Related
Im trying to create a process that masks data. When I create the trigger I'm getting the error.
ORA-04072: invalid trigger type
I'm unsure why and was hoping someone can explain what the problem is and how to fix it.
The end result is when a user queries cards they should see the masked data and WHEN they query CARDS_TBL they should see all the data (unmasked)
Original implementation
CREATE TABLE CARDS (
CARD_ID NUMBER
GENERATED BY DEFAULT AS IDENTITY,
CARD_STR VARCHAR2(16) NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (CARD_ID)
);
INSERT INTO CARDS(CARD_STR) VALUES('4024007187788590');
INSERT INTO CARDS(CARD_STR) VALUES('5432223398564536');
INSERT INTO CARDS(CARD_STR) VALUES('5430445512530934');
INSERT INTO CARDS(CARD_STR) VALUES('4020156755227854');
INSERT INTO CARDS(CARD_STR) VALUES('5431248766892318');
CREATE OR REPLACE VIEW CARDS_V AS
SELECT
CARD_ID,
REGEXP_REPLACE(CARD_STR, '(^\d{3})(.*)(\d{4}$)', '\1**********\3') AS CARD_STR
FROM CARDS;
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER CARDS_TRG_INSERT INSTEAD OF
INSERT ON CARDS_V
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
INSERT INTO CARDS (CARD_STR) VALUES (:NEW.CARD_STR);
END;
INSERT INTO CARDS_V (CARD_STR) VALUES ('4011589733550908');
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER CARDS_TRG_UPDATE INSTEAD OF
UPDATE ON CARDS_V
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
UPDATE CARDS
SET CARD_STR = :NEW.CARD_STR
WHERE CARD_ID = :OLD.CARD_ID;
END;
CREATE TABLE CARDS_TBL (
CARD_ID NUMBER
GENERATED BY DEFAULT AS IDENTITY,
CARD_STR VARCHAR2(16) NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (CARD_ID)
);
INSERT INTO CARDS_TBL(CARD_STR) VALUES('4024007187788590');
INSERT INTO CARDS_TBL(CARD_STR) VALUES('5432223398564536');
INSERT INTO CARDS_TBL(CARD_STR) VALUES('5430445512530934');
INSERT INTO CARDS_TBL(CARD_STR) VALUES('4020156755227854');
INSERT INTO CARDS_TBL(CARD_STR) VALUES('5431248766892318');
CREATE OR REPLACE VIEW CARDS AS
SELECT
CARD_ID,
REGEXP_REPLACE(CARD_STR, '(^\d{3})(.*)(\d{4}$)', '\1**********\3') AS CARD_STR
FROM CARDS_TBL;
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER CARDS_TBL_TRG_UPDATE BEFORE UPDATE ON CARDS_TBL
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
UPDATE CARDS_TBL
SET CARD_STR = :NEW.CARD_STR
WHERE CARD_ID = :OLD.CARD_ID;
END;
/
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER CARDS_TBL_TRG_INSERT BEFORE INSERT ON CARDS
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
INSERT INTO CARDS_TBL (CARD_STR) VALUES (:NEW.CARD_STR);
END;
INSERT INTO CARDS_TBL (CARD_STR) VALUES ('2222333344445555');
SELECT * FROM CARDS_TBL;
UPDATE CARDS_TBL
SET CARD_STR = '2222333344445566'
WHERE CARD_ID = 6;
/
SELECT * FROM CARDS;
In this particular example, at least, the trigger CARDS_TBL_TRG_UPDATE doesn't do anything (except raise a MUTATING TABLE exception) and can be dispensed with. Get rid of it and your example runs as expected. See this db<>fiddle
I have two table, TABLE_A and TABLE_B. When something gets inserted into TABLE_A there is a trigger that also inserts the data into TABLE_B. TABLE_A has an ID column which is populated using a sequence. This id then is also inserted into TABLE_B. This is the whole DDL for this:
CREATE TABLE "TABLE_A"
( "ID" NUMBER(8,0) NOT NULL ENABLE,
"COLUMN1" NUMBER(8,0) NOT NULL ENABLE,
"COLUMN2" NUMBER(4,0) NOT NULL ENABLE
)
/
CREATE TABLE "TABLE_B"
