5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/select.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,2195 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/select.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-select">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-select">
+ <primary>SELECT</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <indexterm zone="sql-select">
+ <primary>TABLE command</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <indexterm zone="sql-select">
+ <primary>WITH</primary>
+ <secondary>in SELECT</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>SELECT</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>SELECT</refname>
+ <refname>TABLE</refname>
+ <refname>WITH</refname>
+ <refpurpose>retrieve rows from a table or view</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+[ WITH [ RECURSIVE ] <replaceable class="parameter">with_query</replaceable> [, ...] ]
+SELECT [ ALL | DISTINCT [ ON ( <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> [, ...] ) ] ]
+ [ * | <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> [ [ AS ] <replaceable class="parameter">output_name</replaceable> ] [, ...] ]
+ [ FROM <replaceable class="parameter">from_item</replaceable> [, ...] ]
+ [ WHERE <replaceable class="parameter">condition</replaceable> ]
+ [ GROUP BY [ ALL | DISTINCT ] <replaceable class="parameter">grouping_element</replaceable> [, ...] ]
+ [ HAVING <replaceable class="parameter">condition</replaceable> ]
+ [ WINDOW <replaceable class="parameter">window_name</replaceable> AS ( <replaceable class="parameter">window_definition</replaceable> ) [, ...] ]
+ [ { UNION | INTERSECT | EXCEPT } [ ALL | DISTINCT ] <replaceable class="parameter">select</replaceable> ]
+ [ ORDER BY <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> [ ASC | DESC | USING <replaceable class="parameter">operator</replaceable> ] [ NULLS { FIRST | LAST } ] [, ...] ]
+ [ LIMIT { <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable> | ALL } ]
+ [ OFFSET <replaceable class="parameter">start</replaceable> [ ROW | ROWS ] ]
+ [ FETCH { FIRST | NEXT } [ <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable> ] { ROW | ROWS } { ONLY | WITH TIES } ]
+ [ FOR { UPDATE | NO KEY UPDATE | SHARE | KEY SHARE } [ OF <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [, ...] ] [ NOWAIT | SKIP LOCKED ] [...] ]
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">from_item</replaceable> can be one of:</phrase>
+
+ [ ONLY ] <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [ * ] [ [ AS ] <replaceable class="parameter">alias</replaceable> [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_alias</replaceable> [, ...] ) ] ]
+ [ TABLESAMPLE <replaceable class="parameter">sampling_method</replaceable> ( <replaceable class="parameter">argument</replaceable> [, ...] ) [ REPEATABLE ( <replaceable class="parameter">seed</replaceable> ) ] ]
+ [ LATERAL ] ( <replaceable class="parameter">select</replaceable> ) [ AS ] <replaceable class="parameter">alias</replaceable> [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_alias</replaceable> [, ...] ) ]
+ <replaceable class="parameter">with_query_name</replaceable> [ [ AS ] <replaceable class="parameter">alias</replaceable> [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_alias</replaceable> [, ...] ) ] ]
+ [ LATERAL ] <replaceable class="parameter">function_name</replaceable> ( [ <replaceable class="parameter">argument</replaceable> [, ...] ] )
+ [ WITH ORDINALITY ] [ [ AS ] <replaceable class="parameter">alias</replaceable> [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_alias</replaceable> [, ...] ) ] ]
+ [ LATERAL ] <replaceable class="parameter">function_name</replaceable> ( [ <replaceable class="parameter">argument</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) [ AS ] <replaceable class="parameter">alias</replaceable> ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_definition</replaceable> [, ...] )
+ [ LATERAL ] <replaceable class="parameter">function_name</replaceable> ( [ <replaceable class="parameter">argument</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) AS ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_definition</replaceable> [, ...] )
+ [ LATERAL ] ROWS FROM( <replaceable class="parameter">function_name</replaceable> ( [ <replaceable class="parameter">argument</replaceable> [, ...] ] ) [ AS ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_definition</replaceable> [, ...] ) ] [, ...] )
+ [ WITH ORDINALITY ] [ [ AS ] <replaceable class="parameter">alias</replaceable> [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_alias</replaceable> [, ...] ) ] ]
+ <replaceable class="parameter">from_item</replaceable> [ NATURAL ] <replaceable class="parameter">join_type</replaceable> <replaceable class="parameter">from_item</replaceable> [ ON <replaceable class="parameter">join_condition</replaceable> | USING ( <replaceable class="parameter">join_column</replaceable> [, ...] ) [ AS <replaceable class="parameter">join_using_alias</replaceable> ] ]
+
+<phrase>and <replaceable class="parameter">grouping_element</replaceable> can be one of:</phrase>
+
+ ( )
+ <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable>
+ ( <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> [, ...] )
+ ROLLUP ( { <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> | ( <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> [, ...] ) } [, ...] )
+ CUBE ( { <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> | ( <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> [, ...] ) } [, ...] )
+ GROUPING SETS ( <replaceable class="parameter">grouping_element</replaceable> [, ...] )
+
+<phrase>and <replaceable class="parameter">with_query</replaceable> is:</phrase>
+
+ <replaceable class="parameter">with_query_name</replaceable> [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ...] ) ] AS [ [ NOT ] MATERIALIZED ] ( <replaceable class="parameter">select</replaceable> | <replaceable class="parameter">values</replaceable> | <replaceable class="parameter">insert</replaceable> | <replaceable class="parameter">update</replaceable> | <replaceable class="parameter">delete</replaceable> )
+ [ SEARCH { BREADTH | DEPTH } FIRST BY <replaceable>column_name</replaceable> [, ...] SET <replaceable>search_seq_col_name</replaceable> ]
+ [ CYCLE <replaceable>column_name</replaceable> [, ...] SET <replaceable>cycle_mark_col_name</replaceable> [ TO <replaceable>cycle_mark_value</replaceable> DEFAULT <replaceable>cycle_mark_default</replaceable> ] USING <replaceable>cycle_path_col_name</replaceable> ]
+
+TABLE [ ONLY ] <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [ * ]
+</synopsis>
+
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>SELECT</command> retrieves rows from zero or more tables.
+ The general processing of <command>SELECT</command> is as follows:
+
+ <orderedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ All queries in the <literal>WITH</literal> list are computed.
+ These effectively serve as temporary tables that can be referenced
+ in the <literal>FROM</literal> list. A <literal>WITH</literal> query
+ that is referenced more than once in <literal>FROM</literal> is
+ computed only once,
+ unless specified otherwise with <literal>NOT MATERIALIZED</literal>.
+ (See <xref linkend="sql-with"/> below.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ All elements in the <literal>FROM</literal> list are computed.
+ (Each element in the <literal>FROM</literal> list is a real or
+ virtual table.) If more than one element is specified in the
+ <literal>FROM</literal> list, they are cross-joined together.
+ (See <xref linkend="sql-from"/> below.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If the <literal>WHERE</literal> clause is specified, all rows
+ that do not satisfy the condition are eliminated from the
+ output. (See <xref linkend="sql-where"/> below.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If the <literal>GROUP BY</literal> clause is specified,
+ or if there are aggregate function calls, the
+ output is combined into groups of rows that match on one or more
+ values, and the results of aggregate functions are computed.
+ If the <literal>HAVING</literal> clause is present, it
+ eliminates groups that do not satisfy the given condition. (See
+ <xref linkend="sql-groupby"/> and
+ <xref linkend="sql-having"/> below.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The actual output rows are computed using the
+ <command>SELECT</command> output expressions for each selected
+ row or row group. (See <xref linkend="sql-select-list"/> below.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para><literal>SELECT DISTINCT</literal> eliminates duplicate rows from the
+ result. <literal>SELECT DISTINCT ON</literal> eliminates rows that
+ match on all the specified expressions. <literal>SELECT ALL</literal>
+ (the default) will return all candidate rows, including
+ duplicates. (See <xref linkend="sql-distinct"/> below.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Using the operators <literal>UNION</literal>,
+ <literal>INTERSECT</literal>, and <literal>EXCEPT</literal>, the
+ output of more than one <command>SELECT</command> statement can
+ be combined to form a single result set. The
+ <literal>UNION</literal> operator returns all rows that are in
+ one or both of the result sets. The
+ <literal>INTERSECT</literal> operator returns all rows that are
+ strictly in both result sets. The <literal>EXCEPT</literal>
+ operator returns the rows that are in the first result set but
+ not in the second. In all three cases, duplicate rows are
+ eliminated unless <literal>ALL</literal> is specified. The noise
+ word <literal>DISTINCT</literal> can be added to explicitly specify
+ eliminating duplicate rows. Notice that <literal>DISTINCT</literal> is
+ the default behavior here, even though <literal>ALL</literal> is
+ the default for <command>SELECT</command> itself. (See
+ <xref linkend="sql-union"/>, <xref linkend="sql-intersect"/>, and
+ <xref linkend="sql-except"/> below.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If the <literal>ORDER BY</literal> clause is specified, the
+ returned rows are sorted in the specified order. If
+ <literal>ORDER BY</literal> is not given, the rows are returned
+ in whatever order the system finds fastest to produce. (See
+ <xref linkend="sql-orderby"/> below.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If the <literal>LIMIT</literal> (or <literal>FETCH FIRST</literal>) or <literal>OFFSET</literal>
+ clause is specified, the <command>SELECT</command> statement
+ only returns a subset of the result rows. (See <xref
+ linkend="sql-limit"/> below.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If <literal>FOR UPDATE</literal>, <literal>FOR NO KEY UPDATE</literal>, <literal>FOR SHARE</literal>
+ or <literal>FOR KEY SHARE</literal>
+ is specified, the
+ <command>SELECT</command> statement locks the selected rows
+ against concurrent updates. (See <xref linkend="sql-for-update-share"/>
+ below.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </orderedlist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must have <literal>SELECT</literal> privilege on each column used
+ in a <command>SELECT</command> command. The use of <literal>FOR NO KEY UPDATE</literal>,
+ <literal>FOR UPDATE</literal>,
+ <literal>FOR SHARE</literal> or <literal>FOR KEY SHARE</literal> requires
+ <literal>UPDATE</literal> privilege as well (for at least one column
+ of each table so selected).
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <refsect2 id="sql-with" xreflabel="WITH Clause">
+ <title><literal>WITH</literal> Clause</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>WITH</literal> clause allows you to specify one or more
+ subqueries that can be referenced by name in the primary query.
+ The subqueries effectively act as temporary tables or views
+ for the duration of the primary query.
+ Each subquery can be a <command>SELECT</command>, <command>TABLE</command>, <command>VALUES</command>,
+ <command>INSERT</command>, <command>UPDATE</command> or
+ <command>DELETE</command> statement.
+ When writing a data-modifying statement (<command>INSERT</command>,
+ <command>UPDATE</command> or <command>DELETE</command>) in
+ <literal>WITH</literal>, it is usual to include a <literal>RETURNING</literal> clause.
+ It is the output of <literal>RETURNING</literal>, <emphasis>not</emphasis> the underlying
+ table that the statement modifies, that forms the temporary table that is
+ read by the primary query. If <literal>RETURNING</literal> is omitted, the
+ statement is still executed, but it produces no output so it cannot be
+ referenced as a table by the primary query.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A name (without schema qualification) must be specified for each
+ <literal>WITH</literal> query. Optionally, a list of column names
+ can be specified; if this is omitted,
+ the column names are inferred from the subquery.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If <literal>RECURSIVE</literal> is specified, it allows a
+ <command>SELECT</command> subquery to reference itself by name. Such a
+ subquery must have the form
+<synopsis>
+<replaceable class="parameter">non_recursive_term</replaceable> UNION [ ALL | DISTINCT ] <replaceable class="parameter">recursive_term</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ where the recursive self-reference must appear on the right-hand
+ side of the <literal>UNION</literal>. Only one recursive self-reference
+ is permitted per query. Recursive data-modifying statements are not
+ supported, but you can use the results of a recursive
+ <command>SELECT</command> query in
+ a data-modifying statement. See <xref linkend="queries-with"/> for
+ an example.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Another effect of <literal>RECURSIVE</literal> is that
+ <literal>WITH</literal> queries need not be ordered: a query
+ can reference another one that is later in the list. (However,
+ circular references, or mutual recursion, are not implemented.)
+ Without <literal>RECURSIVE</literal>, <literal>WITH</literal> queries
+ can only reference sibling <literal>WITH</literal> queries
+ that are earlier in the <literal>WITH</literal> list.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When there are multiple queries in the <literal>WITH</literal>
+ clause, <literal>RECURSIVE</literal> should be written only once,
+ immediately after <literal>WITH</literal>. It applies to all queries
+ in the <literal>WITH</literal> clause, though it has no effect on
+ queries that do not use recursion or forward references.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The optional <literal>SEARCH</literal> clause computes a <firstterm>search
+ sequence column</firstterm> that can be used for ordering the results of a
+ recursive query in either breadth-first or depth-first order. The
+ supplied column name list specifies the row key that is to be used for
+ keeping track of visited rows. A column named
+ <replaceable>search_seq_col_name</replaceable> will be added to the result
+ column list of the <literal>WITH</literal> query. This column can be
+ ordered by in the outer query to achieve the respective ordering. See
+ <xref linkend="queries-with-search"/> for examples.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The optional <literal>CYCLE</literal> clause is used to detect cycles in
+ recursive queries. The supplied column name list specifies the row key
+ that is to be used for keeping track of visited rows. A column named
+ <replaceable>cycle_mark_col_name</replaceable> will be added to the result
+ column list of the <literal>WITH</literal> query. This column will be set
+ to <replaceable>cycle_mark_value</replaceable> when a cycle has been
+ detected, else to <replaceable>cycle_mark_default</replaceable>.
+ Furthermore, processing of the recursive union will stop when a cycle has
+ been detected. <replaceable>cycle_mark_value</replaceable> and
+ <replaceable>cycle_mark_default</replaceable> must be constants and they
+ must be coercible to a common data type, and the data type must have an
+ inequality operator. (The SQL standard requires that they be Boolean
+ constants or character strings, but PostgreSQL does not require that.) By
+ default, <literal>TRUE</literal> and <literal>FALSE</literal> (of type
+ <type>boolean</type>) are used. Furthermore, a column
+ named <replaceable>cycle_path_col_name</replaceable> will be added to the
+ result column list of the <literal>WITH</literal> query. This column is
+ used internally for tracking visited rows. See <xref
+ linkend="queries-with-cycle"/> for examples.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Both the <literal>SEARCH</literal> and the <literal>CYCLE</literal> clause
+ are only valid for recursive <literal>WITH</literal> queries. The
+ <replaceable>with_query</replaceable> must be a <literal>UNION</literal>
+ (or <literal>UNION ALL</literal>) of two <literal>SELECT</literal> (or
+ equivalent) commands (no nested <literal>UNION</literal>s). If both
+ clauses are used, the column added by the <literal>SEARCH</literal> clause
+ appears before the columns added by the <literal>CYCLE</literal> clause.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The primary query and the <literal>WITH</literal> queries are all
+ (notionally) executed at the same time. This implies that the effects of
+ a data-modifying statement in <literal>WITH</literal> cannot be seen from
+ other parts of the query, other than by reading its <literal>RETURNING</literal>
+ output. If two such data-modifying statements attempt to modify the same
+ row, the results are unspecified.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A key property of <literal>WITH</literal> queries is that they
+ are normally evaluated only once per execution of the primary query,
+ even if the primary query refers to them more than once.
+ In particular, data-modifying statements are guaranteed to be
+ executed once and only once, regardless of whether the primary query
+ reads all or any of their output.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ However, a <literal>WITH</literal> query can be marked
+ <literal>NOT MATERIALIZED</literal> to remove this guarantee. In that
+ case, the <literal>WITH</literal> query can be folded into the primary
+ query much as though it were a simple sub-<literal>SELECT</literal> in
+ the primary query's <literal>FROM</literal> clause. This results in
+ duplicate computations if the primary query refers to
+ that <literal>WITH</literal> query more than once; but if each such use
+ requires only a few rows of the <literal>WITH</literal> query's total
+ output, <literal>NOT MATERIALIZED</literal> can provide a net savings by
+ allowing the queries to be optimized jointly.
+ <literal>NOT MATERIALIZED</literal> is ignored if it is attached to
+ a <literal>WITH</literal> query that is recursive or is not
+ side-effect-free (i.e., is not a plain <literal>SELECT</literal>
+ containing no volatile functions).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ By default, a side-effect-free <literal>WITH</literal> query is folded
+ into the primary query if it is used exactly once in the primary
+ query's <literal>FROM</literal> clause. This allows joint optimization
+ of the two query levels in situations where that should be semantically
+ invisible. However, such folding can be prevented by marking the
+ <literal>WITH</literal> query as <literal>MATERIALIZED</literal>.
+ That might be useful, for example, if the <literal>WITH</literal> query
+ is being used as an optimization fence to prevent the planner from
+ choosing a bad plan.
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> versions before v12 never did
+ such folding, so queries written for older versions might rely on
+ <literal>WITH</literal> to act as an optimization fence.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ See <xref linkend="queries-with"/> for additional information.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2 id="sql-from" xreflabel="FROM Clause">
+ <title><literal>FROM</literal> Clause</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>FROM</literal> clause specifies one or more source
+ tables for the <command>SELECT</command>. If multiple sources are
+ specified, the result is the Cartesian product (cross join) of all
+ the sources. But usually qualification conditions are added (via
+ <literal>WHERE</literal>) to restrict the returned rows to a small subset of the
+ Cartesian product.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>FROM</literal> clause can contain the following
+ elements:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing table or view.
+ If <literal>ONLY</literal> is specified before the table name, only that
+ table is scanned. If <literal>ONLY</literal> is not specified, the table
+ and all its descendant tables (if any) are scanned. Optionally,
+ <literal>*</literal> can be specified after the table name to explicitly
+ indicate that descendant tables are included.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">alias</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A substitute name for the <literal>FROM</literal> item containing the
+ alias. An alias is used for brevity or to eliminate ambiguity
+ for self-joins (where the same table is scanned multiple
+ times). When an alias is provided, it completely hides the
+ actual name of the table or function; for example given
+ <literal>FROM foo AS f</literal>, the remainder of the
+ <command>SELECT</command> must refer to this <literal>FROM</literal>
+ item as <literal>f</literal> not <literal>foo</literal>. If an alias is
+ written, a column alias list can also be written to provide
+ substitute names for one or more columns of the table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>TABLESAMPLE <replaceable class="parameter">sampling_method</replaceable> ( <replaceable class="parameter">argument</replaceable> [, ...] ) [ REPEATABLE ( <replaceable class="parameter">seed</replaceable> ) ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A <literal>TABLESAMPLE</literal> clause after
+ a <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> indicates that the
+ specified <replaceable class="parameter">sampling_method</replaceable>
+ should be used to retrieve a subset of the rows in that table.
+ This sampling precedes the application of any other filters such
+ as <literal>WHERE</literal> clauses.
+ The standard <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> distribution
+ includes two sampling methods, <literal>BERNOULLI</literal>
+ and <literal>SYSTEM</literal>, and other sampling methods can be
+ installed in the database via extensions.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>BERNOULLI</literal> and <literal>SYSTEM</literal> sampling methods
+ each accept a single <replaceable class="parameter">argument</replaceable>
+ which is the fraction of the table to sample, expressed as a
+ percentage between 0 and 100. This argument can be
+ any <type>real</type>-valued expression. (Other sampling methods might
+ accept more or different arguments.) These two methods each return
+ a randomly-chosen sample of the table that will contain
+ approximately the specified percentage of the table's rows.
+ The <literal>BERNOULLI</literal> method scans the whole table and
+ selects or ignores individual rows independently with the specified
+ probability.
+ The <literal>SYSTEM</literal> method does block-level sampling with
+ each block having the specified chance of being selected; all rows
+ in each selected block are returned.
+ The <literal>SYSTEM</literal> method is significantly faster than
+ the <literal>BERNOULLI</literal> method when small sampling
+ percentages are specified, but it may return a less-random sample of
+ the table as a result of clustering effects.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The optional <literal>REPEATABLE</literal> clause specifies
+ a <replaceable class="parameter">seed</replaceable> number or expression to use
+ for generating random numbers within the sampling method. The seed
+ value can be any non-null floating-point value. Two queries that
+ specify the same seed and <replaceable class="parameter">argument</replaceable>
+ values will select the same sample of the table, if the table has
+ not been changed meanwhile. But different seed values will usually
+ produce different samples.
+ If <literal>REPEATABLE</literal> is not given then a new random
+ sample is selected for each query, based upon a system-generated seed.
+ Note that some add-on sampling methods do not
+ accept <literal>REPEATABLE</literal>, and will always produce new
+ samples on each use.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">select</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A sub-<command>SELECT</command> can appear in the
+ <literal>FROM</literal> clause. This acts as though its
+ output were created as a temporary table for the duration of
+ this single <command>SELECT</command> command. Note that the
+ sub-<command>SELECT</command> must be surrounded by
+ parentheses, and an alias <emphasis>must</emphasis> be
+ provided for it. A
+ <link linkend="sql-values"><command>VALUES</command></link> command
+ can also be used here.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">with_query_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A <literal>WITH</literal> query is referenced by writing its name,
+ just as though the query's name were a table name. (In fact,
+ the <literal>WITH</literal> query hides any real table of the same name
+ for the purposes of the primary query. If necessary, you can
+ refer to a real table of the same name by schema-qualifying
+ the table's name.)
