INSERT
INSERT
7
SQL - Language Statements
INSERT
create new rows in a table
[ WITH [ RECURSIVE ] with_query [, ...] ]
INSERT INTO table_name [ AS alias ] [ ( column_name [, ...] ) ]
[ OVERRIDING { SYSTEM | USER } VALUE ]
{ DEFAULT VALUES | VALUES ( { expression | DEFAULT } [, ...] ) [, ...] | query }
[ ON CONFLICT [ conflict_target ] conflict_action ]
[ RETURNING * | output_expression [ [ AS ] output_name ] [, ...] ]
where conflict_target can be one of:
( { index_column_name | ( index_expression ) } [ COLLATE collation ] [ opclass ] [, ...] ) [ WHERE index_predicate ]
ON CONSTRAINT constraint_name
and conflict_action is one of:
DO NOTHING
DO UPDATE SET { column_name = { expression | DEFAULT } |
( column_name [, ...] ) = [ ROW ] ( { expression | DEFAULT } [, ...] ) |
( column_name [, ...] ) = ( sub-SELECT )
} [, ...]
[ WHERE condition ]
Description
INSERT 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.
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 N column
names, if there are only N columns supplied by the
VALUES clause or query. The values
supplied by the VALUES clause or query are
associated with the explicit or implicit column list left-to-right.
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.
If the expression for any column is not of the correct data type,
automatic type conversion will be attempted.
INSERT 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 .
ON CONFLICT can be used to specify an alternative
action to raising a unique constraint or exclusion constraint
violation error. (See below.)
The optional RETURNING clause causes INSERT
to compute and return value(s) based on each row actually inserted
(or updated, if an ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE 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 RETURNING list is identical to that of the output
list of SELECT. Only rows that were successfully
inserted or updated will be returned. For example, if a row was
locked but not updated because an ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE
... WHERE clause condition was not satisfied, the
row will not be returned.
You must have INSERT privilege on a table in
order to insert into it. If ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE is
present, UPDATE privilege on the table is also
required.
If a column list is specified, you only need
INSERT privilege on the listed columns.
Similarly, when ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE is specified, you
only need UPDATE privilege on the column(s) that are
listed to be updated. However, ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE
also requires SELECT privilege on any column whose
values are read in the ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE
expressions or condition.
Use of the RETURNING clause requires SELECT
privilege on all columns mentioned in RETURNING.
If you use the query clause to insert rows from a
query, you of course need to have SELECT privilege on
any table or column used in the query.
Parameters
Inserting
This section covers parameters that may be used when only
inserting new rows. Parameters exclusively
used with the ON CONFLICT clause are described
separately.
with_query
The WITH clause allows you to specify one or more
subqueries that can be referenced by name in the INSERT
query. See and
for details.
It is possible for the query
(SELECT statement)
to also contain a WITH clause. In such a case both
sets of with_query can be referenced within
the query, but the
second one takes precedence since it is more closely nested.
table_name
The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing table.
alias
A substitute name for table_name. When an alias is
provided, it completely hides the actual name of the table.
This is particularly useful when ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE
targets a table named excluded, since that will otherwise
be taken as the name of the special table representing the row proposed
for insertion.
column_name
The name of a column in the table named by table_name. 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 ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE, do not include
the table's name in the specification of a target column. For
example, INSERT INTO table_name ... ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE
SET table_name.col = 1 is invalid (this follows the general
behavior for UPDATE).
OVERRIDING SYSTEM VALUE
If this clause is specified, then any values supplied for identity
columns will override the default sequence-generated values.
For an identity column defined as GENERATED ALWAYS,
it is an error to insert an explicit value (other than
DEFAULT) without specifying either
OVERRIDING SYSTEM VALUE or OVERRIDING USER
VALUE. (For an identity column defined as
GENERATED BY DEFAULT, OVERRIDING SYSTEM
VALUE is the normal behavior and specifying it does nothing,
but PostgreSQL allows it as an extension.)
OVERRIDING USER VALUE
If this clause is specified, then any values supplied for identity
columns are ignored and the default sequence-generated values are
applied.