( "ID" NUMBER(8,0) NOT NULL ENABLE,
"COLUMN1" NUMBER(8,0) NOT NULL ENABLE,
"COLUMN2" NUMBER(4,0) NOT NULL ENABLE
)
/
CREATE UNIQUE INDEX "AID_PK" ON "TABLE_A" ("ID")
/
ALTER TABLE "TABLE_A" ADD CONSTRAINT "AID_PK" PRIMARY KEY ("ID")
USING INDEX "AID_PK" ENABLE
/
create or replace TRIGGER my_trigger
BEFORE INSERT OR UPDATE OR DELETE ON TABLE_A
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
IF INSERTING THEN
INSERT INTO TABLE_B(
ID,
COLUMN1,
COLUMN2)
VALUES(
:new.ID,
:new.COLUMN1,
:new.COLUMN2);
END IF;
END;
/
ALTER TRIGGER "my_trigger" ENABLE
/
CREATE SEQUENCE "MY_SEQ" MINVALUE 1 MAXVALUE 999999999999999 INCREMENT BY 1 START WITH 5002 CACHE 20 NOORDER NOCYCLE NOKEEP NOSCALE GLOBAL;
/
CREATE OR REPLACE EDITIONABLE TRIGGER "MYSEQ_SEQ_IOT"
before insert on table_a
for each row
begin
select MY_SEQ.nextval into :new.id from dual;
end;
/
ALTER TRIGGER "MYSEQ_SEQ_IOT" ENABLE
/
Now when I run this statement:
INSERT INTO PER_ART(
COLUMN1,
COLUMN2
)
VALUES(
1111111,
2222222);
I get this error:
ORA-01400: cannot insert NULL into ("TABLE_B"."ID")
ORA-06512: at "my_trigger", line 7
ORA-04088: error during execution of trigger 'my_trigger'
Why is the ID null when the sequence should be populating it?
The order in which your two triggers fire is indeterminate. In my opinion, the best solution would be to just use one trigger:
create or replace TRIGGER my_trigger
BEFORE INSERT ON TABLE_A
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
select MY_SEQ.nextval
into :new.id
from dual;
INSERT INTO TABLE_B(
ID,
COLUMN1,
COLUMN2)
VALUES(
:new.ID, -- Or use MY_SEQ.curreval
:new.COLUMN1,
:new.COLUMN2);
END;
If you must have two triggers for some reason, then you can control their firing order using the FOLLOWS and PRECEDES clauses of the CREATE TRIGGER statement. Refer to the documentation for details on controlling trigger order.
It appears that there is no concept of AUTO_INCREMENT in Oracle, up until and including version 11g.
How can I create a column that behaves like auto increment in Oracle 11g?
There is no such thing as "auto_increment" or "identity" columns in Oracle as of Oracle 11g. However, you can model it easily with a sequence and a trigger:
Table definition:
CREATE TABLE departments (
ID NUMBER(10) NOT NULL,
DESCRIPTION VARCHAR2(50) NOT NULL);
ALTER TABLE departments ADD (
CONSTRAINT dept_pk PRIMARY KEY (ID));
CREATE SEQUENCE dept_seq START WITH 1;
Trigger definition:
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER dept_bir
BEFORE INSERT ON departments
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
SELECT dept_seq.NEXTVAL
INTO :new.id
FROM dual;
END;
/
UPDATE:
IDENTITY column is now available on Oracle 12c:
create table t1 (
c1 NUMBER GENERATED by default on null as IDENTITY,
c2 VARCHAR2(10)
);
or specify starting and increment values, also preventing any insert into the identity column (GENERATED ALWAYS) (again, Oracle 12c+ only)
create table t1 (
c1 NUMBER GENERATED ALWAYS as IDENTITY(START with 1 INCREMENT by 1),
c2 VARCHAR2(10)
);
Alternatively, Oracle 12 also allows to use a sequence as a default value:
CREATE SEQUENCE dept_seq START WITH 1;
CREATE TABLE departments (
ID NUMBER(10) DEFAULT dept_seq.nextval NOT NULL,
DESCRIPTION VARCHAR2(50) NOT NULL);
ALTER TABLE departments ADD (
CONSTRAINT dept_pk PRIMARY KEY (ID));
SYS_GUID returns a GUID-- a globally unique ID. A SYS_GUID is a RAW(16). It does not generate an incrementing numeric value.