+ An alias can be provided in the same way as for a table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">function_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Function calls can appear in the <literal>FROM</literal>
+ clause. (This is especially useful for functions that return
+ result sets, but any function can be used.) This acts as
+ though the function's output were created as a temporary table for the
+ duration of this single <command>SELECT</command> command.
+ If the function's result type is composite (including the case of a
+ function with multiple <literal>OUT</literal> parameters), each
+ attribute becomes a separate column in the implicit table.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When the optional <command>WITH ORDINALITY</command> clause is added
+ to the function call, an additional column of type <type>bigint</type>
+ will be appended to the function's result column(s). This column
+ numbers the rows of the function's result set, starting from 1.
+ By default, this column is named <literal>ordinality</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ An alias can be provided in the same way as for a table.
+ If an alias is written, a column
+ alias list can also be written to provide substitute names for
+ one or more attributes of the function's composite return
+ type, including the ordinality column if present.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Multiple function calls can be combined into a
+ single <literal>FROM</literal>-clause item by surrounding them
+ with <literal>ROWS FROM( ... )</literal>. The output of such an item is the
+ concatenation of the first row from each function, then the second
+ row from each function, etc. If some of the functions produce fewer
+ rows than others, null values are substituted for the missing data, so
+ that the total number of rows returned is always the same as for the
+ function that produced the most rows.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the function has been defined as returning the
+ <type>record</type> data type, then an alias or the key word
+ <literal>AS</literal> must be present, followed by a column
+ definition list in the form <literal>( <replaceable
+ class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> <replaceable
+ class="parameter">data_type</replaceable> <optional>, ...
+ </optional>)</literal>. The column definition list must match the
+ actual number and types of columns returned by the function.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When using the <literal>ROWS FROM( ... )</literal> syntax, if one of the
+ functions requires a column definition list, it's preferred to put
+ the column definition list after the function call inside
+ <literal>ROWS FROM( ... )</literal>. A column definition list can be placed
+ after the <literal>ROWS FROM( ... )</literal> construct only if there's just
+ a single function and no <literal>WITH ORDINALITY</literal> clause.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To use <literal>ORDINALITY</literal> together with a column definition
+ list, you must use the <literal>ROWS FROM( ... )</literal> syntax and put the
+ column definition list inside <literal>ROWS FROM( ... )</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">join_type</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ One of
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para><literal>[ INNER ] JOIN</literal></para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para><literal>LEFT [ OUTER ] JOIN</literal></para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para><literal>RIGHT [ OUTER ] JOIN</literal></para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para><literal>FULL [ OUTER ] JOIN</literal></para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para><literal>CROSS JOIN</literal></para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+
+ For the <literal>INNER</literal> and <literal>OUTER</literal> join types, a
+ join condition must be specified, namely exactly one of
+ <literal>NATURAL</literal>, <literal>ON <replaceable
+ class="parameter">join_condition</replaceable></literal>, or
+ <literal>USING (<replaceable
+ class="parameter">join_column</replaceable> [, ...])</literal>.
+ See below for the meaning. For <literal>CROSS JOIN</literal>,
+ none of these clauses can appear.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A <literal>JOIN</literal> clause combines two <literal>FROM</literal>
+ items, which for convenience we will refer to as <quote>tables</quote>,
+ though in reality they can be any type of <literal>FROM</literal> item.
+ Use parentheses if necessary to determine the order of nesting.
+ In the absence of parentheses, <literal>JOIN</literal>s nest
+ left-to-right. In any case <literal>JOIN</literal> binds more
+ tightly than the commas separating <literal>FROM</literal>-list items.
+ </para>
+
+ <para><literal>CROSS JOIN</literal> and <literal>INNER JOIN</literal>
+ produce a simple Cartesian product, the same result as you get from
+ listing the two tables at the top level of <literal>FROM</literal>,
+ but restricted by the join condition (if any).
+ <literal>CROSS JOIN</literal> is equivalent to <literal>INNER JOIN ON
+ (TRUE)</literal>, that is, no rows are removed by qualification.
+ These join types are just a notational convenience, since they
+ do nothing you couldn't do with plain <literal>FROM</literal> and
+ <literal>WHERE</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para><literal>LEFT OUTER JOIN</literal> returns all rows in the qualified
+ Cartesian product (i.e., all combined rows that pass its join
+ condition), plus one copy of each row in the left-hand table
+ for which there was no right-hand row that passed the join
+ condition. This left-hand row is extended to the full width
+ of the joined table by inserting null values for the
+ right-hand columns. Note that only the <literal>JOIN</literal>
+ clause's own condition is considered while deciding which rows
+ have matches. Outer conditions are applied afterwards.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Conversely, <literal>RIGHT OUTER JOIN</literal> returns all the
+ joined rows, plus one row for each unmatched right-hand row
+ (extended with nulls on the left). This is just a notational
+ convenience, since you could convert it to a <literal>LEFT
+ OUTER JOIN</literal> by switching the left and right tables.
+ </para>
+
+ <para><literal>FULL OUTER JOIN</literal> returns all the joined rows, plus
+ one row for each unmatched left-hand row (extended with nulls
+ on the right), plus one row for each unmatched right-hand row
+ (extended with nulls on the left).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ON <replaceable class="parameter">join_condition</replaceable></literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para><replaceable class="parameter">join_condition</replaceable> is
+ an expression resulting in a value of type
+ <type>boolean</type> (similar to a <literal>WHERE</literal>
+ clause) that specifies which rows in a join are considered to
+ match.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>USING ( <replaceable class="parameter">join_column</replaceable> [, ...] ) [ AS <replaceable class="parameter">join_using_alias</replaceable> ]</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A clause of the form <literal>USING ( a, b, ... )</literal> is
+ shorthand for <literal>ON left_table.a = right_table.a AND
+ left_table.b = right_table.b ...</literal>. Also,
+ <literal>USING</literal> implies that only one of each pair of
+ equivalent columns will be included in the join output, not
+ both.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If a <replaceable class="parameter">join_using_alias</replaceable>
+ name is specified, it provides a table alias for the join columns.
+ Only the join columns listed in the <literal>USING</literal> clause
+ are addressable by this name. Unlike a regular <replaceable
+ class="parameter">alias</replaceable>, this does not hide the names of
+ the joined tables from the rest of the query. Also unlike a regular
+ <replaceable class="parameter">alias</replaceable>, you cannot write a
+ column alias list &mdash; the output names of the join columns are the
+ same as they appear in the <literal>USING</literal> list.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>NATURAL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ <literal>NATURAL</literal> is shorthand for a
+ <literal>USING</literal> list that mentions all columns in the two
+ tables that have matching names. If there are no common
+ column names, <literal>NATURAL</literal> is equivalent
+ to <literal>ON TRUE</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>LATERAL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>LATERAL</literal> key word can precede a
+ sub-<command>SELECT</command> <literal>FROM</literal> item. This allows the
+ sub-<command>SELECT</command> to refer to columns of <literal>FROM</literal>
+ items that appear before it in the <literal>FROM</literal> list. (Without
+ <literal>LATERAL</literal>, each sub-<command>SELECT</command> is
+ evaluated independently and so cannot cross-reference any other
+ <literal>FROM</literal> item.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para><literal>LATERAL</literal> can also precede a function-call
+ <literal>FROM</literal> item, but in this case it is a noise word, because
+ the function expression can refer to earlier <literal>FROM</literal> items
+ in any case.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A <literal>LATERAL</literal> item can appear at top level in the
+ <literal>FROM</literal> list, or within a <literal>JOIN</literal> tree. In the
+ latter case it can also refer to any items that are on the left-hand
+ side of a <literal>JOIN</literal> that it is on the right-hand side of.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When a <literal>FROM</literal> item contains <literal>LATERAL</literal>
+ cross-references, evaluation proceeds as follows: for each row of the
+ <literal>FROM</literal> item providing the cross-referenced column(s), or
+ set of rows of multiple <literal>FROM</literal> items providing the
+ columns, the <literal>LATERAL</literal> item is evaluated using that
+ row or row set's values of the columns. The resulting row(s) are
+ joined as usual with the rows they were computed from. This is
+ repeated for each row or set of rows from the column source table(s).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The column source table(s) must be <literal>INNER</literal> or
+ <literal>LEFT</literal> joined to the <literal>LATERAL</literal> item, else
+ there would not be a well-defined set of rows from which to compute
+ each set of rows for the <literal>LATERAL</literal> item. Thus,
+ although a construct such as <literal><replaceable>X</replaceable> RIGHT JOIN
+ LATERAL <replaceable>Y</replaceable></literal> is syntactically valid, it is
+ not actually allowed for <replaceable>Y</replaceable> to reference
+ <replaceable>X</replaceable>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2 id="sql-where" xreflabel="WHERE Clause">
+ <title><literal>WHERE</literal> Clause</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The optional <literal>WHERE</literal> clause has the general form
+<synopsis>
+WHERE <replaceable class="parameter">condition</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ where <replaceable class="parameter">condition</replaceable> is
+ any expression that evaluates to a result of type
+ <type>boolean</type>. Any row that does not satisfy this
+ condition will be eliminated from the output. A row satisfies the
+ condition if it returns true when the actual row values are
+ substituted for any variable references.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2 id="sql-groupby" xreflabel="GROUP BY Clause">
+ <title><literal>GROUP BY</literal> Clause</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The optional <literal>GROUP BY</literal> clause has the general form
+<synopsis>
+GROUP BY [ ALL | DISTINCT ] <replaceable class="parameter">grouping_element</replaceable> [, ...]
+</synopsis>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <literal>GROUP BY</literal> will condense into a single row all
+ selected rows that share the same values for the grouped
+ expressions. An <replaceable
+ class="parameter">expression</replaceable> used inside a
+ <replaceable class="parameter">grouping_element</replaceable>
+ can be an input column name, or the name or ordinal number of an
+ output column (<command>SELECT</command> list item), or an arbitrary
+ expression formed from input-column values. In case of ambiguity,
+ a <literal>GROUP BY</literal> name will be interpreted as an
+ input-column name rather than an output column name.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If any of <literal>GROUPING SETS</literal>, <literal>ROLLUP</literal> or
+ <literal>CUBE</literal> are present as grouping elements, then the
+ <literal>GROUP BY</literal> clause as a whole defines some number of
+ independent <replaceable>grouping sets</replaceable>. The effect of this is
+ equivalent to constructing a <literal>UNION ALL</literal> between
+ subqueries with the individual grouping sets as their
+ <literal>GROUP BY</literal> clauses. The optional <literal>DISTINCT</literal>
+ clause removes duplicate sets before processing; it does <emphasis>not</emphasis>
+ transform the <literal>UNION ALL</literal> into a <literal>UNION DISTINCT</literal>.
+ For further details on the handling
+ of grouping sets see <xref linkend="queries-grouping-sets"/>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Aggregate functions, if any are used, are computed across all rows
+ making up each group, producing a separate value for each group.
+ (If there are aggregate functions but no <literal>GROUP BY</literal>
+ clause, the query is treated as having a single group comprising all
+ the selected rows.)
+ The set of rows fed to each aggregate function can be further filtered by
+ attaching a <literal>FILTER</literal> clause to the aggregate function
+ call; see <xref linkend="syntax-aggregates"/> for more information. When
+ a <literal>FILTER</literal> clause is present, only those rows matching it
+ are included in the input to that aggregate function.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When <literal>GROUP BY</literal> is present,
+ or any aggregate functions are present, it is not valid for
+ the <command>SELECT</command> list expressions to refer to
+ ungrouped columns except within aggregate functions or when the
+ ungrouped column is functionally dependent on the grouped columns,
+ since there would otherwise be more than one possible value to
+ return for an ungrouped column. A functional dependency exists if
+ the grouped columns (or a subset thereof) are the primary key of
+ the table containing the ungrouped column.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Keep in mind that all aggregate functions are evaluated before
+ evaluating any <quote>scalar</quote> expressions in the <literal>HAVING</literal>
+ clause or <literal>SELECT</literal> list. This means that, for example,
+ a <literal>CASE</literal> expression cannot be used to skip evaluation of
+ an aggregate function; see <xref linkend="syntax-express-eval"/>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Currently, <literal>FOR NO KEY UPDATE</literal>, <literal>FOR UPDATE</literal>,
+ <literal>FOR SHARE</literal> and <literal>FOR KEY SHARE</literal> cannot be
+ specified with <literal>GROUP BY</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2 id="sql-having" xreflabel="HAVING Clause">
+ <title><literal>HAVING</literal> Clause</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The optional <literal>HAVING</literal> clause has the general form
+<synopsis>
+HAVING <replaceable class="parameter">condition</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ where <replaceable class="parameter">condition</replaceable> is
+ the same as specified for the <literal>WHERE</literal> clause.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <literal>HAVING</literal> eliminates group rows that do not
+ satisfy the condition. <literal>HAVING</literal> is different
+ from <literal>WHERE</literal>: <literal>WHERE</literal> filters
+ individual rows before the application of <literal>GROUP
+ BY</literal>, while <literal>HAVING</literal> filters group rows
+ created by <literal>GROUP BY</literal>. Each column referenced in
+ <replaceable class="parameter">condition</replaceable> must
+ unambiguously reference a grouping column, unless the reference
+ appears within an aggregate function or the ungrouped column is
+ functionally dependent on the grouping columns.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The presence of <literal>HAVING</literal> turns a query into a grouped
+ query even if there is no <literal>GROUP BY</literal> clause. This is the
+ same as what happens when the query contains aggregate functions but
+ no <literal>GROUP BY</literal> clause. All the selected rows are considered to
+ form a single group, and the <command>SELECT</command> list and
+ <literal>HAVING</literal> clause can only reference table columns from
+ within aggregate functions. Such a query will emit a single row if the
+ <literal>HAVING</literal> condition is true, zero rows if it is not true.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Currently, <literal>FOR NO KEY UPDATE</literal>, <literal>FOR UPDATE</literal>,
+ <literal>FOR SHARE</literal> and <literal>FOR KEY SHARE</literal> cannot be
+ specified with <literal>HAVING</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2 id="sql-window" xreflabel="WINDOW Clause">
+ <title><literal>WINDOW</literal> Clause</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The optional <literal>WINDOW</literal> clause has the general form
+<synopsis>
+WINDOW <replaceable class="parameter">window_name</replaceable> AS ( <replaceable class="parameter">window_definition</replaceable> ) [, ...]
+</synopsis>
+ where <replaceable class="parameter">window_name</replaceable> is
+ a name that can be referenced from <literal>OVER</literal> clauses or
+ subsequent window definitions, and
+ <replaceable class="parameter">window_definition</replaceable> is
+<synopsis>
+[ <replaceable class="parameter">existing_window_name</replaceable> ]
+[ PARTITION BY <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> [, ...] ]
+[ ORDER BY <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> [ ASC | DESC | USING <replaceable class="parameter">operator</replaceable> ] [ NULLS { FIRST | LAST } ] [, ...] ]
+[ <replaceable class="parameter">frame_clause</replaceable> ]
+</synopsis>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If an <replaceable class="parameter">existing_window_name</replaceable>
+ is specified it must refer to an earlier entry in the <literal>WINDOW</literal>
+ list; the new window copies its partitioning clause from that entry,
+ as well as its ordering clause if any. In this case the new window cannot
+ specify its own <literal>PARTITION BY</literal> clause, and it can specify
+ <literal>ORDER BY</literal> only if the copied window does not have one.
+ The new window always uses its own frame clause; the copied window
+ must not specify a frame clause.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The elements of the <literal>PARTITION BY</literal> list are interpreted in
+ much the same fashion as elements of a <link
+ linkend="sql-groupby"><literal>GROUP BY</literal></link> clause, except that
+ they are always simple expressions and never the name or number of an
+ output column.
+ Another difference is that these expressions can contain aggregate
+ function calls, which are not allowed in a regular <literal>GROUP BY</literal>
+ clause. They are allowed here because windowing occurs after grouping
+ and aggregation.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Similarly, the elements of the <literal>ORDER BY</literal> list are interpreted
+ in much the same fashion as elements of a statement-level <link
+ linkend="sql-orderby"><literal>ORDER BY</literal></link> clause, except that
+ the expressions are always taken as simple expressions and never the name
+ or number of an output column.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The optional <replaceable class="parameter">frame_clause</replaceable> defines
+ the <firstterm>window frame</firstterm> for window functions that depend on the
+ frame (not all do). The window frame is a set of related rows for
+ each row of the query (called the <firstterm>current row</firstterm>).
+ The <replaceable class="parameter">frame_clause</replaceable> can be one of
+
+<synopsis>
+{ RANGE | ROWS | GROUPS } <replaceable>frame_start</replaceable> [ <replaceable>frame_exclusion</replaceable> ]
+{ RANGE | ROWS | GROUPS } BETWEEN <replaceable>frame_start</replaceable> AND <replaceable>frame_end</replaceable> [ <replaceable>frame_exclusion</replaceable> ]
+</synopsis>
+
+ where <replaceable>frame_start</replaceable>
+ and <replaceable>frame_end</replaceable> can be one of
+
+<synopsis>
+UNBOUNDED PRECEDING
+<replaceable>offset</replaceable> PRECEDING
+CURRENT ROW
+<replaceable>offset</replaceable> FOLLOWING
+UNBOUNDED FOLLOWING
+</synopsis>
+
+ and <replaceable>frame_exclusion</replaceable> can be one of
+
+<synopsis>
+EXCLUDE CURRENT ROW
+EXCLUDE GROUP
+EXCLUDE TIES
+EXCLUDE NO OTHERS
+</synopsis>
+
+ If <replaceable>frame_end</replaceable> is omitted it defaults to <literal>CURRENT
+ ROW</literal>. Restrictions are that
+ <replaceable>frame_start</replaceable> cannot be <literal>UNBOUNDED FOLLOWING</literal>,
+ <replaceable>frame_end</replaceable> cannot be <literal>UNBOUNDED PRECEDING</literal>,
+ and the <replaceable>frame_end</replaceable> choice cannot appear earlier in the
+ above list of <replaceable>frame_start</replaceable>
+ and <replaceable>frame_end</replaceable> options than
+ the <replaceable>frame_start</replaceable> choice does &mdash; for example
+ <literal>RANGE BETWEEN CURRENT ROW AND <replaceable>offset</replaceable>
+ PRECEDING</literal> is not allowed.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The default framing option is <literal>RANGE UNBOUNDED PRECEDING</literal>,
+ which is the same as <literal>RANGE BETWEEN UNBOUNDED PRECEDING AND
+ CURRENT ROW</literal>; it sets the frame to be all rows from the partition start
+ up through the current row's last <firstterm>peer</firstterm> (a row
+ that the window's <literal>ORDER BY</literal> clause considers
+ equivalent to the current row; all rows are peers if there
+ is no <literal>ORDER BY</literal>).
+ In general, <literal>UNBOUNDED PRECEDING</literal> means that the frame
+ starts with the first row of the partition, and similarly
+ <literal>UNBOUNDED FOLLOWING</literal> means that the frame ends with the last
+ row of the partition, regardless
+ of <literal>RANGE</literal>, <literal>ROWS</literal>
+ or <literal>GROUPS</literal> mode.
+ In <literal>ROWS</literal> mode, <literal>CURRENT ROW</literal> means
+ that the frame starts or ends with the current row; but
+ in <literal>RANGE</literal> or <literal>GROUPS</literal> mode it means
+ that the frame starts or ends with the current row's first or last peer
+ in the <literal>ORDER BY</literal> ordering.
+ The <replaceable>offset</replaceable> <literal>PRECEDING</literal> and
+ <replaceable>offset</replaceable> <literal>FOLLOWING</literal> options
+ vary in meaning depending on the frame mode.
+ In <literal>ROWS</literal> mode, the <replaceable>offset</replaceable>
+ is an integer indicating that the frame starts or ends that many rows
+ before or after the current row.
+ In <literal>GROUPS</literal> mode, the <replaceable>offset</replaceable>
+ is an integer indicating that the frame starts or ends that many peer
+ groups before or after the current row's peer group, where
+ a <firstterm>peer group</firstterm> is a group of rows that are
+ equivalent according to the window's <literal>ORDER BY</literal> clause.
+ In <literal>RANGE</literal> mode, use of
+ an <replaceable>offset</replaceable> option requires that there be
+ exactly one <literal>ORDER BY</literal> column in the window definition.
+ Then the frame contains those rows whose ordering column value is no
+ more than <replaceable>offset</replaceable> less than
+ (for <literal>PRECEDING</literal>) or more than
+ (for <literal>FOLLOWING</literal>) the current row's ordering column
+ value. In these cases the data type of
+ the <replaceable>offset</replaceable> expression depends on the data
+ type of the ordering column. For numeric ordering columns it is
+ typically of the same type as the ordering column, but for datetime
+ ordering columns it is an <type>interval</type>.