This clause is useful for example when copying values between tables.
Writing INSERT INTO tbl2 OVERRIDING USER VALUE SELECT * FROM
tbl1 will copy from tbl1 all columns that
are not identity columns in tbl2 while values for
the identity columns in tbl2 will be generated by
the sequences associated with tbl2.
DEFAULT VALUES
All columns will be filled with their default values, as if
DEFAULT were explicitly specified for each column.
(An OVERRIDING clause is not permitted in this
form.)
expression
An expression or value to assign to the corresponding column.
DEFAULT
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.
query
A query (SELECT statement) that supplies the
rows to be inserted. Refer to the
statement for a description of the syntax.
output_expression
An expression to be computed and returned by the
INSERT command after each row is inserted or
updated. The expression can use any column names of the table
named by table_name. Write
* to return all columns of the inserted or updated
row(s).
output_name
A name to use for a returned column.
ON CONFLICT Clause
UPSERT
ON CONFLICT
The optional ON CONFLICT 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
arbiter constraint or index specified by
conflict_target is violated, the
alternative conflict_action is taken.
ON CONFLICT DO NOTHING simply avoids inserting
a row as its alternative action. ON CONFLICT DO
UPDATE updates the existing row that conflicts with the
row proposed for insertion as its alternative action.
conflict_target can perform
unique index inference. When performing
inference, it consists of one or more index_column_name columns and/or
index_expression
expressions, and an optional index_predicate. All table_name unique indexes that,
without regard to order, contain exactly the
conflict_target-specified
columns/expressions are inferred (chosen) as arbiter indexes. If
an index_predicate 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 ON CONFLICT) if such an index
satisfying every other criteria is available. If an attempt at
inference is unsuccessful, an error is raised.
ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE guarantees an atomic
INSERT or UPDATE outcome;
provided there is no independent error, one of those two outcomes
is guaranteed, even under high concurrency. This is also known as
UPSERT — UPDATE or
INSERT
.
conflict_target
Specifies which conflicts ON CONFLICT takes
the alternative action on by choosing arbiter
indexes. Either performs unique index
inference, or names a constraint explicitly. For
ON CONFLICT DO NOTHING, it is optional to
specify a conflict_target; when
omitted, conflicts with all usable constraints (and unique
indexes) are handled. For ON CONFLICT DO
UPDATE, a conflict_target
must be provided.
conflict_action
conflict_action specifies an
alternative ON CONFLICT action. It can be
either DO NOTHING, or a DO
UPDATE clause specifying the exact details of the
UPDATE action to be performed in case of a
conflict. The SET and
WHERE clauses in ON CONFLICT DO
UPDATE have access to the existing row using the
table's name (or an alias), and to the row proposed for insertion
using the special excluded table.
SELECT privilege is required on any column in the
target table where corresponding excluded
columns are read.
Note that the effects of all per-row BEFORE
INSERT triggers are reflected in
excluded values, since those effects may
have contributed to the row being excluded from insertion.
index_column_name
The name of a table_name column. Used to
infer arbiter indexes. Follows CREATE
INDEX format. SELECT privilege on
index_column_name
is required.
index_expression
Similar to index_column_name, but used to
infer expressions on table_name columns appearing
within index definitions (not simple columns). Follows
CREATE INDEX format. SELECT
privilege on any column appearing within index_expression is required.
collation
When specified, mandates that corresponding index_column_name or
index_expression
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 CREATE INDEX format.
opclass
When specified, mandates that corresponding index_column_name or
index_expression
use particular operator class in order to be matched during
inference. Typically this is omitted, as the
equality 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 CREATE
INDEX format.
index_predicate
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 CREATE
INDEX format. SELECT privilege on any
column appearing within index_predicate is required.
constraint_name
Explicitly specifies an arbiter
constraint by name, rather than inferring
a constraint or index.
condition
An expression that returns a value of type
boolean. Only rows for which this expression
returns true will be updated, although all
rows will be locked when the ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE
action is taken. Note that
condition is evaluated last, after
a conflict has been identified as a candidate to update.