If you want to create an incrementing numeric key, you'll want to create a sequence.
CREATE SEQUENCE name_of_sequence
START WITH 1
INCREMENT BY 1
CACHE 100;
You would then either use that sequence in your INSERT statement
INSERT INTO name_of_table( primary_key_column, <<other columns>> )
VALUES( name_of_sequence.nextval, <<other values>> );
Or you can define a trigger that automatically populates the primary key value using the sequence
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER trigger_name
BEFORE INSERT ON table_name
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
SELECT name_of_sequence.nextval
INTO :new.primary_key_column
FROM dual;
END;
If you are using Oracle 11.1 or later, you can simplify the trigger a bit
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER trigger_name
BEFORE INSERT ON table_name
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
:new.primary_key_column := name_of_sequence.nextval;
END;
If you really want to use SYS_GUID
CREATE TABLE table_name (
primary_key_column raw(16) default sys_guid() primary key,
<<other columns>>
)
In Oracle 12c onward you could do something like,
CREATE TABLE MAPS
(
MAP_ID INTEGER GENERATED ALWAYS AS IDENTITY (START WITH 1 INCREMENT BY 1) NOT NULL,
MAP_NAME VARCHAR(24) NOT NULL,
UNIQUE (MAP_ID, MAP_NAME)
);
And in Oracle (Pre 12c).
-- create table
CREATE TABLE MAPS
(
MAP_ID INTEGER NOT NULL ,
MAP_NAME VARCHAR(24) NOT NULL,
UNIQUE (MAP_ID, MAP_NAME)
);
-- create sequence
CREATE SEQUENCE MAPS_SEQ;
-- create tigger using the sequence
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER MAPS_TRG
BEFORE INSERT ON MAPS
FOR EACH ROW
WHEN (new.MAP_ID IS NULL)
BEGIN
SELECT MAPS_SEQ.NEXTVAL
INTO :new.MAP_ID
FROM dual;
END;
/
Here are three flavors:
numeric. Simple increasing numeric value, e.g. 1,2,3,....
GUID. globally univeral identifier, as a RAW datatype.
GUID (string). Same as above, but as a string which might be easier to handle in some languages.
x is the identity column. Substitute FOO with your table name in each of the examples.
-- numerical identity, e.g. 1,2,3...
create table FOO (
x number primary key
);
create sequence FOO_seq;
create or replace trigger FOO_trg
before insert on FOO
for each row
begin
select FOO_seq.nextval into :new.x from dual;
end;
/
-- GUID identity, e.g. 7CFF0C304187716EE040488AA1F9749A
-- use the commented out lines if you prefer RAW over VARCHAR2.
create table FOO (
x varchar(32) primary key -- string version
-- x raw(32) primary key -- raw version
);
create or replace trigger FOO_trg
before insert on FOO
for each row
begin
select cast(sys_guid() as varchar2(32)) into :new.x from dual; -- string version
-- select sys_guid() into :new.x from dual; -- raw version
end;
/
update:
Oracle 12c introduces these two variants that don't depend on triggers:
create table mytable(id number default mysequence.nextval);
create table mytable(id number generated as identity);
The first one uses a sequence in the traditional way; the second manages the value internally.
Oracle Database 12c introduced Identity, an auto-incremental (system-generated) column.