+ In all these cases, the value of the <replaceable>offset</replaceable>
+ must be non-null and non-negative. Also, while
+ the <replaceable>offset</replaceable> does not have to be a simple
+ constant, it cannot contain variables, aggregate functions, or window
+ functions.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <replaceable>frame_exclusion</replaceable> option allows rows around
+ the current row to be excluded from the frame, even if they would be
+ included according to the frame start and frame end options.
+ <literal>EXCLUDE CURRENT ROW</literal> excludes the current row from the
+ frame.
+ <literal>EXCLUDE GROUP</literal> excludes the current row and its
+ ordering peers from the frame.
+ <literal>EXCLUDE TIES</literal> excludes any peers of the current
+ row from the frame, but not the current row itself.
+ <literal>EXCLUDE NO OTHERS</literal> simply specifies explicitly the
+ default behavior of not excluding the current row or its peers.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Beware that the <literal>ROWS</literal> mode can produce unpredictable
+ results if the <literal>ORDER BY</literal> ordering does not order the rows
+ uniquely. The <literal>RANGE</literal> and <literal>GROUPS</literal>
+ modes are designed to ensure that rows that are peers in
+ the <literal>ORDER BY</literal> ordering are treated alike: all rows of
+ a given peer group will be in the frame or excluded from it.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The purpose of a <literal>WINDOW</literal> clause is to specify the
+ behavior of <firstterm>window functions</firstterm> appearing in the query's
+ <link linkend="sql-select-list"><command>SELECT</command> list</link> or
+ <link linkend="sql-orderby"><literal>ORDER BY</literal></link> clause.
+ These functions
+ can reference the <literal>WINDOW</literal> clause entries by name
+ in their <literal>OVER</literal> clauses. A <literal>WINDOW</literal> clause
+ entry does not have to be referenced anywhere, however; if it is not
+ used in the query it is simply ignored. It is possible to use window
+ functions without any <literal>WINDOW</literal> clause at all, since
+ a window function call can specify its window definition directly in
+ its <literal>OVER</literal> clause. However, the <literal>WINDOW</literal>
+ clause saves typing when the same window definition is needed for more
+ than one window function.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Currently, <literal>FOR NO KEY UPDATE</literal>, <literal>FOR UPDATE</literal>,
+ <literal>FOR SHARE</literal> and <literal>FOR KEY SHARE</literal> cannot be
+ specified with <literal>WINDOW</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Window functions are described in detail in
+ <xref linkend="tutorial-window"/>,
+ <xref linkend="syntax-window-functions"/>, and
+ <xref linkend="queries-window"/>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2 id="sql-select-list" xreflabel="SELECT List">
+ <title><command>SELECT</command> List</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>SELECT</command> list (between the key words
+ <literal>SELECT</literal> and <literal>FROM</literal>) specifies expressions
+ that form the output rows of the <command>SELECT</command>
+ statement. The expressions can (and usually do) refer to columns
+ computed in the <literal>FROM</literal> clause.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Just as in a table, every output column of a <command>SELECT</command>
+ has a name. In a simple <command>SELECT</command> this name is just
+ used to label the column for display, but when the <command>SELECT</command>
+ is a sub-query of a larger query, the name is seen by the larger query
+ as the column name of the virtual table produced by the sub-query.
+ To specify the name to use for an output column, write
+ <literal>AS</literal> <replaceable class="parameter">output_name</replaceable>
+ after the column's expression. (You can omit <literal>AS</literal>,
+ but only if the desired output name does not match any
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> keyword (see <xref
+ linkend="sql-keywords-appendix"/>). For protection against possible
+ future keyword additions, it is recommended that you always either
+ write <literal>AS</literal> or double-quote the output name.)
+ If you do not specify a column name, a name is chosen automatically
+ by <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>. If the column's expression
+ is a simple column reference then the chosen name is the same as that
+ column's name. In more complex cases a function or type name may be
+ used, or the system may fall back on a generated name such as
+ <literal>?column?</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ An output column's name can be used to refer to the column's value in
+ <literal>ORDER BY</literal> and <literal>GROUP BY</literal> clauses, but not in the
+ <literal>WHERE</literal> or <literal>HAVING</literal> clauses; there you must write
+ out the expression instead.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Instead of an expression, <literal>*</literal> can be written in
+ the output list as a shorthand for all the columns of the selected
+ rows. Also, you can write <literal><replaceable
+ class="parameter">table_name</replaceable>.*</literal> as a
+ shorthand for the columns coming from just that table. In these
+ cases it is not possible to specify new names with <literal>AS</literal>;
+ the output column names will be the same as the table columns' names.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ According to the SQL standard, the expressions in the output list should
+ be computed before applying <literal>DISTINCT</literal>, <literal>ORDER
+ BY</literal>, or <literal>LIMIT</literal>. This is obviously necessary
+ when using <literal>DISTINCT</literal>, since otherwise it's not clear
+ what values are being made distinct. However, in many cases it is
+ convenient if output expressions are computed after <literal>ORDER
+ BY</literal> and <literal>LIMIT</literal>; particularly if the output list
+ contains any volatile or expensive functions. With that behavior, the
+ order of function evaluations is more intuitive and there will not be
+ evaluations corresponding to rows that never appear in the output.
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> will effectively evaluate output expressions
+ after sorting and limiting, so long as those expressions are not
+ referenced in <literal>DISTINCT</literal>, <literal>ORDER BY</literal>
+ or <literal>GROUP BY</literal>. (As a counterexample, <literal>SELECT
+ f(x) FROM tab ORDER BY 1</literal> clearly must evaluate <function>f(x)</function>
+ before sorting.) Output expressions that contain set-returning functions
+ are effectively evaluated after sorting and before limiting, so
+ that <literal>LIMIT</literal> will act to cut off the output from a
+ set-returning function.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> versions before 9.6 did not provide any
+ guarantees about the timing of evaluation of output expressions versus
+ sorting and limiting; it depended on the form of the chosen query plan.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2 id="sql-distinct" xreflabel="DISTINCT Clause">
+ <title><literal>DISTINCT</literal> Clause</title>
+
+ <para>
+ If <literal>SELECT DISTINCT</literal> is specified, all duplicate rows are
+ removed from the result set (one row is kept from each group of
+ duplicates). <literal>SELECT ALL</literal> specifies the opposite: all rows are
+ kept; that is the default.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <literal>SELECT DISTINCT ON ( <replaceable
+ class="parameter">expression</replaceable> [, ...] )</literal>
+ keeps only the first row of each set of rows where the given
+ expressions evaluate to equal. The <literal>DISTINCT ON</literal>
+ expressions are interpreted using the same rules as for
+ <literal>ORDER BY</literal> (see above). Note that the <quote>first
+ row</quote> of each set is unpredictable unless <literal>ORDER
+ BY</literal> is used to ensure that the desired row appears first. For
+ example:
+<programlisting>
+SELECT DISTINCT ON (location) location, time, report
+ FROM weather_reports
+ ORDER BY location, time DESC;
+</programlisting>
+ retrieves the most recent weather report for each location. But
+ if we had not used <literal>ORDER BY</literal> to force descending order
+ of time values for each location, we'd have gotten a report from
+ an unpredictable time for each location.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>DISTINCT ON</literal> expression(s) must match the leftmost
+ <literal>ORDER BY</literal> expression(s). The <literal>ORDER BY</literal> clause
+ will normally contain additional expression(s) that determine the
+ desired precedence of rows within each <literal>DISTINCT ON</literal> group.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Currently, <literal>FOR NO KEY UPDATE</literal>, <literal>FOR UPDATE</literal>,
+ <literal>FOR SHARE</literal> and <literal>FOR KEY SHARE</literal> cannot be
+ specified with <literal>DISTINCT</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2 id="sql-union" xreflabel="UNION Clause">
+ <title><literal>UNION</literal> Clause</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>UNION</literal> clause has this general form:
+<synopsis>
+<replaceable class="parameter">select_statement</replaceable> UNION [ ALL | DISTINCT ] <replaceable class="parameter">select_statement</replaceable>
+</synopsis><replaceable class="parameter">select_statement</replaceable> is
+ any <command>SELECT</command> statement without an <literal>ORDER
+ BY</literal>, <literal>LIMIT</literal>, <literal>FOR NO KEY UPDATE</literal>, <literal>FOR UPDATE</literal>,
+ <literal>FOR SHARE</literal>, or <literal>FOR KEY SHARE</literal> clause.
+ (<literal>ORDER BY</literal> and <literal>LIMIT</literal> can be attached to a
+ subexpression if it is enclosed in parentheses. Without
+ parentheses, these clauses will be taken to apply to the result of
+ the <literal>UNION</literal>, not to its right-hand input
+ expression.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>UNION</literal> operator computes the set union of
+ the rows returned by the involved <command>SELECT</command>
+ statements. A row is in the set union of two result sets if it
+ appears in at least one of the result sets. The two
+ <command>SELECT</command> statements that represent the direct
+ operands of the <literal>UNION</literal> must produce the same
+ number of columns, and corresponding columns must be of compatible
+ data types.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The result of <literal>UNION</literal> does not contain any duplicate
+ rows unless the <literal>ALL</literal> option is specified.
+ <literal>ALL</literal> prevents elimination of duplicates. (Therefore,
+ <literal>UNION ALL</literal> is usually significantly quicker than
+ <literal>UNION</literal>; use <literal>ALL</literal> when you can.)
+ <literal>DISTINCT</literal> can be written to explicitly specify the
+ default behavior of eliminating duplicate rows.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Multiple <literal>UNION</literal> operators in the same
+ <command>SELECT</command> statement are evaluated left to right,
+ unless otherwise indicated by parentheses.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Currently, <literal>FOR NO KEY UPDATE</literal>, <literal>FOR UPDATE</literal>, <literal>FOR SHARE</literal> and
+ <literal>FOR KEY SHARE</literal> cannot be
+ specified either for a <literal>UNION</literal> result or for any input of a
+ <literal>UNION</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2 id="sql-intersect" xreflabel="INTERSECT Clause">
+ <title><literal>INTERSECT</literal> Clause</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>INTERSECT</literal> clause has this general form:
+<synopsis>
+<replaceable class="parameter">select_statement</replaceable> INTERSECT [ ALL | DISTINCT ] <replaceable class="parameter">select_statement</replaceable>
+</synopsis><replaceable class="parameter">select_statement</replaceable> is
+ any <command>SELECT</command> statement without an <literal>ORDER
+ BY</literal>, <literal>LIMIT</literal>, <literal>FOR NO KEY UPDATE</literal>, <literal>FOR UPDATE</literal>,
+ <literal>FOR SHARE</literal>, or <literal>FOR KEY SHARE</literal> clause.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>INTERSECT</literal> operator computes the set
+ intersection of the rows returned by the involved
+ <command>SELECT</command> statements. A row is in the
+ intersection of two result sets if it appears in both result sets.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The result of <literal>INTERSECT</literal> does not contain any
+ duplicate rows unless the <literal>ALL</literal> option is specified.
+ With <literal>ALL</literal>, a row that has <replaceable>m</replaceable> duplicates in the
+ left table and <replaceable>n</replaceable> duplicates in the right table will appear
+ min(<replaceable>m</replaceable>,<replaceable>n</replaceable>) times in the result set.
+ <literal>DISTINCT</literal> can be written to explicitly specify the
+ default behavior of eliminating duplicate rows.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Multiple <literal>INTERSECT</literal> operators in the same
+ <command>SELECT</command> statement are evaluated left to right,
+ unless parentheses dictate otherwise.
+ <literal>INTERSECT</literal> binds more tightly than
+ <literal>UNION</literal>. That is, <literal>A UNION B INTERSECT
+ C</literal> will be read as <literal>A UNION (B INTERSECT
+ C)</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Currently, <literal>FOR NO KEY UPDATE</literal>, <literal>FOR UPDATE</literal>, <literal>FOR SHARE</literal> and
+ <literal>FOR KEY SHARE</literal> cannot be
+ specified either for an <literal>INTERSECT</literal> result or for any input of
+ an <literal>INTERSECT</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2 id="sql-except" xreflabel="EXCEPT Clause">
+ <title><literal>EXCEPT</literal> Clause</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>EXCEPT</literal> clause has this general form:
+<synopsis>
+<replaceable class="parameter">select_statement</replaceable> EXCEPT [ ALL | DISTINCT ] <replaceable class="parameter">select_statement</replaceable>
+</synopsis><replaceable class="parameter">select_statement</replaceable> is
+ any <command>SELECT</command> statement without an <literal>ORDER
+ BY</literal>, <literal>LIMIT</literal>, <literal>FOR NO KEY UPDATE</literal>, <literal>FOR UPDATE</literal>,
+ <literal>FOR SHARE</literal>, or <literal>FOR KEY SHARE</literal> clause.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>EXCEPT</literal> operator computes the set of rows
+ that are in the result of the left <command>SELECT</command>
+ statement but not in the result of the right one.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The result of <literal>EXCEPT</literal> does not contain any
+ duplicate rows unless the <literal>ALL</literal> option is specified.
+ With <literal>ALL</literal>, a row that has <replaceable>m</replaceable> duplicates in the
+ left table and <replaceable>n</replaceable> duplicates in the right table will appear
+ max(<replaceable>m</replaceable>-<replaceable>n</replaceable>,0) times in the result set.
+ <literal>DISTINCT</literal> can be written to explicitly specify the
+ default behavior of eliminating duplicate rows.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Multiple <literal>EXCEPT</literal> operators in the same
+ <command>SELECT</command> statement are evaluated left to right,
+ unless parentheses dictate otherwise. <literal>EXCEPT</literal> binds at
+ the same level as <literal>UNION</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Currently, <literal>FOR NO KEY UPDATE</literal>, <literal>FOR UPDATE</literal>, <literal>FOR SHARE</literal> and
+ <literal>FOR KEY SHARE</literal> cannot be
+ specified either for an <literal>EXCEPT</literal> result or for any input of
+ an <literal>EXCEPT</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2 id="sql-orderby" xreflabel="ORDER BY Clause">
+ <title><literal>ORDER BY</literal> Clause</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The optional <literal>ORDER BY</literal> clause has this general form:
+<synopsis>
+ORDER BY <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> [ ASC | DESC | USING <replaceable class="parameter">operator</replaceable> ] [ NULLS { FIRST | LAST } ] [, ...]
+</synopsis>
+ The <literal>ORDER BY</literal> clause causes the result rows to
+ be sorted according to the specified expression(s). If two rows are
+ equal according to the leftmost expression, they are compared
+ according to the next expression and so on. If they are equal
+ according to all specified expressions, they are returned in
+ an implementation-dependent order.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Each <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> can be the
+ name or ordinal number of an output column
+ (<command>SELECT</command> list item), or it can be an arbitrary
+ expression formed from input-column values.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The ordinal number refers to the ordinal (left-to-right) position
+ of the output column. This feature makes it possible to define an
+ ordering on the basis of a column that does not have a unique
+ name. This is never absolutely necessary because it is always
+ possible to assign a name to an output column using the
+ <literal>AS</literal> clause.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ It is also possible to use arbitrary expressions in the
+ <literal>ORDER BY</literal> clause, including columns that do not
+ appear in the <command>SELECT</command> output list. Thus the
+ following statement is valid:
+<programlisting>
+SELECT name FROM distributors ORDER BY code;
+</programlisting>
+ A limitation of this feature is that an <literal>ORDER BY</literal>
+ clause applying to the result of a <literal>UNION</literal>,
+ <literal>INTERSECT</literal>, or <literal>EXCEPT</literal> clause can only
+ specify an output column name or number, not an expression.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If an <literal>ORDER BY</literal> expression is a simple name that
+ matches both an output column name and an input column name,
+ <literal>ORDER BY</literal> will interpret it as the output column name.
+ This is the opposite of the choice that <literal>GROUP BY</literal> will
+ make in the same situation. This inconsistency is made to be
+ compatible with the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Optionally one can add the key word <literal>ASC</literal> (ascending) or
+ <literal>DESC</literal> (descending) after any expression in the
+ <literal>ORDER BY</literal> clause. If not specified, <literal>ASC</literal> is
+ assumed by default. Alternatively, a specific ordering operator
+ name can be specified in the <literal>USING</literal> clause.
+ An ordering operator must be a less-than or greater-than
+ member of some B-tree operator family.
+ <literal>ASC</literal> is usually equivalent to <literal>USING &lt;</literal> and
+ <literal>DESC</literal> is usually equivalent to <literal>USING &gt;</literal>.
+ (But the creator of a user-defined data type can define exactly what the
+ default sort ordering is, and it might correspond to operators with other
+ names.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If <literal>NULLS LAST</literal> is specified, null values sort after all
+ non-null values; if <literal>NULLS FIRST</literal> is specified, null values
+ sort before all non-null values. If neither is specified, the default
+ behavior is <literal>NULLS LAST</literal> when <literal>ASC</literal> is specified
+ or implied, and <literal>NULLS FIRST</literal> when <literal>DESC</literal> is specified
+ (thus, the default is to act as though nulls are larger than non-nulls).
+ When <literal>USING</literal> is specified, the default nulls ordering depends
+ on whether the operator is a less-than or greater-than operator.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Note that ordering options apply only to the expression they follow;
+ for example <literal>ORDER BY x, y DESC</literal> does not mean
+ the same thing as <literal>ORDER BY x DESC, y DESC</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Character-string data is sorted according to the collation that applies
+ to the column being sorted. That can be overridden at need by including
+ a <literal>COLLATE</literal> clause in the
+ <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable>, for example
+ <literal>ORDER BY mycolumn COLLATE "en_US"</literal>.
+ For more information see <xref linkend="sql-syntax-collate-exprs"/> and
+ <xref linkend="collation"/>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2 id="sql-limit" xreflabel="LIMIT Clause">
+ <title><literal>LIMIT</literal> Clause</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>LIMIT</literal> clause consists of two independent
+ sub-clauses:
+<synopsis>
+LIMIT { <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable> | ALL }
+OFFSET <replaceable class="parameter">start</replaceable>
+</synopsis>
+ The parameter <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable> specifies the
+ maximum number of rows to return, while <replaceable
+ class="parameter">start</replaceable> specifies the number of rows
+ to skip before starting to return rows. When both are specified,
+ <replaceable class="parameter">start</replaceable> rows are skipped
+ before starting to count the <replaceable
+ class="parameter">count</replaceable> rows to be returned.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable> expression
+ evaluates to NULL, it is treated as <literal>LIMIT ALL</literal>, i.e., no
+ limit. If <replaceable class="parameter">start</replaceable> evaluates
+ to NULL, it is treated the same as <literal>OFFSET 0</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ SQL:2008 introduced a different syntax to achieve the same result,
+ which <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> also supports. It is:
+<synopsis>
+OFFSET <replaceable class="parameter">start</replaceable> { ROW | ROWS }
+FETCH { FIRST | NEXT } [ <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable> ] { ROW | ROWS } { ONLY | WITH TIES }
+</synopsis>
+ In this syntax, the <replaceable class="parameter">start</replaceable>
+ or <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable> value is required by
+ the standard to be a literal constant, a parameter, or a variable name;
+ as a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension, other expressions
+ are allowed, but will generally need to be enclosed in parentheses to avoid
+ ambiguity.
+ If <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable> is
+ omitted in a <literal>FETCH</literal> clause, it defaults to 1.
+ The <literal>WITH TIES</literal> option is used to return any additional
+ rows that tie for the last place in the result set according to
+ the <literal>ORDER BY</literal> clause; <literal>ORDER BY</literal>
+ is mandatory in this case, and <literal>SKIP LOCKED</literal> is
+ not allowed.
+ <literal>ROW</literal> and <literal>ROWS</literal> as well as
+ <literal>FIRST</literal> and <literal>NEXT</literal> are noise
+ words that don't influence the effects of these clauses.
+ According to the standard, the <literal>OFFSET</literal> clause must come
+ before the <literal>FETCH</literal> clause if both are present; but
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> is laxer and allows either order.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When using <literal>LIMIT</literal>, it is a good idea to use an
+ <literal>ORDER BY</literal> clause that constrains the result rows into a
+ unique order. Otherwise you will get an unpredictable subset of
+ the query's rows &mdash; you might be asking for the tenth through
+ twentieth rows, but tenth through twentieth in what ordering? You
+ don't know what ordering unless you specify <literal>ORDER BY</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The query planner takes <literal>LIMIT</literal> into account when
+ generating a query plan, so you are very likely to get different
+ plans (yielding different row orders) depending on what you use
+ for <literal>LIMIT</literal> and <literal>OFFSET</literal>. Thus, using
+ different <literal>LIMIT</literal>/<literal>OFFSET</literal> values to select
+ different subsets of a query result <emphasis>will give
+ inconsistent results</emphasis> unless you enforce a predictable
+ result ordering with <literal>ORDER BY</literal>. This is not a bug; it
+ is an inherent consequence of the fact that SQL does not promise
+ to deliver the results of a query in any particular order unless
+ <literal>ORDER BY</literal> is used to constrain the order.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ It is even possible for repeated executions of the same <literal>LIMIT</literal>
+ query to return different subsets of the rows of a table, if there
+ is not an <literal>ORDER BY</literal> to enforce selection of a deterministic
+ subset. Again, this is not a bug; determinism of the results is
+ simply not guaranteed in such a case.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2 id="sql-for-update-share" xreflabel="The Locking Clause">
+ <title>The Locking Clause</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <literal>FOR UPDATE</literal>, <literal>FOR NO KEY UPDATE</literal>, <literal>FOR SHARE</literal>
+ and <literal>FOR KEY SHARE</literal>
+ are <firstterm>locking clauses</firstterm>; they affect how <literal>SELECT</literal>
+ locks rows as they are obtained from the table.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The locking clause has the general form
+
+<synopsis>
+FOR <replaceable>lock_strength</replaceable> [ OF <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [, ...] ] [ NOWAIT | SKIP LOCKED ]
+</synopsis>
+
+ where <replaceable>lock_strength</replaceable> can be one of
+
+<synopsis>
+UPDATE
+NO KEY UPDATE
+SHARE
+KEY SHARE
+</synopsis>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For more information on each row-level lock mode, refer to
+ <xref linkend="locking-rows"/>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To prevent the operation from waiting for other transactions to commit,
+ use either the <literal>NOWAIT</literal> or <literal>SKIP LOCKED</literal>
+ option. With <literal>NOWAIT</literal>, the statement reports an error, rather
+ than waiting, if a selected row cannot be locked immediately.