Note that exclusion constraints are not supported as arbiters with
ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE. In all cases, only
NOT DEFERRABLE constraints and unique indexes
are supported as arbiters.
INSERT with an ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE
clause is a deterministic
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.
Note that it is currently not supported for the
ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE clause of an
INSERT 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.
It is often preferable to use unique index inference rather than
naming a constraint directly using ON CONFLICT ON
CONSTRAINT
constraint_name. 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 CREATE UNIQUE INDEX ... CONCURRENTLY
before dropping the index being replaced.
Outputs
On successful completion, an INSERT command returns a command
tag of the form
INSERT oid count
The count is the number of
rows inserted or updated. oid is always 0 (it
used to be the OID assigned to the inserted row if
count was exactly one and the target table was
declared WITH OIDS and 0 otherwise, but creating a table
WITH OIDS is not supported anymore).
If the INSERT command contains a RETURNING
clause, the result will be similar to that of a SELECT
statement containing the columns and values defined in the
RETURNING list, computed over the row(s) inserted or
updated by the command.
Notes
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.
You may also wish to consider using MERGE, since that
allows mixing INSERT, UPDATE, and
DELETE within a single statement.
See .
Examples
Insert a single row into table films:
INSERT INTO films VALUES
('UA502', 'Bananas', 105, '1971-07-13', 'Comedy', '82 minutes');
In this example, the len column is
omitted and therefore it will have the default value:
INSERT INTO films (code, title, did, date_prod, kind)
VALUES ('T_601', 'Yojimbo', 106, '1961-06-16', 'Drama');
This example uses the DEFAULT clause for
the date columns rather than specifying a value:
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');
To insert a row consisting entirely of default values:
INSERT INTO films DEFAULT VALUES;
To insert multiple rows using the multirow VALUES syntax:
INSERT INTO films (code, title, did, date_prod, kind) VALUES
('B6717', 'Tampopo', 110, '1985-02-10', 'Comedy'),
('HG120', 'The Dinner Game', 140, DEFAULT, 'Comedy');
This example inserts some rows into table
films from a table tmp_films
with the same column layout as films:
INSERT INTO films SELECT * FROM tmp_films WHERE date_prod < '2004-05-07';
This example inserts into array columns:
-- 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," "}}');
Insert a single row into table distributors, returning
the sequence number generated by the DEFAULT clause:
INSERT INTO distributors (did, dname) VALUES (DEFAULT, 'XYZ Widgets')
RETURNING did;
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:
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;
Insert or update new distributors as appropriate. Assumes a unique
index has been defined that constrains values appearing in the
did column. Note that the special
excluded table is used to reference values originally
proposed for insertion:
INSERT INTO distributors (did, dname)
VALUES (5, 'Gizmo Transglobal'), (6, 'Associated Computing, Inc')
ON CONFLICT (did) DO UPDATE SET dname = EXCLUDED.dname;
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 did column:
INSERT INTO distributors (did, dname) VALUES (7, 'Redline GmbH')
ON CONFLICT (did) DO NOTHING;
Insert or update new distributors as appropriate. Example assumes
a unique index has been defined that constrains values appearing in
the did column. WHERE clause is
used to limit the rows actually updated (any existing row not
updated will still be locked, though):
-- 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 <> '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;
Insert new distributor if possible; otherwise
DO NOTHING. Example assumes a unique index has been
defined that constrains values appearing in the
did column on a subset of rows where the
is_active Boolean column evaluates to
true:
-- 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;
Compatibility
INSERT conforms to the SQL standard, except that
the RETURNING clause is a
PostgreSQL extension, as is the ability
to use WITH with INSERT, and the ability to
specify an alternative action with ON CONFLICT.
Also, the case in
which a column name list is omitted, but not all the columns are
filled from the VALUES clause or query,
is disallowed by the standard. If you prefer a more SQL standard
conforming statement than ON CONFLICT, see
.
The SQL standard specifies that OVERRIDING SYSTEM VALUE
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.
Possible limitations of the query clause are documented under
.