In the previous database versions (until 11g), you usually implement an Identity by creating a Sequence and a Trigger.
From 12c onward, you can create your own Table and define the column that has to be generated as an Identity.
Assuming you mean a column like the SQL Server identity column?
In Oracle, you use a SEQUENCE to achieve the same functionality. I'll see if I can find a good link and post it here.
Update: looks like you found it yourself. Here is the link anyway:
http://www.techonthenet.com/oracle/sequences.php
Trigger and Sequence can be used when you want serialized number that anyone can easily read/remember/understand. But if you don't want to manage ID Column (like emp_id) by this way, and value of this column is not much considerable, you can use SYS_GUID() at Table Creation to get Auto Increment like this.
CREATE TABLE <table_name>
(emp_id RAW(16) DEFAULT SYS_GUID() PRIMARY KEY,
name VARCHAR2(30));
Now your emp_id column will accept "globally unique identifier value".
you can insert value in table by ignoring emp_id column like this.
INSERT INTO <table_name> (name) VALUES ('name value');
So, it will insert unique value to your emp_id Column.
Starting with Oracle 12c there is support for Identity columns in one of two ways:
Sequence + Table - In this solution you still create a sequence as you normally would, then you use the following DDL:
CREATE TABLE MyTable
(ID NUMBER DEFAULT MyTable_Seq.NEXTVAL,
...)
Table Only - In this solution no sequence is explicitly specified. You would use the following DDL:
CREATE TABLE MyTable (ID NUMBER GENERATED AS IDENTITY, ...)
If you use the first way it is backward compatible with the existing way of doing things. The second is a little more straightforward and is more inline with the rest of the RDMS systems out there.
it is called Identity Columns and it is available only from oracle Oracle 12c
CREATE TABLE identity_test_tab
(
id NUMBER GENERATED ALWAYS AS IDENTITY,
description VARCHAR2 (30)
);
example of insert into Identity Columns as below
INSERT INTO identity_test_tab (description) VALUES ('Just DESCRIPTION');
1 row created.
you can NOT do insert like below
INSERT INTO identity_test_tab (id, description) VALUES (NULL, 'ID=NULL and DESCRIPTION');
ERROR at line 1: ORA-32795: cannot insert into a generated always
identity column
INSERT INTO identity_test_tab (id, description) VALUES (999, 'ID=999 and DESCRIPTION');
ERROR at line 1: ORA-32795: cannot insert into a generated always
identity column
useful link
Here is complete solution w.r.t exception/error handling for auto increment, this solution is backward compatible and will work on 11g & 12c, specifically if application is in production.
Please replace 'TABLE_NAME' with your appropriate table name
--checking if table already exisits
BEGIN
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'DROP TABLE TABLE_NAME';
EXCEPTION WHEN OTHERS THEN NULL;
END;
/
--creating table
CREATE TABLE TABLE_NAME (
ID NUMBER(10) PRIMARY KEY NOT NULL,
.
.
.
);
--checking if sequence already exists
BEGIN
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'DROP SEQUENCE TABLE_NAME_SEQ';
EXCEPTION WHEN OTHERS THEN NULL;
END;
--creating sequence
/
CREATE SEQUENCE TABLE_NAME_SEQ START WITH 1 INCREMENT BY 1 MINVALUE 1 NOMAXVALUE NOCYCLE CACHE 2;
--granting rights as per required user group
/
GRANT SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE ON TABLE_NAME TO USER_GROUP;
-- creating trigger
/
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER TABLE_NAME_TS BEFORE INSERT OR UPDATE ON TABLE_NAME FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
-- auto increment column
SELECT TABLE_NAME_SEQ.NextVal INTO :New.ID FROM dual;
-- You can also put some other required default data as per need of your columns, for example
SELECT SYS_CONTEXT('USERENV', 'SESSIONID') INTO :New.SessionID FROM dual;
SELECT SYS_CONTEXT('USERENV','SERVER_HOST') INTO :New.HostName FROM dual;
SELECT SYS_CONTEXT('USERENV','OS_USER') INTO :New.LoginID FROM dual;
.