+ With <literal>SKIP LOCKED</literal>, any selected rows that cannot be
+ immediately locked are skipped. Skipping locked rows provides an
+ inconsistent view of the data, so this is not suitable for general purpose
+ work, but can be used to avoid lock contention with multiple consumers
+ accessing a queue-like table.
+ Note that <literal>NOWAIT</literal> and <literal>SKIP LOCKED</literal> apply only
+ to the row-level lock(s) &mdash; the required <literal>ROW SHARE</literal>
+ table-level lock is still taken in the ordinary way (see
+ <xref linkend="mvcc"/>). You can use
+ <link linkend="sql-lock"><command>LOCK</command></link>
+ with the <literal>NOWAIT</literal> option first,
+ if you need to acquire the table-level lock without waiting.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If specific tables are named in a locking clause,
+ then only rows coming from those tables are locked; any other
+ tables used in the <command>SELECT</command> are simply read as
+ usual. A locking
+ clause without a table list affects all tables used in the statement.
+ If a locking clause is
+ applied to a view or sub-query, it affects all tables used in
+ the view or sub-query.
+ However, these clauses
+ do not apply to <literal>WITH</literal> queries referenced by the primary query.
+ If you want row locking to occur within a <literal>WITH</literal> query, specify
+ a locking clause within the <literal>WITH</literal> query.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Multiple locking
+ clauses can be written if it is necessary to specify different locking
+ behavior for different tables. If the same table is mentioned (or
+ implicitly affected) by more than one locking clause,
+ then it is processed as if it was only specified by the strongest one.
+ Similarly, a table is processed
+ as <literal>NOWAIT</literal> if that is specified in any of the clauses
+ affecting it. Otherwise, it is processed
+ as <literal>SKIP LOCKED</literal> if that is specified in any of the
+ clauses affecting it.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The locking clauses cannot be
+ used in contexts where returned rows cannot be clearly identified with
+ individual table rows; for example they cannot be used with aggregation.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When a locking clause
+ appears at the top level of a <command>SELECT</command> query, the rows that
+ are locked are exactly those that are returned by the query; in the
+ case of a join query, the rows locked are those that contribute to
+ returned join rows. In addition, rows that satisfied the query
+ conditions as of the query snapshot will be locked, although they
+ will not be returned if they were updated after the snapshot
+ and no longer satisfy the query conditions. If a
+ <literal>LIMIT</literal> is used, locking stops
+ once enough rows have been returned to satisfy the limit (but note that
+ rows skipped over by <literal>OFFSET</literal> will get locked). Similarly,
+ if a locking clause
+ is used in a cursor's query, only rows actually fetched or stepped past
+ by the cursor will be locked.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When a locking clause
+ appears in a sub-<command>SELECT</command>, the rows locked are those
+ returned to the outer query by the sub-query. This might involve
+ fewer rows than inspection of the sub-query alone would suggest,
+ since conditions from the outer query might be used to optimize
+ execution of the sub-query. For example,
+<programlisting>
+SELECT * FROM (SELECT * FROM mytable FOR UPDATE) ss WHERE col1 = 5;
+</programlisting>
+ will lock only rows having <literal>col1 = 5</literal>, even though that
+ condition is not textually within the sub-query.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Previous releases failed to preserve a lock which is upgraded by a later
+ savepoint. For example, this code:
+<programlisting>
+BEGIN;
+SELECT * FROM mytable WHERE key = 1 FOR UPDATE;
+SAVEPOINT s;
+UPDATE mytable SET ... WHERE key = 1;
+ROLLBACK TO s;
+</programlisting>
+ would fail to preserve the <literal>FOR UPDATE</literal> lock after the
+ <command>ROLLBACK TO</command>. This has been fixed in release 9.3.
+ </para>
+
+ <caution>
+ <para>
+ It is possible for a <command>SELECT</command> command running at the <literal>READ
+ COMMITTED</literal> transaction isolation level and using <literal>ORDER
+ BY</literal> and a locking clause to return rows out of
+ order. This is because <literal>ORDER BY</literal> is applied first.
+ The command sorts the result, but might then block trying to obtain a lock
+ on one or more of the rows. Once the <literal>SELECT</literal> unblocks, some
+ of the ordering column values might have been modified, leading to those
+ rows appearing to be out of order (though they are in order in terms
+ of the original column values). This can be worked around at need by
+ placing the <literal>FOR UPDATE/SHARE</literal> clause in a sub-query,
+ for example
+<programlisting>
+SELECT * FROM (SELECT * FROM mytable FOR UPDATE) ss ORDER BY column1;
+</programlisting>
+ Note that this will result in locking all rows of <structname>mytable</structname>,
+ whereas <literal>FOR UPDATE</literal> at the top level would lock only the
+ actually returned rows. This can make for a significant performance
+ difference, particularly if the <literal>ORDER BY</literal> is combined with
+ <literal>LIMIT</literal> or other restrictions. So this technique is recommended
+ only if concurrent updates of the ordering columns are expected and a
+ strictly sorted result is required.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ At the <literal>REPEATABLE READ</literal> or <literal>SERIALIZABLE</literal>
+ transaction isolation level this would cause a serialization failure (with
+ a <literal>SQLSTATE</literal> of <literal>'40001'</literal>), so there is
+ no possibility of receiving rows out of order under these isolation levels.
+ </para>
+ </caution>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2 id="sql-table">
+ <title><literal>TABLE</literal> Command</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The command
+<programlisting>
+TABLE <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+</programlisting>
+ is equivalent to
+<programlisting>
+SELECT * FROM <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+</programlisting>
+ It can be used as a top-level command or as a space-saving syntax
+ variant in parts of complex queries. Only the <literal>WITH</literal>,
+ <literal>UNION</literal>, <literal>INTERSECT</literal>, <literal>EXCEPT</literal>,
+ <literal>ORDER BY</literal>, <literal>LIMIT</literal>, <literal>OFFSET</literal>,
+ <literal>FETCH</literal> and <literal>FOR</literal> locking clauses can be used
+ with <command>TABLE</command>; the <literal>WHERE</literal> clause and any form of
+ aggregation cannot
+ be used.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To join the table <literal>films</literal> with the table
+ <literal>distributors</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+SELECT f.title, f.did, d.name, f.date_prod, f.kind
+ FROM distributors d, films f
+ WHERE f.did = d.did
+
+ title | did | name | date_prod | kind
+-------------------+-----+--------------+------------+----------
+ The Third Man | 101 | British Lion | 1949-12-23 | Drama
+ The African Queen | 101 | British Lion | 1951-08-11 | Romantic
+ ...
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To sum the column <literal>len</literal> of all films and group
+ the results by <literal>kind</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+SELECT kind, sum(len) AS total FROM films GROUP BY kind;
+
+ kind | total
+----------+-------
+ Action | 07:34
+ Comedy | 02:58
+ Drama | 14:28
+ Musical | 06:42
+ Romantic | 04:38
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To sum the column <literal>len</literal> of all films, group
+ the results by <literal>kind</literal> and show those group totals
+ that are less than 5 hours:
+
+<programlisting>
+SELECT kind, sum(len) AS total
+ FROM films
+ GROUP BY kind
+ HAVING sum(len) &lt; interval '5 hours';
+
+ kind | total
+----------+-------
+ Comedy | 02:58
+ Romantic | 04:38
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The following two examples are identical ways of sorting the individual
+ results according to the contents of the second column
+ (<literal>name</literal>):
+
+<programlisting>
+SELECT * FROM distributors ORDER BY name;
+SELECT * FROM distributors ORDER BY 2;
+
+ did | name
+-----+------------------
+ 109 | 20th Century Fox
+ 110 | Bavaria Atelier
+ 101 | British Lion
+ 107 | Columbia
+ 102 | Jean Luc Godard
+ 113 | Luso films
+ 104 | Mosfilm
+ 103 | Paramount
+ 106 | Toho
+ 105 | United Artists
+ 111 | Walt Disney
+ 112 | Warner Bros.
+ 108 | Westward
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The next example shows how to obtain the union of the tables
+ <literal>distributors</literal> and
+ <literal>actors</literal>, restricting the results to those that begin
+ with the letter W in each table. Only distinct rows are wanted, so the
+ key word <literal>ALL</literal> is omitted.
+
+<programlisting>
+distributors: actors:
+ did | name id | name
+-----+-------------- ----+----------------
+ 108 | Westward 1 | Woody Allen
+ 111 | Walt Disney 2 | Warren Beatty
+ 112 | Warner Bros. 3 | Walter Matthau
+ ... ...
+
+SELECT distributors.name
+ FROM distributors
+ WHERE distributors.name LIKE 'W%'
+UNION
+SELECT actors.name
+ FROM actors
+ WHERE actors.name LIKE 'W%';
+
+ name
+----------------
+ Walt Disney
+ Walter Matthau
+ Warner Bros.
+ Warren Beatty
+ Westward
+ Woody Allen
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This example shows how to use a function in the <literal>FROM</literal>
+ clause, both with and without a column definition list:
+
+<programlisting>
+CREATE FUNCTION distributors(int) RETURNS SETOF distributors AS $$
+ SELECT * FROM distributors WHERE did = $1;
+$$ LANGUAGE SQL;
+
+SELECT * FROM distributors(111);
+ did | name
+-----+-------------
+ 111 | Walt Disney
+
+CREATE FUNCTION distributors_2(int) RETURNS SETOF record AS $$
+ SELECT * FROM distributors WHERE did = $1;
+$$ LANGUAGE SQL;
+
+SELECT * FROM distributors_2(111) AS (f1 int, f2 text);
+ f1 | f2
+-----+-------------
+ 111 | Walt Disney
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Here is an example of a function with an ordinality column added:
+
+<programlisting>
+SELECT * FROM unnest(ARRAY['a','b','c','d','e','f']) WITH ORDINALITY;
+ unnest | ordinality
+--------+----------
+ a | 1
+ b | 2
+ c | 3
+ d | 4
+ e | 5
+ f | 6
+(6 rows)
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This example shows how to use a simple <literal>WITH</literal> clause:
+
+<programlisting>
+WITH t AS (
+ SELECT random() as x FROM generate_series(1, 3)
+ )
+SELECT * FROM t
+UNION ALL
+SELECT * FROM t
+
+ x
+--------------------
+ 0.534150459803641
+ 0.520092216785997
+ 0.0735620250925422
+ 0.534150459803641
+ 0.520092216785997
+ 0.0735620250925422
+</programlisting>
+
+ Notice that the <literal>WITH</literal> query was evaluated only once,
+ so that we got two sets of the same three random values.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This example uses <literal>WITH RECURSIVE</literal> to find all
+ subordinates (direct or indirect) of the employee Mary, and their
+ level of indirectness, from a table that shows only direct
+ subordinates:
+
+<programlisting>
+WITH RECURSIVE employee_recursive(distance, employee_name, manager_name) AS (
+ SELECT 1, employee_name, manager_name
+ FROM employee
+ WHERE manager_name = 'Mary'
+ UNION ALL
+ SELECT er.distance + 1, e.employee_name, e.manager_name
+ FROM employee_recursive er, employee e
+ WHERE er.employee_name = e.manager_name
+ )
+SELECT distance, employee_name FROM employee_recursive;
+</programlisting>
+
+ Notice the typical form of recursive queries:
+ an initial condition, followed by <literal>UNION</literal>,
+ followed by the recursive part of the query. Be sure that the
+ recursive part of the query will eventually return no tuples, or
+ else the query will loop indefinitely. (See <xref linkend="queries-with"/>
+ for more examples.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This example uses <literal>LATERAL</literal> to apply a set-returning function
+ <function>get_product_names()</function> for each row of the
+ <structname>manufacturers</structname> table:
+
+<programlisting>
+SELECT m.name AS mname, pname
+FROM manufacturers m, LATERAL get_product_names(m.id) pname;
+</programlisting>
+
+ Manufacturers not currently having any products would not appear in the
+ result, since it is an inner join. If we wished to include the names of
+ such manufacturers in the result, we could do:
+
+<programlisting>
+SELECT m.name AS mname, pname
+FROM manufacturers m LEFT JOIN LATERAL get_product_names(m.id) pname ON true;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Of course, the <command>SELECT</command> statement is compatible
+ with the SQL standard. But there are some extensions and some
+ missing features.
+ </para>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Omitted <literal>FROM</literal> Clauses</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> allows one to omit the
+ <literal>FROM</literal> clause. It has a straightforward use to
+ compute the results of simple expressions:
+<programlisting>
+SELECT 2+2;
+
+ ?column?
+----------
+ 4
+</programlisting>
+ Some other <acronym>SQL</acronym> databases cannot do this except
+ by introducing a dummy one-row table from which to do the
+ <command>SELECT</command>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Empty <literal>SELECT</literal> Lists</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The list of output expressions after <literal>SELECT</literal> can be
+ empty, producing a zero-column result table.
+ This is not valid syntax according to the SQL standard.
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> allows it to be consistent with
+ allowing zero-column tables.
+ However, an empty list is not allowed when <literal>DISTINCT</literal> is used.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Omitting the <literal>AS</literal> Key Word</title>
+
+ <para>
+ In the SQL standard, the optional key word <literal>AS</literal> can be
+ omitted before an output column name whenever the new column name
+ is a valid column name (that is, not the same as any reserved
+ keyword). <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> is slightly more
+ restrictive: <literal>AS</literal> is required if the new column name
+ matches any keyword at all, reserved or not. Recommended practice is
+ to use <literal>AS</literal> or double-quote output column names, to prevent
+ any possible conflict against future keyword additions.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In <literal>FROM</literal> items, both the standard and
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> allow <literal>AS</literal> to
+ be omitted before an alias that is an unreserved keyword. But
+ this is impractical for output column names, because of syntactic
+ ambiguities.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title><literal>ONLY</literal> and Inheritance</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The SQL standard requires parentheses around the table name when
+ writing <literal>ONLY</literal>, for example <literal>SELECT * FROM ONLY
+ (tab1), ONLY (tab2) WHERE ...</literal>. <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ considers these parentheses to be optional.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> allows a trailing <literal>*</literal> to be written to
+ explicitly specify the non-<literal>ONLY</literal> behavior of including
+ child tables. The standard does not allow this.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ (These points apply equally to all SQL commands supporting the
+ <literal>ONLY</literal> option.)
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title><literal>TABLESAMPLE</literal> Clause Restrictions</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>TABLESAMPLE</literal> clause is currently accepted only on
+ regular tables and materialized views. According to the SQL standard
+ it should be possible to apply it to any <literal>FROM</literal> item.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Function Calls in <literal>FROM</literal></title>
+
+ <para>
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> allows a function call to be
+ written directly as a member of the <literal>FROM</literal> list. In the SQL
+ standard it would be necessary to wrap such a function call in a
+ sub-<command>SELECT</command>; that is, the syntax
+ <literal>FROM <replaceable>func</replaceable>(...) <replaceable>alias</replaceable></literal>
+ is approximately equivalent to
+ <literal>FROM LATERAL (SELECT <replaceable>func</replaceable>(...)) <replaceable>alias</replaceable></literal>.
+ Note that <literal>LATERAL</literal> is considered to be implicit; this is
+ because the standard requires <literal>LATERAL</literal> semantics for an
+ <literal>UNNEST()</literal> item in <literal>FROM</literal>.
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> treats <literal>UNNEST()</literal> the
+ same as other set-returning functions.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Namespace Available to <literal>GROUP BY</literal> and <literal>ORDER BY</literal></title>
+
+ <para>
+ In the SQL-92 standard, an <literal>ORDER BY</literal> clause can
+ only use output column names or numbers, while a <literal>GROUP
+ BY</literal> clause can only use expressions based on input column
+ names. <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extends each of
+ these clauses to allow the other choice as well (but it uses the
+ standard's interpretation if there is ambiguity).
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> also allows both clauses to
+ specify arbitrary expressions. Note that names appearing in an
+ expression will always be taken as input-column names, not as
+ output-column names.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ SQL:1999 and later use a slightly different definition which is not
+ entirely upward compatible with SQL-92.
+ In most cases, however, <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ will interpret an <literal>ORDER BY</literal> or <literal>GROUP
+ BY</literal> expression the same way SQL:1999 does.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Functional Dependencies</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> recognizes functional dependency
+ (allowing columns to be omitted from <literal>GROUP BY</literal>) only when
+ a table's primary key is included in the <literal>GROUP BY</literal> list.
+ The SQL standard specifies additional conditions that should be
+ recognized.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title><literal>LIMIT</literal> and <literal>OFFSET</literal></title>
+
+ <para>
+ The clauses <literal>LIMIT</literal> and <literal>OFFSET</literal>
+ are <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>-specific syntax, also
+ used by <productname>MySQL</productname>. The SQL:2008 standard
+ has introduced the clauses <literal>OFFSET ... FETCH {FIRST|NEXT}
+ ...</literal> for the same functionality, as shown above
+ in <xref linkend="sql-limit"/>. This
+ syntax is also used by <productname>IBM DB2</productname>.
+ (Applications written for <productname>Oracle</productname>
+ frequently use a workaround involving the automatically
+ generated <literal>rownum</literal> column, which is not available in
+ PostgreSQL, to implement the effects of these clauses.)
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title><literal>FOR NO KEY UPDATE</literal>, <literal>FOR UPDATE</literal>, <literal>FOR SHARE</literal>, <literal>FOR KEY SHARE</literal></title>
+
+ <para>
+ Although <literal>FOR UPDATE</literal> appears in the SQL standard, the
+ standard allows it only as an option of <command>DECLARE CURSOR</command>.
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> allows it in any <command>SELECT</command>
+ query as well as in sub-<command>SELECT</command>s, but this is an extension.
+ The <literal>FOR NO KEY UPDATE</literal>, <literal>FOR SHARE</literal> and
+ <literal>FOR KEY SHARE</literal> variants, as well as the <literal>NOWAIT</literal>
+ and <literal>SKIP LOCKED</literal> options, do not appear in the
+ standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Data-Modifying Statements in <literal>WITH</literal></title>
+
+ <para>
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> allows <command>INSERT</command>,
+ <command>UPDATE</command>, and <command>DELETE</command> to be used as <literal>WITH</literal>
+ queries. This is not found in the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Nonstandard Clauses</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <literal>DISTINCT ON ( ... )</literal> is an extension of the
+ SQL standard.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <literal>ROWS FROM( ... )</literal> is an extension of the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>MATERIALIZED</literal> and <literal>NOT
+ MATERIALIZED</literal> options of <literal>WITH</literal> are extensions
+ of the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/select_into.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/select_into.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..82a7778
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/select_into.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,156 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/select_into.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-selectinto">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-selectinto">
+ <primary>SELECT INTO</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>SELECT INTO</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>SELECT INTO</refname>
+ <refpurpose>define a new table from the results of a query</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+[ WITH [ RECURSIVE ] <replaceable class="parameter">with_query</replaceable> [, ...] ]
+SELECT [ ALL | DISTINCT [ ON ( <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> [, ...] ) ] ]
+ * | <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> [ [ AS ] <replaceable class="parameter">output_name</replaceable> ] [, ...]
+ INTO [ TEMPORARY | TEMP | UNLOGGED ] [ TABLE ] <replaceable class="parameter">new_table</replaceable>
+ [ FROM <replaceable class="parameter">from_item</replaceable> [, ...] ]
+ [ WHERE <replaceable class="parameter">condition</replaceable> ]
+ [ GROUP BY <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> [, ...] ]
+ [ HAVING <replaceable class="parameter">condition</replaceable> ]
+ [ WINDOW <replaceable class="parameter">window_name</replaceable> AS ( <replaceable class="parameter">window_definition</replaceable> ) [, ...] ]
+ [ { UNION | INTERSECT | EXCEPT } [ ALL | DISTINCT ] <replaceable class="parameter">select</replaceable> ]
+ [ ORDER BY <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> [ ASC | DESC | USING <replaceable class="parameter">operator</replaceable> ] [ NULLS { FIRST | LAST } ] [, ...] ]
+ [ LIMIT { <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable> | ALL } ]
+ [ OFFSET <replaceable class="parameter">start</replaceable> [ ROW | ROWS ] ]
+ [ FETCH { FIRST | NEXT } [ <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable> ] { ROW | ROWS } ONLY ]
+ [ FOR { UPDATE | SHARE } [ OF <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [, ...] ] [ NOWAIT ] [...] ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>SELECT INTO</command> creates a new table and fills it
+ with data computed by a query. The data is not returned to the
+ client, as it is with a normal <command>SELECT</command>. The new
+ table's columns have the names and data types associated with the
+ output columns of the <command>SELECT</command>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>TEMPORARY</literal> or <literal>TEMP</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If specified, the table is created as a temporary table. Refer
+ to <xref linkend="sql-createtable"/> for details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>UNLOGGED</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If specified, the table is created as an unlogged table. Refer
+ to <xref linkend="sql-createtable"/> for details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">new_table</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the table to be created.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ All other parameters are described in detail under <xref
+ linkend="sql-select"/>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <link linkend="sql-createtableas"><command>CREATE TABLE AS</command></link> is functionally similar to
+ <command>SELECT INTO</command>. <command>CREATE TABLE AS</command>
+ is the recommended syntax, since this form of <command>SELECT
+ INTO</command> is not available in <application>ECPG</application>
+ or <application>PL/pgSQL</application>, because they interpret the
+ <literal>INTO</literal> clause differently. Furthermore,
+ <command>CREATE TABLE AS</command> offers a superset of the
+ functionality provided by <command>SELECT INTO</command>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In contrast to <command>CREATE TABLE AS</command>, <command>SELECT
+ INTO</command> does not allow specifying properties like a table's access
+ method with <xref linkend="sql-createtable-method" /> or the table's
+ tablespace with <xref linkend="sql-createtable-tablespace" />. Use
+ <command>CREATE TABLE AS</command> if necessary. Therefore, the default table
+ access method is chosen for the new table. See <xref
+ linkend="guc-default-table-access-method"/> for more information.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Create a new table <literal>films_recent</literal> consisting of only
+ recent entries from the table <literal>films</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+SELECT * INTO films_recent FROM films WHERE date_prod &gt;= '2002-01-01';
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The SQL standard uses <command>SELECT INTO</command> to
+ represent selecting values into scalar variables of a host program,
+ rather than creating a new table. This indeed is the usage found
+ in <application>ECPG</application> (see <xref linkend="ecpg"/>) and
+ <application>PL/pgSQL</application> (see <xref linkend="plpgsql"/>).
+ The <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> usage of <command>SELECT
+ INTO</command> to represent table creation is historical. Some other SQL
+ implementations also use <command>SELECT INTO</command> in this way (but
+ most SQL implementations support <command>CREATE TABLE AS</command>
+ instead). Apart from such compatibility considerations, it is best to use
+ <command>CREATE TABLE AS</command> for this purpose in new code.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-createtableas"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/set.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/set.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c4aab56
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/set.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,329 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/set.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-set">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-set">
+ <primary>SET</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>SET</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>SET</refname>
+ <refpurpose>change a run-time parameter</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+SET [ SESSION | LOCAL ] <replaceable class="parameter">configuration_parameter</replaceable> { TO | = } { <replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable> | '<replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable>' | DEFAULT }
+SET [ SESSION | LOCAL ] TIME ZONE { <replaceable class="parameter">timezone</replaceable> | LOCAL | DEFAULT }
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>SET</command> command changes run-time configuration
+ parameters. Many of the run-time parameters listed in
+ <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> can be changed on-the-fly with
+ <command>SET</command>.
+ (But some require superuser privileges to change, and others cannot
+ be changed after server or session start.)
+ <command>SET</command> only affects the value used by the current
+ session.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If <command>SET</command> (or equivalently <command>SET SESSION</command>)
+ is issued within a transaction that is later aborted, the effects of the
+ <command>SET</command> command disappear when the transaction is rolled
+ back. Once the surrounding transaction is committed, the effects
+ will persist until the end of the session, unless overridden by another
+ <command>SET</command>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The effects of <command>SET LOCAL</command> last only till the end of
+ the current transaction, whether committed or not. A special case is
+ <command>SET</command> followed by <command>SET LOCAL</command> within
+ a single transaction: the <command>SET LOCAL</command> value will be
+ seen until the end of the transaction, but afterwards (if the transaction
+ is committed) the <command>SET</command> value will take effect.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The effects of <command>SET</command> or <command>SET LOCAL</command> are
+ also canceled by rolling back to a savepoint that is earlier than the
+ command.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If <command>SET LOCAL</command> is used within a function that has a
+ <literal>SET</literal> option for the same variable (see
+ <xref linkend="sql-createfunction"/>),
+ the effects of the <command>SET LOCAL</command> command disappear at
+ function exit; that is, the value in effect when the function was called is
+ restored anyway. This allows <command>SET LOCAL</command> to be used for
+ dynamic or repeated changes of a parameter within a function, while still
+ having the convenience of using the <literal>SET</literal> option to save and
+ restore the caller's value. However, a regular <command>SET</command> command
+ overrides any surrounding function's <literal>SET</literal> option; its effects
+ will persist unless rolled back.
+ </para>
+
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ In <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> versions 8.0 through 8.2,
+ the effects of a <command>SET LOCAL</command> would be canceled by
+ releasing an earlier savepoint, or by successful exit from a
+ <application>PL/pgSQL</application> exception block. This behavior
+ has been changed because it was deemed unintuitive.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SESSION</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies that the command takes effect for the current session.
+ (This is the default if neither <literal>SESSION</literal> nor
+ <literal>LOCAL</literal> appears.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>LOCAL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies that the command takes effect for only the current
+ transaction. After <command>COMMIT</command> or <command>ROLLBACK</command>,
+ the session-level setting takes effect again. Issuing this
+ outside of a transaction block emits a warning and otherwise has
+ no effect.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">configuration_parameter</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Name of a settable run-time parameter. Available parameters are
+ documented in <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> and below.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">value</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ New value of parameter. Values can be specified as string
+ constants, identifiers, numbers, or comma-separated lists of
+ these, as appropriate for the particular parameter.
+ <literal>DEFAULT</literal> can be written to specify
+ resetting the parameter to its default value (that is, whatever
+ value it would have had if no <command>SET</command> had been executed
+ in the current session).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ Besides the configuration parameters documented in <xref
+ linkend="runtime-config"/>, there are a few that can only be
+ adjusted using the <command>SET</command> command or that have a
+ special syntax:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SCHEMA</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para><literal>SET SCHEMA '<replaceable>value</replaceable>'</literal> is an alias for
+ <literal>SET search_path TO <replaceable>value</replaceable></literal>. Only one
+ schema can be specified using this syntax.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>NAMES</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para><literal>SET NAMES <replaceable>value</replaceable></literal> is an alias for
+ <literal>SET client_encoding TO <replaceable>value</replaceable></literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SEED</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Sets the internal seed for the random number generator (the
+ function <function>random</function>). Allowed values are
+ floating-point numbers between -1 and 1 inclusive.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The seed can also be set by invoking the function
+ <function>setseed</function>:
+<programlisting>
+SELECT setseed(<replaceable>value</replaceable>);
+</programlisting></para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>TIME ZONE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para><literal>SET TIME ZONE <replaceable>value</replaceable></literal> is an alias
+ for <literal>SET timezone TO <replaceable>value</replaceable></literal>. The
+ syntax <literal>SET TIME ZONE</literal> allows special syntax
+ for the time zone specification. Here are examples of valid
+ values:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>'PST8PDT'</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The time zone for Berkeley, California.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>'Europe/Rome'</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The time zone for Italy.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>-7</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The time zone 7 hours west from UTC (equivalent
+ to PDT). Positive values are east from UTC.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>INTERVAL '-08:00' HOUR TO MINUTE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The time zone 8 hours west from UTC (equivalent
+ to PST).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>LOCAL</literal></term>
+ <term><literal>DEFAULT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Set the time zone to your local time zone (that is, the
+ server's default value of <varname>timezone</varname>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Timezone settings given as numbers or intervals are internally
+ translated to POSIX timezone syntax. For example, after
+ <literal>SET TIME ZONE -7</literal>, <command>SHOW TIME ZONE</command> would
+ report <literal>&lt;-07&gt;+07</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ See <xref linkend="datatype-timezones"/> for more information
+ about time zones.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The function <function>set_config</function> provides equivalent
+ functionality; see <xref linkend="functions-admin-set"/>.
+ Also, it is possible to UPDATE the
+ <link linkend="view-pg-settings"><structname>pg_settings</structname></link>
+ system view to perform the equivalent of <command>SET</command>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Set the schema search path:
+<programlisting>
+SET search_path TO my_schema, public;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Set the style of date to traditional
+ <productname>POSTGRES</productname> with <quote>day before month</quote>
+ input convention:
+<screen>
+SET datestyle TO postgres, dmy;
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Set the time zone for Berkeley, California:
+<screen>
+SET TIME ZONE 'PST8PDT';
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Set the time zone for Italy:
+<screen>
+SET TIME ZONE 'Europe/Rome';
+</screen></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <literal>SET TIME ZONE</literal> extends syntax defined in the SQL
+ standard. The standard allows only numeric time zone offsets while
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> allows more flexible
+ time-zone specifications. All other <literal>SET</literal>
+ features are <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extensions.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-reset"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-show"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/set_constraints.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/set_constraints.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d91965a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/set_constraints.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,125 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/set_constraints.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-set-constraints">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-set-constraints">
+ <primary>SET CONSTRAINTS</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>SET CONSTRAINTS</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>SET CONSTRAINTS</refname>
+ <refpurpose>set constraint check timing for the current transaction</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+SET CONSTRAINTS { ALL | <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [, ...] } { DEFERRED | IMMEDIATE }
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>SET CONSTRAINTS</command> sets the behavior of constraint
+ checking within the current transaction. <literal>IMMEDIATE</literal>
+ constraints are checked at the end of each
+ statement. <literal>DEFERRED</literal> constraints are not checked until
+ transaction commit. Each constraint has its own
+ <literal>IMMEDIATE</literal> or <literal>DEFERRED</literal> mode.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Upon creation, a constraint is given one of three
+ characteristics: <literal>DEFERRABLE INITIALLY DEFERRED</literal>,
+ <literal>DEFERRABLE INITIALLY IMMEDIATE</literal>, or
+ <literal>NOT DEFERRABLE</literal>. The third
+ class is always <literal>IMMEDIATE</literal> and is not affected by the
+ <command>SET CONSTRAINTS</command> command. The first two classes start
+ every transaction in the indicated mode, but their behavior can be changed
+ within a transaction by <command>SET CONSTRAINTS</command>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>SET CONSTRAINTS</command> with a list of constraint names changes
+ the mode of just those constraints (which must all be deferrable). Each
+ constraint name can be schema-qualified. The
+ current schema search path is used to find the first matching name if
+ no schema name is specified. <command>SET CONSTRAINTS ALL</command>
+ changes the mode of all deferrable constraints.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When <command>SET CONSTRAINTS</command> changes the mode of a constraint
+ from <literal>DEFERRED</literal>
+ to <literal>IMMEDIATE</literal>, the new mode takes effect
+ retroactively: any outstanding data modifications that would have
+ been checked at the end of the transaction are instead checked during the
+ execution of the <command>SET CONSTRAINTS</command> command.
+ If any such constraint is violated, the <command>SET CONSTRAINTS</command>
+ fails (and does not change the constraint mode). Thus, <command>SET
+ CONSTRAINTS</command> can be used to force checking of constraints to
+ occur at a specific point in a transaction.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Currently, only <literal>UNIQUE</literal>, <literal>PRIMARY KEY</literal>,
+ <literal>REFERENCES</literal> (foreign key), and <literal>EXCLUDE</literal>
+ constraints are affected by this setting.
+ <literal>NOT NULL</literal> and <literal>CHECK</literal> constraints are
+ always checked immediately when a row is inserted or modified
+ (<emphasis>not</emphasis> at the end of the statement).
+ Uniqueness and exclusion constraints that have not been declared
+ <literal>DEFERRABLE</literal> are also checked immediately.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The firing of triggers that are declared as <quote>constraint triggers</quote>
+ is also controlled by this setting &mdash; they fire at the same time
+ that the associated constraint should be checked.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Because <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> does not require constraint
+ names to be unique within a schema (but only per-table), it is possible
+ that there is more than one match for a specified constraint name.
+ In this case <command>SET CONSTRAINTS</command> will act on all matches.
+ For a non-schema-qualified name, once a match or matches have been found in
+ some schema in the search path, schemas appearing later in the path are not
+ searched.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This command only alters the behavior of constraints within the
+ current transaction. Issuing this outside of a transaction block
+ emits a warning and otherwise has no effect.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This command complies with the behavior defined in the SQL
+ standard, except for the limitation that, in
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>, it does not apply to
+ <literal>NOT NULL</literal> and <literal>CHECK</literal> constraints.
+ Also, <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> checks non-deferrable
+ uniqueness constraints immediately, not at end of statement as the
+ standard would suggest.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/set_role.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/set_role.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f02babf
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/set_role.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,155 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/set_role.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-set-role">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-set-role">
+ <primary>SET ROLE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>SET ROLE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>SET ROLE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>set the current user identifier of the current session</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+SET [ SESSION | LOCAL ] ROLE <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable>
+SET [ SESSION | LOCAL ] ROLE NONE
+RESET ROLE
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This command sets the current user
+ identifier of the current SQL session to be <replaceable
+ class="parameter">role_name</replaceable>. The role name can be
+ written as either an identifier or a string literal.
+ After <command>SET ROLE</command>, permissions checking for SQL commands
+ is carried out as though the named role were the one that had logged
+ in originally.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The specified <replaceable class="parameter">role_name</replaceable>
+ must be a role that the current session user is a member of.
+ (If the session user is a superuser, any role can be selected.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>SESSION</literal> and <literal>LOCAL</literal> modifiers act the same
+ as for the regular <link linkend="sql-set"><command>SET</command></link>
+ command.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <literal>SET ROLE NONE</literal> sets the current user identifier to the
+ current session user identifier, as returned by
+ <function>session_user</function>. <literal>RESET ROLE</literal> sets the
+ current user identifier to the connection-time setting specified by the
+ <link linkend="libpq-connect-options">command-line options</link>,
+ <link linkend="sql-alterrole"><command>ALTER ROLE</command></link>, or
+ <link linkend="sql-alterdatabase"><command>ALTER DATABASE</command></link>,
+ if any such settings exist. Otherwise, <literal>RESET ROLE</literal> sets
+ the current user identifier to the current session user identifier. These
+ forms can be executed by any user.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Using this command, it is possible to either add privileges or restrict
+ one's privileges. If the session user role has the <literal>INHERIT</literal>
+ attribute, then it automatically has all the privileges of every role that
+ it could <command>SET ROLE</command> to; in this case <command>SET ROLE</command>
+ effectively drops all the privileges assigned directly to the session user
+ and to the other roles it is a member of, leaving only the privileges
+ available to the named role. On the other hand, if the session user role
+ has the <literal>NOINHERIT</literal> attribute, <command>SET ROLE</command> drops the
+ privileges assigned directly to the session user and instead acquires the
+ privileges available to the named role.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In particular, when a superuser chooses to <command>SET ROLE</command> to a
+ non-superuser role, they lose their superuser privileges.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>SET ROLE</command> has effects comparable to
+ <link linkend="sql-set-session-authorization"><command>SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION</command></link>, but the privilege
+ checks involved are quite different. Also,
+ <command>SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION</command> determines which roles are
+ allowable for later <command>SET ROLE</command> commands, whereas changing
+ roles with <command>SET ROLE</command> does not change the set of roles
+ allowed to a later <command>SET ROLE</command>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>SET ROLE</command> does not process session variables as specified by
+ the role's <link linkend="sql-alterrole"><command>ALTER ROLE</command></link> settings; this only happens during
+ login.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>SET ROLE</command> cannot be used within a
+ <literal>SECURITY DEFINER</literal> function.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+<programlisting>
+SELECT SESSION_USER, CURRENT_USER;
+
+ session_user | current_user
+--------------+--------------
+ peter | peter
+
+SET ROLE 'paul';
+
+SELECT SESSION_USER, CURRENT_USER;
+
+ session_user | current_user
+--------------+--------------
+ peter | paul
+</programlisting>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ allows identifier syntax (<literal>"<replaceable>rolename</replaceable>"</literal>), while
+ the SQL standard requires the role name to be written as a string
+ literal. SQL does not allow this command during a transaction;
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> does not make this
+ restriction because there is no reason to.
+ The <literal>SESSION</literal> and <literal>LOCAL</literal> modifiers are a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension, as is the
+ <literal>RESET</literal> syntax.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-set-session-authorization"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/set_session_auth.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/set_session_auth.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e44e78e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/set_session_auth.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,130 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/set_session_auth.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-set-session-authorization">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-set-session-authorization">
+ <primary>SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION</refname>
+ <refpurpose>set the session user identifier and the current user identifier of the current session</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+SET [ SESSION | LOCAL ] SESSION AUTHORIZATION <replaceable class="parameter">user_name</replaceable>
+SET [ SESSION | LOCAL ] SESSION AUTHORIZATION DEFAULT
+RESET SESSION AUTHORIZATION
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This command sets the session user identifier and the current user
+ identifier of the current SQL session to be <replaceable
+ class="parameter">user_name</replaceable>. The user name can be
+ written as either an identifier or a string literal. Using this
+ command, it is possible, for example, to temporarily become an
+ unprivileged user and later switch back to being a superuser.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The session user identifier is initially set to be the (possibly
+ authenticated) user name provided by the client. The current user
+ identifier is normally equal to the session user identifier, but
+ might change temporarily in the context of <literal>SECURITY DEFINER</literal>
+ functions and similar mechanisms; it can also be changed by
+ <link linkend="sql-set-role"><command>SET ROLE</command></link>.
+ The current user identifier is relevant for permission checking.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The session user identifier can be changed only if the initial session
+ user (the <firstterm>authenticated user</firstterm>) had the
+ superuser privilege. Otherwise, the command is accepted only if it
+ specifies the authenticated user name.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>SESSION</literal> and <literal>LOCAL</literal> modifiers act the same
+ as for the regular <link linkend="sql-set"><command>SET</command></link>
+ command.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>DEFAULT</literal> and <literal>RESET</literal> forms reset the session
+ and current user identifiers to be the originally authenticated user
+ name. These forms can be executed by any user.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION</command> cannot be used within a
+ <literal>SECURITY DEFINER</literal> function.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+<programlisting>
+SELECT SESSION_USER, CURRENT_USER;
+
+ session_user | current_user
+--------------+--------------
+ peter | peter
+
+SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION 'paul';
+
+SELECT SESSION_USER, CURRENT_USER;
+
+ session_user | current_user
+--------------+--------------
+ paul | paul
+</programlisting>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The SQL standard allows some other expressions to appear in place
+ of the literal <replaceable>user_name</replaceable>, but these options
+ are not important in practice. <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
+ allows identifier syntax (<literal>"<replaceable>username</replaceable>"</literal>), which SQL
+ does not. SQL does not allow this command during a transaction;
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> does not make this
+ restriction because there is no reason to.
+ The <literal>SESSION</literal> and <literal>LOCAL</literal> modifiers are a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension, as is the
+ <literal>RESET</literal> syntax.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The privileges necessary to execute this command are left
+ implementation-defined by the standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-set-role"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/set_transaction.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/set_transaction.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e062e24
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/set_transaction.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,287 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/set_transaction.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-set-transaction">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-set-transaction">
+ <primary>SET TRANSACTION</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary>transaction isolation level</primary>
+ <secondary>setting</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary>read-only transaction</primary>
+ <secondary>setting</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <indexterm>
+ <primary>deferrable transaction</primary>
+ <secondary>setting</secondary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>SET TRANSACTION</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>SET TRANSACTION</refname>
+ <refpurpose>set the characteristics of the current transaction</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+SET TRANSACTION <replaceable class="parameter">transaction_mode</replaceable> [, ...]
+SET TRANSACTION SNAPSHOT <replaceable class="parameter">snapshot_id</replaceable>
+SET SESSION CHARACTERISTICS AS TRANSACTION <replaceable class="parameter">transaction_mode</replaceable> [, ...]
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">transaction_mode</replaceable> is one of:</phrase>
+
+ ISOLATION LEVEL { SERIALIZABLE | REPEATABLE READ | READ COMMITTED | READ UNCOMMITTED }
+ READ WRITE | READ ONLY
+ [ NOT ] DEFERRABLE
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>SET TRANSACTION</command> command sets the
+ characteristics of the current transaction. It has no effect on any
+ subsequent transactions. <command>SET SESSION
+ CHARACTERISTICS</command> sets the default transaction
+ characteristics for subsequent transactions of a session. These
+ defaults can be overridden by <command>SET TRANSACTION</command>
+ for an individual transaction.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The available transaction characteristics are the transaction
+ isolation level, the transaction access mode (read/write or
+ read-only), and the deferrable mode.