.
.
END;
/
Query to create auto increment in oracle. In below query incrmnt column value will be auto incremented wheneever a new row is inserted
CREATE TABLE table1(
id RAW(16) NOT NULL ENABLE,
incrmnt NUMBER(10,0) GENERATED ALWAYS AS IDENTITY
MINVALUE 1 MAXVALUE 999999999999999999999999999 INCREMENT BY 1 START WITH 1 NOORDER NOCYCLE NOT NULL ENABLE,
CONSTRAINT PK_table1 PRIMARY KEY (id) ENABLE);
This is how I did this on an existing table and column (named id):
UPDATE table SET id=ROWNUM;
DECLARE
maxval NUMBER;
BEGIN
SELECT MAX(id) INTO maxval FROM table;
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'DROP SEQUENCE table_seq';
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'CREATE SEQUENCE table_seq START WITH '|| TO_CHAR(TO_NUMBER(maxval)+1) ||' INCREMENT BY 1 NOMAXVALUE';
END;
CREATE TRIGGER table_trigger
BEFORE INSERT ON table
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
:new.id := table_seq.NEXTVAL;
END;
FUNCTION GETUNIQUEID_2 RETURN VARCHAR2
AS
v_curr_id NUMBER;
v_inc NUMBER;
v_next_val NUMBER;
pragma autonomous_transaction;
begin
CREATE SEQUENCE sequnce
START WITH YYMMDD0000000001
INCREMENT BY 1
NOCACHE
select sequence.nextval into v_curr_id from dual;
if(substr(v_curr_id,0,6)= to_char(sysdate,'yymmdd')) then
v_next_val := to_number(to_char(SYSDATE+1, 'yymmdd') || '0000000000');
v_inc := v_next_val - v_curr_id;
execute immediate ' alter sequence sequence increment by ' || v_inc ;
select sequence.nextval into v_curr_id from dual;
execute immediate ' alter sequence sequence increment by 1';
else
dbms_output.put_line('exception : file not found');
end if;
RETURN 'ID'||v_curr_id;
END;
FUNCTION UNIQUE2(
seq IN NUMBER
) RETURN VARCHAR2
AS
i NUMBER := seq;
s VARCHAR2(9);
r NUMBER(2,0);
BEGIN
WHILE i > 0 LOOP
r := MOD( i, 36 );
i := ( i - r ) / 36;
IF ( r < 10 ) THEN
s := TO_CHAR(r) || s;
ELSE
s := CHR( 55 + r ) || s;
END IF;
END LOOP;
RETURN 'ID'||LPAD( s, 14, '0' );
END;
Creating a Sequence:
CREATE SEQUENCE SEQ_CM_LC_FINAL_STATUS
MINVALUE 1 MAXVALUE 999999999999999999999999999
INCREMENT BY 1 START WITH 1 CACHE 20 NOORDER NOCYCLE;
Adding a Trigger
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER CM_LC_FINAL_STATUS_TRIGGER
BEFORE INSERT
ON CM_LC_FINAL_STATUS
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
:NEW.LC_FINAL_STATUS_NO := SEQ_CM_LC_FINAL_STATUS.NEXTVAL;
END;
The first step is to create a SEQUENCE in your database, which is a data object that multiple users can access to automatically generate incremented values. As discussed in the documentation, a sequence in Oracle prevents duplicate values from being created simultaneously because multiple users are effectively forced to “take turns” before each sequential item is generated. –
Finally, we’ll create our SEQUENCE that will be utilized later to actually generate the unique, auto incremented value. –
While we have our table created and ready to go, our sequence is thus far just sitting there but never being put to use. This is where TRIGGERS come in. Similar to an event in modern programming languages, a TRIGGER in Oracle is a stored procedure that is executed when a particular event occurs. Typically a TRIGGER will be configured to fire when a table is updated or a record is deleted, providing a bit of cleanup when necessary. –
In our case, we want to execute our TRIGGER prior to INSERT into our CM_LC_FINAL_STATUS table, ensuring our SEQUENCE is incremented and that new value is passed onto our primary key column.