+ In addition, a snapshot can be selected, though only for the current
+ transaction, not as a session default.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The isolation level of a transaction determines what data the
+ transaction can see when other transactions are running concurrently:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>READ COMMITTED</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A statement can only see rows committed before it began. This
+ is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>REPEATABLE READ</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ All statements of the current transaction can only see rows committed
+ before the first query or data-modification statement was executed in
+ this transaction.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SERIALIZABLE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ All statements of the current transaction can only see rows committed
+ before the first query or data-modification statement was executed in
+ this transaction. If a pattern of reads and writes among concurrent
+ serializable transactions would create a situation which could not
+ have occurred for any serial (one-at-a-time) execution of those
+ transactions, one of them will be rolled back with a
+ <literal>serialization_failure</literal> error.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ The SQL standard defines one additional level, <literal>READ
+ UNCOMMITTED</literal>.
+ In <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> <literal>READ
+ UNCOMMITTED</literal> is treated as <literal>READ COMMITTED</literal>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The transaction isolation level cannot be changed after the first query or
+ data-modification statement (<command>SELECT</command>,
+ <command>INSERT</command>, <command>DELETE</command>,
+ <command>UPDATE</command>, <command>FETCH</command>, or
+ <command>COPY</command>) of a transaction has been executed. See
+ <xref linkend="mvcc"/> for more information about transaction
+ isolation and concurrency control.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The transaction access mode determines whether the transaction is
+ read/write or read-only. Read/write is the default. When a
+ transaction is read-only, the following SQL commands are
+ disallowed: <literal>INSERT</literal>, <literal>UPDATE</literal>,
+ <literal>DELETE</literal>, and <literal>COPY FROM</literal> if the
+ table they would write to is not a temporary table; all
+ <literal>CREATE</literal>, <literal>ALTER</literal>, and
+ <literal>DROP</literal> commands; <literal>COMMENT</literal>,
+ <literal>GRANT</literal>, <literal>REVOKE</literal>,
+ <literal>TRUNCATE</literal>; and <literal>EXPLAIN ANALYZE</literal>
+ and <literal>EXECUTE</literal> if the command they would execute is
+ among those listed. This is a high-level notion of read-only that
+ does not prevent all writes to disk.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>DEFERRABLE</literal> transaction property has no effect
+ unless the transaction is also <literal>SERIALIZABLE</literal> and
+ <literal>READ ONLY</literal>. When all three of these properties are
+ selected for a
+ transaction, the transaction may block when first acquiring its snapshot,
+ after which it is able to run without the normal overhead of a
+ <literal>SERIALIZABLE</literal> transaction and without any risk of
+ contributing to or being canceled by a serialization failure. This mode
+ is well suited for long-running reports or backups.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>SET TRANSACTION SNAPSHOT</literal> command allows a new
+ transaction to run with the same <firstterm>snapshot</firstterm> as an existing
+ transaction. The pre-existing transaction must have exported its snapshot
+ with the <literal>pg_export_snapshot</literal> function (see <xref
+ linkend="functions-snapshot-synchronization"/>). That function returns a
+ snapshot identifier, which must be given to <literal>SET TRANSACTION
+ SNAPSHOT</literal> to specify which snapshot is to be imported. The
+ identifier must be written as a string literal in this command, for example
+ <literal>'000003A1-1'</literal>.
+ <literal>SET TRANSACTION SNAPSHOT</literal> can only be executed at the
+ start of a transaction, before the first query or
+ data-modification statement (<command>SELECT</command>,
+ <command>INSERT</command>, <command>DELETE</command>,
+ <command>UPDATE</command>, <command>FETCH</command>, or
+ <command>COPY</command>) of the transaction. Furthermore, the transaction
+ must already be set to <literal>SERIALIZABLE</literal> or
+ <literal>REPEATABLE READ</literal> isolation level (otherwise, the snapshot
+ would be discarded immediately, since <literal>READ COMMITTED</literal> mode takes
+ a new snapshot for each command). If the importing transaction uses
+ <literal>SERIALIZABLE</literal> isolation level, then the transaction that
+ exported the snapshot must also use that isolation level. Also, a
+ non-read-only serializable transaction cannot import a snapshot from a
+ read-only transaction.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ If <command>SET TRANSACTION</command> is executed without a prior
+ <command>START TRANSACTION</command> or <command>BEGIN</command>,
+ it emits a warning and otherwise has no effect.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ It is possible to dispense with <command>SET TRANSACTION</command>
+ by instead specifying the desired <replaceable
+ class="parameter">transaction_modes</replaceable> in
+ <command>BEGIN</command> or <command>START TRANSACTION</command>.
+ But that option is not available for <command>SET TRANSACTION
+ SNAPSHOT</command>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The session default transaction modes can also be set or examined via the
+ configuration parameters <xref linkend="guc-default-transaction-isolation"/>,
+ <xref linkend="guc-default-transaction-read-only"/>, and
+ <xref linkend="guc-default-transaction-deferrable"/>.
+ (In fact <command>SET SESSION CHARACTERISTICS</command> is just a
+ verbose equivalent for setting these variables with <command>SET</command>.)
+ This means the defaults can be set in the configuration file, via
+ <command>ALTER DATABASE</command>, etc. Consult <xref linkend="runtime-config"/>
+ for more information.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The current transaction's modes can similarly be set or examined via the
+ configuration parameters <xref linkend="guc-transaction-isolation"/>,
+ <xref linkend="guc-transaction-read-only"/>, and
+ <xref linkend="guc-transaction-deferrable"/>. Setting one of these
+ parameters acts the same as the corresponding <command>SET
+ TRANSACTION</command> option, with the same restrictions on when it can
+ be done. However, these parameters cannot be set in the configuration
+ file, or from any source other than live SQL.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To begin a new transaction with the same snapshot as an already
+ existing transaction, first export the snapshot from the existing
+ transaction. That will return the snapshot identifier, for example:
+
+<programlisting>
+BEGIN TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL REPEATABLE READ;
+SELECT pg_export_snapshot();
+ pg_export_snapshot
+---------------------
+ 00000003-0000001B-1
+(1 row)
+</programlisting>
+
+ Then give the snapshot identifier in a <command>SET TRANSACTION
+ SNAPSHOT</command> command at the beginning of the newly opened
+ transaction:
+
+<programlisting>
+BEGIN TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL REPEATABLE READ;
+SET TRANSACTION SNAPSHOT '00000003-0000001B-1';
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1 id="r1-sql-set-transaction-3">
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ These commands are defined in the <acronym>SQL</acronym> standard,
+ except for the <literal>DEFERRABLE</literal> transaction mode
+ and the <command>SET TRANSACTION SNAPSHOT</command> form, which are
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extensions.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <literal>SERIALIZABLE</literal> is the default transaction
+ isolation level in the standard. In
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> the default is ordinarily
+ <literal>READ COMMITTED</literal>, but you can change it as
+ mentioned above.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In the SQL standard, there is one other transaction characteristic
+ that can be set with these commands: the size of the diagnostics
+ area. This concept is specific to embedded SQL, and therefore is
+ not implemented in the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> server.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The SQL standard requires commas between successive <replaceable
+ class="parameter">transaction_modes</replaceable>, but for historical
+ reasons <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> allows the commas to be
+ omitted.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/show.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/show.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..93789ee
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/show.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,200 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/show.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-show">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-show">
+ <primary>SHOW</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>SHOW</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>SHOW</refname>
+ <refpurpose>show the value of a run-time parameter</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+SHOW <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable>
+SHOW ALL
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>SHOW</command> will display the current setting of
+ run-time parameters. These variables can be set using the
+ <command>SET</command> statement, by editing the
+ <filename>postgresql.conf</filename> configuration file, through
+ the <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> environmental variable (when using
+ <application>libpq</application> or a <application>libpq</application>-based
+ application), or through command-line flags when starting the
+ <command>postgres</command> server. See <xref
+ linkend="runtime-config"/> for details.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a run-time parameter. Available parameters are
+ documented in <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> and on the <xref
+ linkend="sql-set"/> reference page. In
+ addition, there are a few parameters that can be shown but not
+ set:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SERVER_VERSION</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Shows the server's version number.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SERVER_ENCODING</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Shows the server-side character set encoding. At present,
+ this parameter can be shown but not set, because the
+ encoding is determined at database creation time.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>LC_COLLATE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Shows the database's locale setting for collation (text
+ ordering). At present, this parameter can be shown but not
+ set, because the setting is determined at database creation
+ time.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>LC_CTYPE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Shows the database's locale setting for character
+ classification. At present, this parameter can be shown but
+ not set, because the setting is determined at database creation
+ time.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>IS_SUPERUSER</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ True if the current role has superuser privileges.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist></para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ALL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show the values of all configuration parameters, with descriptions.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The function <function>current_setting</function> produces
+ equivalent output; see <xref linkend="functions-admin-set"/>.
+ Also, the
+ <link linkend="view-pg-settings"><structname>pg_settings</structname></link>
+ system view produces the same information.
+
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Show the current setting of the parameter <varname>DateStyle</varname>:
+
+<programlisting>
+SHOW DateStyle;
+ DateStyle
+-----------
+ ISO, MDY
+(1 row)
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Show the current setting of the parameter <varname>geqo</varname>:
+<programlisting>
+SHOW geqo;
+ geqo
+------
+ on
+(1 row)
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Show all settings:
+<programlisting>
+SHOW ALL;
+ name | setting | description
+-------------------------+---------+-------------------------------------------------
+ allow_system_table_mods | off | Allows modifications of the structure of ...
+ .
+ .
+ .
+ xmloption | content | Sets whether XML data in implicit parsing ...
+ zero_damaged_pages | off | Continues processing past damaged page headers.
+(196 rows)
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <command>SHOW</command> command is a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extension.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-set"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-reset"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/start_transaction.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/start_transaction.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..74ccd7e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/start_transaction.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,97 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/start_transaction.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-start-transaction">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-start-transaction">
+ <primary>START TRANSACTION</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>START TRANSACTION</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>START TRANSACTION</refname>
+ <refpurpose>start a transaction block</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+START TRANSACTION [ <replaceable class="parameter">transaction_mode</replaceable> [, ...] ]
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">transaction_mode</replaceable> is one of:</phrase>
+
+ ISOLATION LEVEL { SERIALIZABLE | REPEATABLE READ | READ COMMITTED | READ UNCOMMITTED }
+ READ WRITE | READ ONLY
+ [ NOT ] DEFERRABLE
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This command begins a new transaction block. If the isolation level,
+ read/write mode, or deferrable mode is specified, the new transaction has those
+ characteristics, as if <link linkend="sql-set-transaction"><command>SET TRANSACTION</command></link> was executed. This is the same
+ as the <link linkend="sql-begin"><command>BEGIN</command></link> command.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Refer to <xref linkend="sql-set-transaction"/> for information on the meaning
+ of the parameters to this statement.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ In the standard, it is not necessary to issue <command>START TRANSACTION</command>
+ to start a transaction block: any SQL command implicitly begins a block.
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s behavior can be seen as implicitly
+ issuing a <command>COMMIT</command> after each command that does not
+ follow <command>START TRANSACTION</command> (or <command>BEGIN</command>),
+ and it is therefore often called <quote>autocommit</quote>.
+ Other relational database systems might offer an autocommit feature
+ as a convenience.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <literal>DEFERRABLE</literal>
+ <replaceable class="parameter">transaction_mode</replaceable>
+ is a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> language extension.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The SQL standard requires commas between successive <replaceable
+ class="parameter">transaction_modes</replaceable>, but for historical
+ reasons <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> allows the commas to be
+ omitted.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ See also the compatibility section of <xref linkend="sql-set-transaction"/>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-begin"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-commit"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-rollback"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-savepoint"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-set-transaction"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/truncate.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/truncate.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9d846f8
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/truncate.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,233 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/truncate.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-truncate">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-truncate">
+ <primary>TRUNCATE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>TRUNCATE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>TRUNCATE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>empty a table or set of tables</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+TRUNCATE [ TABLE ] [ ONLY ] <replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable> [ * ] [, ... ]
+ [ RESTART IDENTITY | CONTINUE IDENTITY ] [ CASCADE | RESTRICT ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>TRUNCATE</command> quickly removes all rows from a set of
+ tables. It has the same effect as an unqualified
+ <command>DELETE</command> on each table, but since it does not actually
+ scan the tables it is faster. Furthermore, it reclaims disk space
+ immediately, rather than requiring a subsequent <command>VACUUM</command>
+ operation. This is most useful on large tables.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of a table to truncate.
+ If <literal>ONLY</literal> is specified before the table name, only that table
+ is truncated. If <literal>ONLY</literal> is not specified, the table and all
+ its descendant tables (if any) are truncated. Optionally, <literal>*</literal>
+ can be specified after the table name to explicitly indicate that
+ descendant tables are included.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTART IDENTITY</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically restart sequences owned by columns of
+ the truncated table(s).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CONTINUE IDENTITY</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not change the values of sequences. This is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>CASCADE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Automatically truncate all tables that have foreign-key references
+ to any of the named tables, or to any tables added to the group
+ due to <literal>CASCADE</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>RESTRICT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Refuse to truncate if any of the tables have foreign-key references
+ from tables that are not listed in the command. This is the default.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ You must have the <literal>TRUNCATE</literal> privilege on a table
+ to truncate it.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>TRUNCATE</command> acquires an <literal>ACCESS EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock on each
+ table it operates on, which blocks all other concurrent operations
+ on the table. When <literal>RESTART IDENTITY</literal> is specified, any
+ sequences that are to be restarted are likewise locked exclusively.
+ If concurrent access to a table is required, then
+ the <command>DELETE</command> command should be used instead.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>TRUNCATE</command> cannot be used on a table that has foreign-key
+ references from other tables, unless all such tables are also truncated
+ in the same command. Checking validity in such cases would require table
+ scans, and the whole point is not to do one. The <literal>CASCADE</literal>
+ option can be used to automatically include all dependent tables &mdash;
+ but be very careful when using this option, or else you might lose data you
+ did not intend to!
+ Note in particular that when the table to be truncated is a partition,
+ siblings partitions are left untouched, but cascading occurs to all
+ referencing tables and all their partitions with no distinction.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>TRUNCATE</command> will not fire any <literal>ON DELETE</literal>
+ triggers that might exist for the tables. But it will fire
+ <literal>ON TRUNCATE</literal> triggers.
+ If <literal>ON TRUNCATE</literal> triggers are defined for any of
+ the tables, then all <literal>BEFORE TRUNCATE</literal> triggers are
+ fired before any truncation happens, and all <literal>AFTER
+ TRUNCATE</literal> triggers are fired after the last truncation is
+ performed and any sequences are reset.
+ The triggers will fire in the order that the tables are
+ to be processed (first those listed in the command, and then any
+ that were added due to cascading).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>TRUNCATE</command> is not MVCC-safe. After truncation, the table will
+ appear empty to concurrent transactions, if they are using a snapshot
+ taken before the truncation occurred.
+ See <xref linkend="mvcc-caveats"/> for more details.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>TRUNCATE</command> is transaction-safe with respect to the data
+ in the tables: the truncation will be safely rolled back if the surrounding
+ transaction does not commit.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When <literal>RESTART IDENTITY</literal> is specified, the implied
+ <command>ALTER SEQUENCE RESTART</command> operations are also done
+ transactionally; that is, they will be rolled back if the surrounding
+ transaction does not commit. Be aware that if any additional
+ sequence operations are done on the restarted sequences before the
+ transaction rolls back, the effects of these operations on the sequences
+ will be rolled back, but not their effects on <function>currval()</function>;
+ that is, after the transaction <function>currval()</function> will continue to
+ reflect the last sequence value obtained inside the failed transaction,
+ even though the sequence itself may no longer be consistent with that.
+ This is similar to the usual behavior of <function>currval()</function> after
+ a failed transaction.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>TRUNCATE</command> can be used for foreign tables if
+ supported by the foreign data wrapper, for instance,
+ see <xref linkend="postgres-fdw"/>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Truncate the tables <literal>bigtable</literal> and
+ <literal>fattable</literal>:
+
+<programlisting>
+TRUNCATE bigtable, fattable;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The same, and also reset any associated sequence generators:
+
+<programlisting>
+TRUNCATE bigtable, fattable RESTART IDENTITY;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Truncate the table <literal>othertable</literal>, and cascade to any tables
+ that reference <literal>othertable</literal> via foreign-key
+ constraints:
+
+<programlisting>
+TRUNCATE othertable CASCADE;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The SQL:2008 standard includes a <command>TRUNCATE</command> command
+ with the syntax <literal>TRUNCATE TABLE
+ <replaceable>tablename</replaceable></literal>. The clauses
+ <literal>CONTINUE IDENTITY</literal>/<literal>RESTART IDENTITY</literal>
+ also appear in that standard, but have slightly different though related
+ meanings. Some of the concurrency behavior of this command is left
+ implementation-defined by the standard, so the above notes should be
+ considered and compared with other implementations if necessary.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-delete"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/unlisten.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/unlisten.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..687bf48
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/unlisten.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,133 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/unlisten.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-unlisten">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-unlisten">
+ <primary>UNLISTEN</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>UNLISTEN</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>UNLISTEN</refname>
+ <refpurpose>stop listening for a notification</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+UNLISTEN { <replaceable class="parameter">channel</replaceable> | * }
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>UNLISTEN</command> is used to remove an existing
+ registration for <command>NOTIFY</command> events.
+ <command>UNLISTEN</command> cancels any existing registration of
+ the current <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> session as a
+ listener on the notification channel named <replaceable
+ class="parameter">channel</replaceable>. The special wildcard
+ <literal>*</literal> cancels all listener registrations for the
+ current session.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <xref linkend="sql-notify"/>
+ contains a more extensive
+ discussion of the use of <command>LISTEN</command> and
+ <command>NOTIFY</command>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">channel</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Name of a notification channel (any identifier).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>*</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ All current listen registrations for this session are cleared.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ You can unlisten something you were not listening for; no warning or error
+ will appear.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ At the end of each session, <command>UNLISTEN *</command> is
+ automatically executed.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ A transaction that has executed <command>UNLISTEN</command> cannot be
+ prepared for two-phase commit.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To make a registration:
+
+<programlisting>
+LISTEN virtual;
+NOTIFY virtual;
+Asynchronous notification "virtual" received from server process with PID 8448.
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Once <command>UNLISTEN</command> has been executed, further <command>NOTIFY</command>
+ messages will be ignored:
+
+<programlisting>
+UNLISTEN virtual;
+NOTIFY virtual;
+-- no NOTIFY event is received
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>UNLISTEN</command> command in the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-listen"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-notify"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/update.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/update.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3fa54e5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/update.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,468 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/update.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-update">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-update">
+ <primary>UPDATE</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>UPDATE</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>UPDATE</refname>
+ <refpurpose>update rows of a table</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+[ WITH [ RECURSIVE ] <replaceable class="parameter">with_query</replaceable> [, ...] ]
+UPDATE [ ONLY ] <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [ * ] [ [ AS ] <replaceable class="parameter">alias</replaceable> ]
+ SET { <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> = { <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> | DEFAULT } |
+ ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ...] ) = [ ROW ] ( { <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> | DEFAULT } [, ...] ) |
+ ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ...] ) = ( <replaceable class="parameter">sub-SELECT</replaceable> )
+ } [, ...]
+ [ FROM <replaceable class="parameter">from_item</replaceable> [, ...] ]
+ [ WHERE <replaceable class="parameter">condition</replaceable> | WHERE CURRENT OF <replaceable class="parameter">cursor_name</replaceable> ]
+ [ RETURNING * | <replaceable class="parameter">output_expression</replaceable> [ [ AS ] <replaceable class="parameter">output_name</replaceable> ] [, ...] ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>UPDATE</command> changes the values of the specified
+ columns in all rows that satisfy the condition. Only the columns to
+ be modified need be mentioned in the <literal>SET</literal> clause;
+ columns not explicitly modified retain their previous values.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ There are two ways to modify a table using information contained in
+ other tables in the database: using sub-selects, or specifying
+ additional tables in the <literal>FROM</literal> clause. Which
+ technique is more appropriate depends on the specific
+ circumstances.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The optional <literal>RETURNING</literal> clause causes <command>UPDATE</command>
+ to compute and return value(s) based on each row actually updated.
+ Any expression using the table's columns, and/or columns of other
+ tables mentioned in <literal>FROM</literal>, can be computed.
+ The new (post-update) values of the table's columns are used.
+ The syntax of the <literal>RETURNING</literal> list is identical to that of the
+ output list of <command>SELECT</command>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ You must have the <literal>UPDATE</literal> privilege on the table,
+ or at least on the column(s) that are listed to be updated.
+ You must also have the <literal>SELECT</literal>
+ privilege on any column whose values are read in the
+ <replaceable class="parameter">expressions</replaceable> or
+ <replaceable class="parameter">condition</replaceable>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">with_query</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <literal>WITH</literal> clause allows you to specify one or more
+ subqueries that can be referenced by name in the <command>UPDATE</command>
+ query. See <xref linkend="queries-with"/> and <xref linkend="sql-select"/>
+ for details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the table to update.
+ If <literal>ONLY</literal> is specified before the table name, matching rows
+ are updated in the named table only. If <literal>ONLY</literal> is not
+ specified, matching rows are also updated in any tables inheriting from
+ the named table. Optionally, <literal>*</literal> can be specified after the
+ table name to explicitly indicate that descendant tables are included.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">alias</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A substitute name for the target table. When an alias is
+ provided, it completely hides the actual name of the table. For
+ example, given <literal>UPDATE foo AS f</literal>, the remainder of the
+ <command>UPDATE</command> statement must refer to this table as
+ <literal>f</literal> not <literal>foo</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a column in the table named by <replaceable
+ class="parameter">table_name</replaceable>.
+ The column name can be qualified with a subfield name or array
+ subscript, if needed. Do not include the table's name in the
+ specification of a target column &mdash; for example,
+ <literal>UPDATE table_name SET table_name.col = 1</literal> is invalid.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An expression to assign to the column. The expression can use the
+ old values of this and other columns in the table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DEFAULT</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Set the column to its default value (which will be NULL if no specific
+ default expression has been assigned to it). An identity column will be
+ set to a new value generated by the associated sequence. For a
+ generated column, specifying this is permitted but merely specifies the
+ normal behavior of computing the column from its generation expression.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">sub-SELECT</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A <literal>SELECT</literal> sub-query that produces as many output columns
+ as are listed in the parenthesized column list preceding it. The
+ sub-query must yield no more than one row when executed. If it
+ yields one row, its column values are assigned to the target columns;
+ if it yields no rows, NULL values are assigned to the target columns.
+ The sub-query can refer to old values of the current row of the table
+ being updated.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">from_item</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A table expression allowing columns from other tables to appear in
+ the <literal>WHERE</literal> condition and update expressions. This
+ uses the same syntax as the <link
+ linkend="sql-from"><literal>FROM</literal></link> clause of
+ a <command>SELECT</command> statement;
+ for example, an alias for the table name can be specified. Do not
+ repeat the target table as a <replaceable>from_item</replaceable>
+ unless you intend a self-join (in which case it must appear with
+ an alias in the <replaceable>from_item</replaceable>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">condition</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An expression that returns a value of type <type>boolean</type>.
+ Only rows for which this expression returns <literal>true</literal>
+ will be updated.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">cursor_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of the cursor to use in a <literal>WHERE CURRENT OF</literal>
+ condition. The row to be updated is the one most recently fetched
+ from this cursor. The cursor must be a non-grouping
+ query on the <command>UPDATE</command>'s target table.
+ Note that <literal>WHERE CURRENT OF</literal> cannot be
+ specified together with a Boolean condition. See
+ <xref linkend="sql-declare"/>
+ for more information about using cursors with
+ <literal>WHERE CURRENT OF</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">output_expression</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An expression to be computed and returned by the <command>UPDATE</command>
+ command after each row is updated. The expression can use any
+ column names of the table named by <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable>
+ or table(s) listed in <literal>FROM</literal>.
+ Write <literal>*</literal> to return all columns.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">output_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A name to use for a returned column.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Outputs</title>
+
+ <para>
+ On successful completion, an <command>UPDATE</command> command returns a command
+ tag of the form
+<screen>
+UPDATE <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable>
+</screen>
+ The <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable> is the number
+ of rows updated, including matched rows whose values did not change.
+ Note that the number may be less than the number of rows that matched
+ the <replaceable class="parameter">condition</replaceable> when
+ updates were suppressed by a <literal>BEFORE UPDATE</literal> trigger. If
+ <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable> is 0, no rows were
+ updated by the query (this is not considered an error).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ If the <command>UPDATE</command> command contains a <literal>RETURNING</literal>
+ clause, the result will be similar to that of a <command>SELECT</command>
+ statement containing the columns and values defined in the
+ <literal>RETURNING</literal> list, computed over the row(s) updated by the
+ command.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ When a <literal>FROM</literal> clause is present, what essentially happens
+ is that the target table is joined to the tables mentioned in the
+ <replaceable>from_item</replaceable> list, and each output row of the join
+ represents an update operation for the target table. When using
+ <literal>FROM</literal> you should ensure that the join
+ produces at most one output row for each row to be modified. In
+ other words, a target row shouldn't join to more than one row from
+ the other table(s). If it does, then only one of the join rows
+ will be used to update the target row, but which one will be used
+ is not readily predictable.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Because of this indeterminacy, referencing other tables only within
+ sub-selects is safer, though often harder to read and slower than
+ using a join.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In the case of a partitioned table, updating a row might cause it to no
+ longer satisfy the partition constraint of the containing partition. In that
+ case, if there is some other partition in the partition tree for which this
+ row satisfies its partition constraint, then the row is moved to that
+ partition. If there is no such partition, an error will occur. Behind the
+ scenes, the row movement is actually a <command>DELETE</command> and
+ <command>INSERT</command> operation.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ There is a possibility that a concurrent <command>UPDATE</command> or
+ <command>DELETE</command> on the row being moved will get a serialization
+ failure error. Suppose session 1 is performing an <command>UPDATE</command>
+ on a partition key, and meanwhile a concurrent session 2 for which this
+ row is visible performs an <command>UPDATE</command> or
+ <command>DELETE</command> operation on this row. In such case,
+ session 2's <command>UPDATE</command> or <command>DELETE</command> will
+ detect the row movement and raise a serialization failure error (which
+ always returns with an SQLSTATE code '40001'). Applications may wish to
+ retry the transaction if this occurs. In the usual case where the table
+ is not partitioned, or where there is no row movement, session 2 would
+ have identified the newly updated row and carried out the
+ <command>UPDATE</command>/<command>DELETE</command> on this new row
+ version.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Note that while rows can be moved from local partitions to a foreign-table
+ partition (provided the foreign data wrapper supports tuple routing), they
+ cannot be moved from a foreign-table partition to another partition.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Change the word <literal>Drama</literal> to <literal>Dramatic</literal> in the
+ column <structfield>kind</structfield> of the table <structname>films</structname>:
+
+<programlisting>
+UPDATE films SET kind = 'Dramatic' WHERE kind = 'Drama';
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Adjust temperature entries and reset precipitation to its default
+ value in one row of the table <structname>weather</structname>:
+
+<programlisting>
+UPDATE weather SET temp_lo = temp_lo+1, temp_hi = temp_lo+15, prcp = DEFAULT
+ WHERE city = 'San Francisco' AND date = '2003-07-03';
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Perform the same operation and return the updated entries:
+
+<programlisting>
+UPDATE weather SET temp_lo = temp_lo+1, temp_hi = temp_lo+15, prcp = DEFAULT
+ WHERE city = 'San Francisco' AND date = '2003-07-03'
+ RETURNING temp_lo, temp_hi, prcp;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Use the alternative column-list syntax to do the same update:
+<programlisting>
+UPDATE weather SET (temp_lo, temp_hi, prcp) = (temp_lo+1, temp_lo+15, DEFAULT)
+ WHERE city = 'San Francisco' AND date = '2003-07-03';
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Increment the sales count of the salesperson who manages the
+ account for Acme Corporation, using the <literal>FROM</literal>
+ clause syntax:
+<programlisting>
+UPDATE employees SET sales_count = sales_count + 1 FROM accounts
+ WHERE accounts.name = 'Acme Corporation'
+ AND employees.id = accounts.sales_person;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Perform the same operation, using a sub-select in the
+ <literal>WHERE</literal> clause:
+<programlisting>
+UPDATE employees SET sales_count = sales_count + 1 WHERE id =
+ (SELECT sales_person FROM accounts WHERE name = 'Acme Corporation');
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Update contact names in an accounts table to match the currently assigned
+ salesmen:
+<programlisting>
+UPDATE accounts SET (contact_first_name, contact_last_name) =
+ (SELECT first_name, last_name FROM salesmen
+ WHERE salesmen.id = accounts.sales_id);
+</programlisting>
+ A similar result could be accomplished with a join:
+<programlisting>
+UPDATE accounts SET contact_first_name = first_name,
+ contact_last_name = last_name
+ FROM salesmen WHERE salesmen.id = accounts.sales_id;
+</programlisting>
+ However, the second query may give unexpected results
+ if <structname>salesmen</structname>.<structfield>id</structfield> is not a unique key, whereas
+ the first query is guaranteed to raise an error if there are multiple
+ <structfield>id</structfield> matches. Also, if there is no match for a particular
+ <structname>accounts</structname>.<structfield>sales_id</structfield> entry, the first query
+ will set the corresponding name fields to NULL, whereas the second query
+ will not update that row at all.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Update statistics in a summary table to match the current data:
+<programlisting>
+UPDATE summary s SET (sum_x, sum_y, avg_x, avg_y) =
+ (SELECT sum(x), sum(y), avg(x), avg(y) FROM data d
+ WHERE d.group_id = s.group_id);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Attempt to insert a new stock item along with the quantity of stock. If
+ the item already exists, instead update the stock count of the existing
+ item. To do this without failing the entire transaction, use savepoints:
+<programlisting>
+BEGIN;
+-- other operations
+SAVEPOINT sp1;
+INSERT INTO wines VALUES('Chateau Lafite 2003', '24');
+-- Assume the above fails because of a unique key violation,
+-- so now we issue these commands:
+ROLLBACK TO sp1;
+UPDATE wines SET stock = stock + 24 WHERE winename = 'Chateau Lafite 2003';
+-- continue with other operations, and eventually
+COMMIT;
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Change the <structfield>kind</structfield> column of the table
+ <structname>films</structname> in the row on which the cursor
+ <literal>c_films</literal> is currently positioned:
+<programlisting>
+UPDATE films SET kind = 'Dramatic' WHERE CURRENT OF c_films;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ This command conforms to the <acronym>SQL</acronym> standard, except
+ that the <literal>FROM</literal> and <literal>RETURNING</literal> clauses
+ are <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extensions, as is the ability
+ to use <literal>WITH</literal> with <command>UPDATE</command>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Some other database systems offer a <literal>FROM</literal> option in which
+ the target table is supposed to be listed again within <literal>FROM</literal>.
+ That is not how <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> interprets
+ <literal>FROM</literal>. Be careful when porting applications that use this
+ extension.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ According to the standard, the source value for a parenthesized sub-list of
+ target column names can be any row-valued expression yielding the correct
+ number of columns. <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> only allows the
+ source value to be a <link linkend="sql-syntax-row-constructors">row
+ constructor</link> or a sub-<literal>SELECT</literal>. An individual column's
+ updated value can be specified as <literal>DEFAULT</literal> in the
+ row-constructor case, but not inside a sub-<literal>SELECT</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/vacuum.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/vacuum.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3df32b5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/vacuum.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,463 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/vacuum.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-vacuum">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-vacuum">
+ <primary>VACUUM</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>VACUUM</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>VACUUM</refname>
+ <refpurpose>garbage-collect and optionally analyze a database</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+VACUUM [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> [, ...] ) ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">table_and_columns</replaceable> [, ...] ]
+VACUUM [ FULL ] [ FREEZE ] [ VERBOSE ] [ ANALYZE ] [ <replaceable class="parameter">table_and_columns</replaceable> [, ...] ]
+
+<phrase>where <replaceable class="parameter">option</replaceable> can be one of:</phrase>
+
+ FULL [ <replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable> ]
+ FREEZE [ <replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable> ]
+ VERBOSE [ <replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable> ]
+ ANALYZE [ <replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable> ]
+ DISABLE_PAGE_SKIPPING [ <replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable> ]
+ SKIP_LOCKED [ <replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable> ]
+ INDEX_CLEANUP { AUTO | ON | OFF }
+ PROCESS_TOAST [ <replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable> ]
+ TRUNCATE [ <replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable> ]
+ PARALLEL <replaceable class="parameter">integer</replaceable>
+
+<phrase>and <replaceable class="parameter">table_and_columns</replaceable> is:</phrase>
+
+ <replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable> [ ( <replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable> [, ...] ) ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>VACUUM</command> reclaims storage occupied by dead tuples.
+ In normal <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> operation, tuples that
+ are deleted or obsoleted by an update are not physically removed from
+ their table; they remain present until a <command>VACUUM</command> is
+ done. Therefore it's necessary to do <command>VACUUM</command>
+ periodically, especially on frequently-updated tables.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Without a <replaceable class="parameter">table_and_columns</replaceable>
+ list, <command>VACUUM</command> processes every table and materialized view
+ in the current database that the current user has permission to vacuum.
+ With a list, <command>VACUUM</command> processes only those table(s).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>VACUUM ANALYZE</command> performs a <command>VACUUM</command>
+ and then an <command>ANALYZE</command> for each selected table. This
+ is a handy combination form for routine maintenance scripts. See
+ <xref linkend="sql-analyze"/>
+ for more details about its processing.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Plain <command>VACUUM</command> (without <literal>FULL</literal>) simply reclaims
+ space and makes it
+ available for re-use. This form of the command can operate in parallel
+ with normal reading and writing of the table, as an exclusive lock
+ is not obtained. However, extra space is not returned to the operating
+ system (in most cases); it's just kept available for re-use within the
+ same table. It also allows us to leverage multiple CPUs in order to process
+ indexes. This feature is known as <firstterm>parallel vacuum</firstterm>.
+ To disable this feature, one can use <literal>PARALLEL</literal> option and
+ specify parallel workers as zero. <command>VACUUM FULL</command> rewrites
+ the entire contents of the table into a new disk file with no extra space,
+ allowing unused space to be returned to the operating system. This form is
+ much slower and requires an <literal>ACCESS EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock on
+ each table while it is being processed.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When the option list is surrounded by parentheses, the options can be
+ written in any order. Without parentheses, options must be specified
+ in exactly the order shown above.
+ The parenthesized syntax was added in
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 9.0; the unparenthesized
+ syntax is deprecated.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>FULL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Selects <quote>full</quote> vacuum, which can reclaim more
+ space, but takes much longer and exclusively locks the table.
+ This method also requires extra disk space, since it writes a
+ new copy of the table and doesn't release the old copy until
+ the operation is complete. Usually this should only be used when a
+ significant amount of space needs to be reclaimed from within the table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>FREEZE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Selects aggressive <quote>freezing</quote> of tuples.
+ Specifying <literal>FREEZE</literal> is equivalent to performing
+ <command>VACUUM</command> with the
+ <xref linkend="guc-vacuum-freeze-min-age"/> and
+ <xref linkend="guc-vacuum-freeze-table-age"/> parameters
+ set to zero. Aggressive freezing is always performed when the
+ table is rewritten, so this option is redundant when <literal>FULL</literal>
+ is specified.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>VERBOSE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Prints a detailed vacuum activity report for each table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>ANALYZE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Updates statistics used by the planner to determine the most
+ efficient way to execute a query.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>DISABLE_PAGE_SKIPPING</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Normally, <command>VACUUM</command> will skip pages based on the <link
+ linkend="vacuum-for-visibility-map">visibility map</link>. Pages where
+ all tuples are known to be frozen can always be skipped, and those
+ where all tuples are known to be visible to all transactions may be
+ skipped except when performing an aggressive vacuum. Furthermore,
+ except when performing an aggressive vacuum, some pages may be skipped
+ in order to avoid waiting for other sessions to finish using them.
+ This option disables all page-skipping behavior, and is intended to
+ be used only when the contents of the visibility map are
+ suspect, which should happen only if there is a hardware or software
+ issue causing database corruption.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>SKIP_LOCKED</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies that <command>VACUUM</command> should not wait for any
+ conflicting locks to be released when beginning work on a relation:
+ if a relation cannot be locked immediately without waiting, the relation
+ is skipped. Note that even with this option,
+ <command>VACUUM</command> may still block when opening the relation's
+ indexes. Additionally, <command>VACUUM ANALYZE</command> may still
+ block when acquiring sample rows from partitions, table inheritance
+ children, and some types of foreign tables. Also, while
+ <command>VACUUM</command> ordinarily processes all partitions of
+ specified partitioned tables, this option will cause
+ <command>VACUUM</command> to skip all partitions if there is a
+ conflicting lock on the partitioned table.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>INDEX_CLEANUP</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Normally, <command>VACUUM</command> will skip index vacuuming
+ when there are very few dead tuples in the table. The cost of
+ processing all of the table's indexes is expected to greatly
+ exceed the benefit of removing dead index tuples when this
+ happens. This option can be used to force
+ <command>VACUUM</command> to process indexes when there are more
+ than zero dead tuples. The default is <literal>AUTO</literal>,
+ which allows <command>VACUUM</command> to skip index vacuuming
+ when appropriate. If <literal>INDEX_CLEANUP</literal> is set to
+ <literal>ON</literal>, <command>VACUUM</command> will
+ conservatively remove all dead tuples from indexes. This may be
+ useful for backwards compatibility with earlier releases of
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> where this was the
+ standard behavior.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>INDEX_CLEANUP</literal> can also be set to
+ <literal>OFF</literal> to force <command>VACUUM</command> to
+ <emphasis>always</emphasis> skip index vacuuming, even when
+ there are many dead tuples in the table. This may be useful
+ when it is necessary to make <command>VACUUM</command> run as
+ quickly as possible to avoid imminent transaction ID wraparound
+ (see <xref linkend="vacuum-for-wraparound"/>). However, the
+ wraparound failsafe mechanism controlled by <xref
+ linkend="guc-vacuum-failsafe-age"/> will generally trigger
+ automatically to avoid transaction ID wraparound failure, and
+ should be preferred. If index cleanup is not performed
+ regularly, performance may suffer, because as the table is
+ modified indexes will accumulate dead tuples and the table
+ itself will accumulate dead line pointers that cannot be removed
+ until index cleanup is completed.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ This option has no effect for tables that have no index and is
+ ignored if the <literal>FULL</literal> option is used. It also
+ has no effect on the transaction ID wraparound failsafe
+ mechanism. When triggered it will skip index vacuuming, even
+ when <literal>INDEX_CLEANUP</literal> is set to
+ <literal>ON</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>PROCESS_TOAST</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies that <command>VACUUM</command> should attempt to process the
+ corresponding <literal>TOAST</literal> table for each relation, if one
+ exists. This is usually the desired behavior and is the default.
+ Setting this option to false may be useful when it is only necessary to
+ vacuum the main relation. This option is required when the
+ <literal>FULL</literal> option is used.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>TRUNCATE</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies that <command>VACUUM</command> should attempt to
+ truncate off any empty pages at the end of the table and allow
+ the disk space for the truncated pages to be returned to
+ the operating system. This is normally the desired behavior
+ and is the default unless the <literal>vacuum_truncate</literal>
+ option has been set to false for the table to be vacuumed.
+ Setting this option to false may be useful to avoid
+ <literal>ACCESS EXCLUSIVE</literal> lock on the table that
+ the truncation requires. This option is ignored if the
+ <literal>FULL</literal> option is used.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><literal>PARALLEL</literal></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Perform index vacuum and index cleanup phases of <command>VACUUM</command>
+ in parallel using <replaceable class="parameter">integer</replaceable>
+ background workers (for the details of each vacuum phase, please
+ refer to <xref linkend="vacuum-phases"/>). The number of workers used
+ to perform the operation is equal to the number of indexes on the
+ relation that support parallel vacuum which is limited by the number of
+ workers specified with <literal>PARALLEL</literal> option if any which is
+ further limited by <xref linkend="guc-max-parallel-maintenance-workers"/>.
+ An index can participate in parallel vacuum if and only if the size of the
+ index is more than <xref linkend="guc-min-parallel-index-scan-size"/>.
+ Please note that it is not guaranteed that the number of parallel workers
+ specified in <replaceable class="parameter">integer</replaceable> will be
+ used during execution. It is possible for a vacuum to run with fewer
+ workers than specified, or even with no workers at all. Only one worker
+ can be used per index. So parallel workers are launched only when there
+ are at least <literal>2</literal> indexes in the table. Workers for
+ vacuum are launched before the start of each phase and exit at the end of
+ the phase. These behaviors might change in a future release. This
+ option can't be used with the <literal>FULL</literal> option.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether the selected option should be turned on or off.
+ You can write <literal>TRUE</literal>, <literal>ON</literal>, or
+ <literal>1</literal> to enable the option, and <literal>FALSE</literal>,
+ <literal>OFF</literal>, or <literal>0</literal> to disable it. The
+ <replaceable class="parameter">boolean</replaceable> value can also
+ be omitted, in which case <literal>TRUE</literal> is assumed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">integer</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies a non-negative integer value passed to the selected option.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">table_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name (optionally schema-qualified) of a specific table or
+ materialized view to vacuum. If the specified table is a partitioned
+ table, all of its leaf partitions are vacuumed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">column_name</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a specific column to analyze. Defaults to all columns.
+ If a column list is specified, <literal>ANALYZE</literal> must also be
+ specified.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Outputs</title>
+
+ <para>
+ When <literal>VERBOSE</literal> is specified, <command>VACUUM</command> emits
+ progress messages to indicate which table is currently being
+ processed. Various statistics about the tables are printed as well.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To vacuum a table, one must ordinarily be the table's owner or a
+ superuser. However, database owners are allowed to
+ vacuum all tables in their databases, except shared catalogs.