create trigger t1_trigger
before insert on AUDITLOGS
for each row
begin
select t1_seq.nextval into :new.id from dual;
end;
only I have to just change the table name (AUDITLOGS) with your table name and new.id with new.column_name
oracle has sequences AND identity columns in 12c
http://www.oracle-base.com/articles/12c/identity-columns-in-oracle-12cr1.php#identity-columns
I found this but not sure what rdb 7 is
http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/products/rdb/0307-identity-columns-128126.pdf
Maybe just try this simple script:
http://www.hlavaj.sk/ai.php
Result is:
CREATE SEQUENCE TABLE_PK_SEQ;
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER TR_SEQ_TABLE BEFORE INSERT ON TABLE FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
SELECT TABLE_PK_SEQ.NEXTVAL
INTO :new.PK
FROM dual;
END;
It appears that there is no concept of AUTO_INCREMENT in Oracle, up until and including version 11g.
How can I create a column that behaves like auto increment in Oracle 11g?
There is no such thing as "auto_increment" or "identity" columns in Oracle as of Oracle 11g. However, you can model it easily with a sequence and a trigger:
Table definition:
CREATE TABLE departments (
ID NUMBER(10) NOT NULL,
DESCRIPTION VARCHAR2(50) NOT NULL);
ALTER TABLE departments ADD (
CONSTRAINT dept_pk PRIMARY KEY (ID));
CREATE SEQUENCE dept_seq START WITH 1;
Trigger definition:
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER dept_bir
BEFORE INSERT ON departments
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
SELECT dept_seq.NEXTVAL
INTO :new.id
FROM dual;
END;
/
UPDATE:
IDENTITY column is now available on Oracle 12c:
create table t1 (
c1 NUMBER GENERATED by default on null as IDENTITY,
c2 VARCHAR2(10)
);
or specify starting and increment values, also preventing any insert into the identity column (GENERATED ALWAYS) (again, Oracle 12c+ only)
create table t1 (
c1 NUMBER GENERATED ALWAYS as IDENTITY(START with 1 INCREMENT by 1),
c2 VARCHAR2(10)
);
Alternatively, Oracle 12 also allows to use a sequence as a default value:
CREATE SEQUENCE dept_seq START WITH 1;
CREATE TABLE departments (
ID NUMBER(10) DEFAULT dept_seq.nextval NOT NULL,
DESCRIPTION VARCHAR2(50) NOT NULL);
ALTER TABLE departments ADD (
CONSTRAINT dept_pk PRIMARY KEY (ID));
SYS_GUID returns a GUID-- a globally unique ID. A SYS_GUID is a RAW(16). It does not generate an incrementing numeric value.
If you want to create an incrementing numeric key, you'll want to create a sequence.
CREATE SEQUENCE name_of_sequence
START WITH 1
INCREMENT BY 1
CACHE 100;
You would then either use that sequence in your INSERT statement
INSERT INTO name_of_table( primary_key_column, <<other columns>> )
VALUES( name_of_sequence.nextval, <<other values>> );
Or you can define a trigger that automatically populates the primary key value using the sequence
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER trigger_name
BEFORE INSERT ON table_name
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
SELECT name_of_sequence.nextval
INTO :new.primary_key_column
FROM dual;
END;
If you are using Oracle 11.1 or later, you can simplify the trigger a bit
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER trigger_name
BEFORE INSERT ON table_name
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
:new.primary_key_column := name_of_sequence.nextval;
END;
If you really want to use SYS_GUID
CREATE TABLE table_name (
primary_key_column raw(16) default sys_guid() primary key,
<<other columns>>
)
In Oracle 12c onward you could do something like,
CREATE TABLE MAPS
(
MAP_ID INTEGER GENERATED ALWAYS AS IDENTITY (START WITH 1 INCREMENT BY 1) NOT NULL,
MAP_NAME VARCHAR(24) NOT NULL,
UNIQUE (MAP_ID, MAP_NAME)
);
And in Oracle (Pre 12c).
-- create table
CREATE TABLE MAPS
(
MAP_ID INTEGER NOT NULL ,
MAP_NAME VARCHAR(24) NOT NULL,
UNIQUE (MAP_ID, MAP_NAME)
);
-- create sequence
CREATE SEQUENCE MAPS_SEQ;
-- create tigger using the sequence
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER MAPS_TRG
BEFORE INSERT ON MAPS
FOR EACH ROW
WHEN (new.MAP_ID IS NULL)
BEGIN
SELECT MAPS_SEQ.NEXTVAL
INTO :new.MAP_ID
FROM dual;
END;
/
Here are three flavors:
numeric. Simple increasing numeric value, e.g. 1,2,3,....
GUID. globally univeral identifier, as a RAW datatype.
GUID (string). Same as above, but as a string which might be easier to handle in some languages.
x is the identity column. Substitute FOO with your table name in each of the examples.
-- numerical identity, e.g. 1,2,3...
create table FOO (
x number primary key
);
create sequence FOO_seq;
create or replace trigger FOO_trg
before insert on FOO
for each row
begin
select FOO_seq.nextval into :new.x from dual;
end;
/
-- GUID identity, e.g. 7CFF0C304187716EE040488AA1F9749A
-- use the commented out lines if you prefer RAW over VARCHAR2.
create table FOO (
x varchar(32) primary key -- string version
-- x raw(32) primary key -- raw version
);
create or replace trigger FOO_trg
before insert on FOO
for each row
begin
select cast(sys_guid() as varchar2(32)) into :new.x from dual; -- string version
-- select sys_guid() into :new.x from dual; -- raw version
end;
/
update:
Oracle 12c introduces these two variants that don't depend on triggers:
create table mytable(id number default mysequence.nextval);
create table mytable(id number generated as identity);
The first one uses a sequence in the traditional way; the second manages the value internally.
Oracle Database 12c introduced Identity, an auto-incremental (system-generated) column.
In the previous database versions (until 11g), you usually implement an Identity by creating a Sequence and a Trigger.
From 12c onward, you can create your own Table and define the column that has to be generated as an Identity.
Assuming you mean a column like the SQL Server identity column?
In Oracle, you use a SEQUENCE to achieve the same functionality. I'll see if I can find a good link and post it here.
Update: looks like you found it yourself. Here is the link anyway:
http://www.techonthenet.com/oracle/sequences.php
Trigger and Sequence can be used when you want serialized number that anyone can easily read/remember/understand. But if you don't want to manage ID Column (like emp_id) by this way, and value of this column is not much considerable, you can use SYS_GUID() at Table Creation to get Auto Increment like this.
CREATE TABLE <table_name>
(emp_id RAW(16) DEFAULT SYS_GUID() PRIMARY KEY,
name VARCHAR2(30));
Now your emp_id column will accept "globally unique identifier value".
you can insert value in table by ignoring emp_id column like this.
INSERT INTO <table_name> (name) VALUES ('name value');
So, it will insert unique value to your emp_id Column.
Starting with Oracle 12c there is support for Identity columns in one of two ways:
Sequence + Table - In this solution you still create a sequence as you normally would, then you use the following DDL:
CREATE TABLE MyTable
(ID NUMBER DEFAULT MyTable_Seq.NEXTVAL,
...)
Table Only - In this solution no sequence is explicitly specified. You would use the following DDL:
CREATE TABLE MyTable (ID NUMBER GENERATED AS IDENTITY, ...)