+ (The restriction for shared catalogs means that a true database-wide
+ <command>VACUUM</command> can only be performed by a superuser.)
+ <command>VACUUM</command> will skip over any tables that the calling user
+ does not have permission to vacuum.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>VACUUM</command> cannot be executed inside a transaction block.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For tables with <acronym>GIN</acronym> indexes, <command>VACUUM</command> (in
+ any form) also completes any pending index insertions, by moving pending
+ index entries to the appropriate places in the main <acronym>GIN</acronym> index
+ structure. See <xref linkend="gin-fast-update"/> for details.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ We recommend that active production databases be
+ vacuumed frequently (at least nightly), in order to
+ remove dead rows. After adding or deleting a large number
+ of rows, it might be a good idea to issue a <command>VACUUM
+ ANALYZE</command> command for the affected table. This will update the
+ system catalogs with
+ the results of all recent changes, and allow the
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> query planner to make better
+ choices in planning queries.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <option>FULL</option> option is not recommended for routine use,
+ but might be useful in special cases. An example is when you have deleted
+ or updated most of the rows in a table and would like the table to
+ physically shrink to occupy less disk space and allow faster table
+ scans. <command>VACUUM FULL</command> will usually shrink the table
+ more than a plain <command>VACUUM</command> would.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <option>PARALLEL</option> option is used only for vacuum purposes.
+ If this option is specified with the <option>ANALYZE</option> option,
+ it does not affect <option>ANALYZE</option>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>VACUUM</command> causes a substantial increase in I/O traffic,
+ which might cause poor performance for other active sessions. Therefore,
+ it is sometimes advisable to use the cost-based vacuum delay feature. For
+ parallel vacuum, each worker sleeps in proportion to the work done by that
+ worker. See <xref linkend="runtime-config-resource-vacuum-cost"/> for
+ details.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> includes an <quote>autovacuum</quote>
+ facility which can automate routine vacuum maintenance. For more
+ information about automatic and manual vacuuming, see
+ <xref linkend="routine-vacuuming"/>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Each backend running <command>VACUUM</command> without the
+ <literal>FULL</literal> option will report its progress in the
+ <structname>pg_stat_progress_vacuum</structname> view. Backends running
+ <command>VACUUM FULL</command> will instead report their progress in the
+ <structname>pg_stat_progress_cluster</structname> view. See
+ <xref linkend="vacuum-progress-reporting"/> and
+ <xref linkend="cluster-progress-reporting"/> for details.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To clean a single table <literal>onek</literal>, analyze it for
+ the optimizer and print a detailed vacuum activity report:
+
+<programlisting>
+VACUUM (VERBOSE, ANALYZE) onek;
+</programlisting></para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para>
+ There is no <command>VACUUM</command> statement in the SQL standard.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="app-vacuumdb"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="runtime-config-resource-vacuum-cost"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="autovacuum"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="vacuum-progress-reporting"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="cluster-progress-reporting"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/vacuumdb.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/vacuumdb.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..223b986
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/vacuumdb.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,628 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/vacuumdb.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="app-vacuumdb">
+ <indexterm zone="app-vacuumdb">
+ <primary>vacuumdb</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle><application>vacuumdb</application></refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>Application</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>vacuumdb</refname>
+ <refpurpose>garbage-collect and analyze a <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>vacuumdb</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>connection-option</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+
+ <arg choice="plain" rep="repeat">
+ <arg choice="opt">
+ <group choice="plain">
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>-t</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>--table</option></arg>
+ </group>
+ <replaceable>table</replaceable>
+ <arg choice="opt">( <replaceable class="parameter">column</replaceable> [,...] )</arg>
+ </arg>
+ </arg>
+
+ <arg choice="opt"><replaceable>dbname</replaceable></arg>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+
+ <cmdsynopsis>
+ <command>vacuumdb</command>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>connection-option</replaceable></arg>
+ <arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>option</replaceable></arg>
+ <group choice="plain">
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>-a</option></arg>
+ <arg choice="plain"><option>--all</option></arg>
+ </group>
+ </cmdsynopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>vacuumdb</application> is a utility for cleaning a
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database.
+ <application>vacuumdb</application> will also generate internal statistics
+ used by the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> query optimizer.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>vacuumdb</application> is a wrapper around the SQL
+ command <link linkend="sql-vacuum"><command>VACUUM</command></link>.
+ There is no effective difference between vacuuming and analyzing
+ databases via this utility and via other methods for accessing the
+ server.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Options</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>vacuumdb</application> accepts the following command-line arguments:
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-a</option></term>
+ <term><option>--all</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Vacuum all databases.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option><optional>-d</optional> <replaceable class="parameter">dbname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option><optional>--dbname=</optional><replaceable class="parameter">dbname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the name of the database to be cleaned or analyzed,
+ when <option>-a</option>/<option>--all</option> is not used.
+ If this is not specified, the database name is read
+ from the environment variable <envar>PGDATABASE</envar>. If
+ that is not set, the user name specified for the connection is
+ used. The <replaceable>dbname</replaceable> can be a <link
+ linkend="libpq-connstring">connection string</link>. If so,
+ connection string parameters will override any conflicting command
+ line options.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--disable-page-skipping</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Disable skipping pages based on the contents of the visibility map.
+ </para>
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ This option is only available for servers running
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 9.6 and later.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-e</option></term>
+ <term><option>--echo</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Echo the commands that <application>vacuumdb</application> generates
+ and sends to the server.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-f</option></term>
+ <term><option>--full</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Perform <quote>full</quote> vacuuming.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-F</option></term>
+ <term><option>--freeze</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Aggressively <quote>freeze</quote> tuples.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--force-index-cleanup</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Always remove index entries pointing to dead tuples.
+ </para>
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ This option is only available for servers running
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 12 and later.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-j <replaceable class="parameter">njobs</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--jobs=<replaceable class="parameter">njobs</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Execute the vacuum or analyze commands in parallel by running
+ <replaceable class="parameter">njobs</replaceable>
+ commands simultaneously. This option may reduce the processing time
+ but it also increases the load on the database server.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <application>vacuumdb</application> will open
+ <replaceable class="parameter">njobs</replaceable> connections to the
+ database, so make sure your <xref linkend="guc-max-connections"/>
+ setting is high enough to accommodate all connections.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Note that using this mode together with the <option>-f</option>
+ (<literal>FULL</literal>) option might cause deadlock failures if
+ certain system catalogs are processed in parallel.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--min-mxid-age <replaceable class="parameter">mxid_age</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Only execute the vacuum or analyze commands on tables with a multixact
+ ID age of at least <replaceable class="parameter">mxid_age</replaceable>.
+ This setting is useful for prioritizing tables to process to prevent
+ multixact ID wraparound (see
+ <xref linkend="vacuum-for-multixact-wraparound"/>).
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ For the purposes of this option, the multixact ID age of a relation is
+ the greatest of the ages of the main relation and its associated
+ <acronym>TOAST</acronym> table, if one exists. Since the commands
+ issued by <application>vacuumdb</application> will also process the
+ <acronym>TOAST</acronym> table for the relation if necessary, it does
+ not need to be considered separately.
+ </para>
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ This option is only available for servers running
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 9.6 and later.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--min-xid-age <replaceable class="parameter">xid_age</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Only execute the vacuum or analyze commands on tables with a
+ transaction ID age of at least
+ <replaceable class="parameter">xid_age</replaceable>. This setting
+ is useful for prioritizing tables to process to prevent transaction
+ ID wraparound (see <xref linkend="vacuum-for-wraparound"/>).
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ For the purposes of this option, the transaction ID age of a relation
+ is the greatest of the ages of the main relation and its associated
+ <acronym>TOAST</acronym> table, if one exists. Since the commands
+ issued by <application>vacuumdb</application> will also process the
+ <acronym>TOAST</acronym> table for the relation if necessary, it does
+ not need to be considered separately.
+ </para>
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ This option is only available for servers running
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 9.6 and later.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-index-cleanup</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not remove index entries pointing to dead tuples.
+ </para>
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ This option is only available for servers running
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 12 and later.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-process-toast</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Skip the TOAST table associated with the table to vacuum, if any.
+ </para>
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ This option is only available for servers running
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 14 and later.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--no-truncate</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not truncate empty pages at the end of the table.
+ </para>
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ This option is only available for servers running
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 12 and later.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-P <replaceable class="parameter">parallel_workers</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--parallel=<replaceable class="parameter">parallel_workers</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specify the number of parallel workers for <firstterm>parallel vacuum</firstterm>.
+ This allows the vacuum to leverage multiple CPUs to process indexes.
+ See <xref linkend="sql-vacuum"/>.
+ </para>
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ This option is only available for servers running
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 13 and later.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-q</option></term>
+ <term><option>--quiet</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not display progress messages.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--skip-locked</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Skip relations that cannot be immediately locked for processing.
+ </para>
+ <note>
+ <para>
+ This option is only available for servers running
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 12 and later.
+ </para>
+ </note>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-t <replaceable class="parameter">table</replaceable> [ (<replaceable class="parameter">column</replaceable> [,...]) ]</option></term>
+ <term><option>--table=<replaceable class="parameter">table</replaceable> [ (<replaceable class="parameter">column</replaceable> [,...]) ]</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Clean or analyze <replaceable class="parameter">table</replaceable> only.
+ Column names can be specified only in conjunction with
+ the <option>--analyze</option> or <option>--analyze-only</option> options.
+ Multiple tables can be vacuumed by writing multiple
+ <option>-t</option> switches.
+ </para>
+ <tip>
+ <para>
+ If you specify columns, you probably have to escape the parentheses
+ from the shell. (See examples below.)
+ </para>
+ </tip>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-v</option></term>
+ <term><option>--verbose</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print detailed information during processing.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-V</option></term>
+ <term><option>--version</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Print the <application>vacuumdb</application> version and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-z</option></term>
+ <term><option>--analyze</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Also calculate statistics for use by the optimizer.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-Z</option></term>
+ <term><option>--analyze-only</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Only calculate statistics for use by the optimizer (no vacuum).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--analyze-in-stages</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Only calculate statistics for use by the optimizer (no vacuum),
+ like <option>--analyze-only</option>. Run several (currently three)
+ stages of analyze with different configuration settings, to produce
+ usable statistics faster.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This option is useful to analyze a database that was newly populated
+ from a restored dump or by <command>pg_upgrade</command>. This option
+ will try to create some statistics as fast as possible, to make the
+ database usable, and then produce full statistics in the subsequent
+ stages.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-?</option></term>
+ <term><option>--help</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Show help about <application>vacuumdb</application> command line
+ arguments, and exit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>vacuumdb</application> also accepts
+ the following command-line arguments for connection parameters:
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-h <replaceable class="parameter">host</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--host=<replaceable class="parameter">host</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the host name of the machine on which the server
+ is running. If the value begins with a slash, it is used
+ as the directory for the Unix domain socket.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-p <replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--port=<replaceable class="parameter">port</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the TCP port or local Unix domain socket file
+ extension on which the server
+ is listening for connections.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-U <replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <term><option>--username=<replaceable class="parameter">username</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ User name to connect as.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-w</option></term>
+ <term><option>--no-password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Never issue a password prompt. If the server requires
+ password authentication and a password is not available by
+ other means such as a <filename>.pgpass</filename> file, the
+ connection attempt will fail. This option can be useful in
+ batch jobs and scripts where no user is present to enter a
+ password.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-W</option></term>
+ <term><option>--password</option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Force <application>vacuumdb</application> to prompt for a
+ password before connecting to a database.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ This option is never essential, since
+ <application>vacuumdb</application> will automatically prompt
+ for a password if the server demands password authentication.
+ However, <application>vacuumdb</application> will waste a
+ connection attempt finding out that the server wants a password.
+ In some cases it is worth typing <option>-W</option> to avoid the extra
+ connection attempt.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--maintenance-db=<replaceable class="parameter">dbname</replaceable></option></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies the name of the database to connect to to discover which
+ databases should be vacuumed,
+ when <option>-a</option>/<option>--all</option> is used.
+ If not specified, the <literal>postgres</literal> database will be used,
+ or if that does not exist, <literal>template1</literal> will be used.
+ This can be a <link linkend="libpq-connstring">connection
+ string</link>. If so, connection string parameters will override any
+ conflicting command line options. Also, connection string parameters
+ other than the database name itself will be re-used when connecting
+ to other databases.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Environment</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PGDATABASE</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGHOST</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGPORT</envar></term>
+ <term><envar>PGUSER</envar></term>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Default connection parameters
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><envar>PG_COLOR</envar></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specifies whether to use color in diagnostic messages. Possible values
+ are <literal>always</literal>, <literal>auto</literal> and
+ <literal>never</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ This utility, like most other <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> utilities,
+ also uses the environment variables supported by <application>libpq</application>
+ (see <xref linkend="libpq-envars"/>).
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Diagnostics</title>
+
+ <para>
+ In case of difficulty, see <xref linkend="sql-vacuum"/>
+ and <xref linkend="app-psql"/> for
+ discussions of potential problems and error messages.
+ The database server must be running at the
+ targeted host. Also, any default connection settings and environment
+ variables used by the <application>libpq</application> front-end
+ library will apply.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <application>vacuumdb</application> might need to connect several
+ times to the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> server, asking
+ for a password each time. It is convenient to have a
+ <filename>~/.pgpass</filename> file in such cases. See <xref
+ linkend="libpq-pgpass"/> for more information.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To clean the database <literal>test</literal>:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$ </prompt><userinput>vacuumdb test</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To clean and analyze for the optimizer a database named
+ <literal>bigdb</literal>:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$ </prompt><userinput>vacuumdb --analyze bigdb</userinput>
+</screen>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ To clean a single table
+ <literal>foo</literal> in a database named
+ <literal>xyzzy</literal>, and analyze a single column
+ <literal>bar</literal> of the table for the optimizer:
+<screen>
+<prompt>$ </prompt><userinput>vacuumdb --analyze --verbose --table='foo(bar)' xyzzy</userinput>
+</screen></para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-vacuum"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/values.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/values.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d3a3aaf
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/values.sgml
@@ -0,0 +1,251 @@
+<!--
+doc/src/sgml/ref/values.sgml
+PostgreSQL documentation
+-->
+
+<refentry id="sql-values">
+ <indexterm zone="sql-values">
+ <primary>VALUES</primary>
+ </indexterm>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>VALUES</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo>SQL - Language Statements</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>VALUES</refname>
+ <refpurpose>compute a set of rows</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsynopsisdiv>
+<synopsis>
+VALUES ( <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> [, ...] ) [, ...]
+ [ ORDER BY <replaceable class="parameter">sort_expression</replaceable> [ ASC | DESC | USING <replaceable class="parameter">operator</replaceable> ] [, ...] ]
+ [ LIMIT { <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable> | ALL } ]
+ [ OFFSET <replaceable class="parameter">start</replaceable> [ ROW | ROWS ] ]
+ [ FETCH { FIRST | NEXT } [ <replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable> ] { ROW | ROWS } ONLY ]
+</synopsis>
+ </refsynopsisdiv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>VALUES</command> computes a row value or set of row values
+ specified by value expressions. It is most commonly used to generate
+ a <quote>constant table</quote> within a larger command, but it can be
+ used on its own.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When more than one row is specified, all the rows must have the same
+ number of elements. The data types of the resulting table's columns are
+ determined by combining the explicit or inferred types of the expressions
+ appearing in that column, using the same rules as for <literal>UNION</literal>
+ (see <xref linkend="typeconv-union-case"/>).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Within larger commands, <command>VALUES</command> is syntactically allowed
+ anywhere that <command>SELECT</command> is. Because it is treated like a
+ <command>SELECT</command> by the grammar, it is possible to use
+ the <literal>ORDER BY</literal>, <literal>LIMIT</literal> (or
+ equivalently <literal>FETCH FIRST</literal>),
+ and <literal>OFFSET</literal> clauses with a
+ <command>VALUES</command> command.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Parameters</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A constant or expression to compute and insert at the indicated place
+ in the resulting table (set of rows). In a <command>VALUES</command> list
+ appearing at the top level of an <command>INSERT</command>, an
+ <replaceable class="parameter">expression</replaceable> can be replaced
+ by <literal>DEFAULT</literal> to indicate that the destination column's
+ default value should be inserted. <literal>DEFAULT</literal> cannot
+ be used when <command>VALUES</command> appears in other contexts.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">sort_expression</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An expression or integer constant indicating how to sort the result
+ rows. This expression can refer to the columns of the
+ <command>VALUES</command> result as <literal>column1</literal>, <literal>column2</literal>,
+ etc. For more details see
+ <xref linkend="sql-orderby"/>
+ in the <xref linkend="sql-select"/> documentation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">operator</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A sorting operator. For details see
+ <xref linkend="sql-orderby"/>
+ in the <xref linkend="sql-select"/> documentation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">count</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The maximum number of rows to return. For details see
+ <xref linkend="sql-limit"/>
+ in the <xref linkend="sql-select"/> documentation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><replaceable class="parameter">start</replaceable></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The number of rows to skip before starting to return rows.
+ For details see <xref linkend="sql-limit"/>
+ in the <xref linkend="sql-select"/> documentation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notes</title>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>VALUES</command> lists with very large numbers of rows should be avoided,
+ as you might encounter out-of-memory failures or poor performance.
+ <command>VALUES</command> appearing within <command>INSERT</command> is a special case
+ (because the desired column types are known from the <command>INSERT</command>'s
+ target table, and need not be inferred by scanning the <command>VALUES</command>
+ list), so it can handle larger lists than are practical in other contexts.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+
+ <para>
+ A bare <command>VALUES</command> command:
+
+<programlisting>
+VALUES (1, 'one'), (2, 'two'), (3, 'three');
+</programlisting>
+
+ This will return a table of two columns and three rows. It's effectively
+ equivalent to:
+
+<programlisting>
+SELECT 1 AS column1, 'one' AS column2
+UNION ALL
+SELECT 2, 'two'
+UNION ALL
+SELECT 3, 'three';
+</programlisting>
+
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ More usually, <command>VALUES</command> is used within a larger SQL command.
+ The most common use is in <command>INSERT</command>:
+
+<programlisting>
+INSERT INTO films (code, title, did, date_prod, kind)
+ VALUES ('T_601', 'Yojimbo', 106, '1961-06-16', 'Drama');
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ In the context of <command>INSERT</command>, entries of a <command>VALUES</command> list
+ can be <literal>DEFAULT</literal> to indicate that the column default
+ should be used here instead of specifying a value:
+
+<programlisting>
+INSERT INTO films VALUES
+ ('UA502', 'Bananas', 105, DEFAULT, 'Comedy', '82 minutes'),
+ ('T_601', 'Yojimbo', 106, DEFAULT, 'Drama', DEFAULT);
+</programlisting>
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <command>VALUES</command> can also be used where a sub-<command>SELECT</command> might
+ be written, for example in a <literal>FROM</literal> clause:
+
+<programlisting>
+SELECT f.*
+ FROM films f, (VALUES('MGM', 'Horror'), ('UA', 'Sci-Fi')) AS t (studio, kind)
+ WHERE f.studio = t.studio AND f.kind = t.kind;
+
+UPDATE employees SET salary = salary * v.increase
+ FROM (VALUES(1, 200000, 1.2), (2, 400000, 1.4)) AS v (depno, target, increase)
+ WHERE employees.depno = v.depno AND employees.sales &gt;= v.target;
+</programlisting>
+
+ Note that an <literal>AS</literal> clause is required when <command>VALUES</command>
+ is used in a <literal>FROM</literal> clause, just as is true for
+ <command>SELECT</command>. It is not required that the <literal>AS</literal> clause
+ specify names for all the columns, but it's good practice to do so.
+ (The default column names for <command>VALUES</command> are <literal>column1</literal>,
+ <literal>column2</literal>, etc in <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>, but
+ these names might be different in other database systems.)
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When <command>VALUES</command> is used in <command>INSERT</command>, the values are all
+ automatically coerced to the data type of the corresponding destination
+ column. When it's used in other contexts, it might be necessary to specify
+ the correct data type. If the entries are all quoted literal constants,
+ coercing the first is sufficient to determine the assumed type for all:
+
+<programlisting>
+SELECT * FROM machines
+WHERE ip_address IN (VALUES('192.168.0.1'::inet), ('192.168.0.10'), ('192.168.1.43'));
+</programlisting></para>
+
+ <tip>
+ <para>
+ For simple <literal>IN</literal> tests, it's better to rely on the
+ <link linkend="functions-comparisons-in-scalar">list-of-scalars</link>
+ form of <literal>IN</literal> than to write a <command>VALUES</command>
+ query as shown above. The list of scalars method requires less writing
+ and is often more efficient.
+ </para>
+ </tip>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Compatibility</title>
+
+ <para><command>VALUES</command> conforms to the SQL standard.
+ <literal>LIMIT</literal> and <literal>OFFSET</literal> are
+ <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> extensions; see also
+ under <xref linkend="sql-select"/>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-insert"/></member>
+ <member><xref linkend="sql-select"/></member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>