If you use the first way it is backward compatible with the existing way of doing things. The second is a little more straightforward and is more inline with the rest of the RDMS systems out there.
it is called Identity Columns and it is available only from oracle Oracle 12c
CREATE TABLE identity_test_tab
(
id NUMBER GENERATED ALWAYS AS IDENTITY,
description VARCHAR2 (30)
);
example of insert into Identity Columns as below
INSERT INTO identity_test_tab (description) VALUES ('Just DESCRIPTION');
1 row created.
you can NOT do insert like below
INSERT INTO identity_test_tab (id, description) VALUES (NULL, 'ID=NULL and DESCRIPTION');
ERROR at line 1: ORA-32795: cannot insert into a generated always
identity column
INSERT INTO identity_test_tab (id, description) VALUES (999, 'ID=999 and DESCRIPTION');
ERROR at line 1: ORA-32795: cannot insert into a generated always
identity column
useful link
Here is complete solution w.r.t exception/error handling for auto increment, this solution is backward compatible and will work on 11g & 12c, specifically if application is in production.
Please replace 'TABLE_NAME' with your appropriate table name
--checking if table already exisits
BEGIN
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'DROP TABLE TABLE_NAME';
EXCEPTION WHEN OTHERS THEN NULL;
END;
/
--creating table
CREATE TABLE TABLE_NAME (
ID NUMBER(10) PRIMARY KEY NOT NULL,
.
.
.
);
--checking if sequence already exists
BEGIN
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'DROP SEQUENCE TABLE_NAME_SEQ';
EXCEPTION WHEN OTHERS THEN NULL;
END;
--creating sequence
/
CREATE SEQUENCE TABLE_NAME_SEQ START WITH 1 INCREMENT BY 1 MINVALUE 1 NOMAXVALUE NOCYCLE CACHE 2;
--granting rights as per required user group
/
GRANT SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE ON TABLE_NAME TO USER_GROUP;
-- creating trigger
/
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER TABLE_NAME_TS BEFORE INSERT OR UPDATE ON TABLE_NAME FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
-- auto increment column
SELECT TABLE_NAME_SEQ.NextVal INTO :New.ID FROM dual;
-- You can also put some other required default data as per need of your columns, for example
SELECT SYS_CONTEXT('USERENV', 'SESSIONID') INTO :New.SessionID FROM dual;
SELECT SYS_CONTEXT('USERENV','SERVER_HOST') INTO :New.HostName FROM dual;
SELECT SYS_CONTEXT('USERENV','OS_USER') INTO :New.LoginID FROM dual;
.
.
.
END;
/
Query to create auto increment in oracle. In below query incrmnt column value will be auto incremented wheneever a new row is inserted
CREATE TABLE table1(
id RAW(16) NOT NULL ENABLE,
incrmnt NUMBER(10,0) GENERATED ALWAYS AS IDENTITY
MINVALUE 1 MAXVALUE 999999999999999999999999999 INCREMENT BY 1 START WITH 1 NOORDER NOCYCLE NOT NULL ENABLE,
CONSTRAINT PK_table1 PRIMARY KEY (id) ENABLE);
This is how I did this on an existing table and column (named id):
UPDATE table SET id=ROWNUM;
DECLARE
maxval NUMBER;
BEGIN
SELECT MAX(id) INTO maxval FROM table;
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'DROP SEQUENCE table_seq';
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'CREATE SEQUENCE table_seq START WITH '|| TO_CHAR(TO_NUMBER(maxval)+1) ||' INCREMENT BY 1 NOMAXVALUE';
END;
CREATE TRIGGER table_trigger
BEFORE INSERT ON table
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
:new.id := table_seq.NEXTVAL;
END;
FUNCTION GETUNIQUEID_2 RETURN VARCHAR2
AS
v_curr_id NUMBER;
v_inc NUMBER;
v_next_val NUMBER;
pragma autonomous_transaction;
begin
CREATE SEQUENCE sequnce
START WITH YYMMDD0000000001
INCREMENT BY 1
NOCACHE
select sequence.nextval into v_curr_id from dual;
if(substr(v_curr_id,0,6)= to_char(sysdate,'yymmdd')) then
v_next_val := to_number(to_char(SYSDATE+1, 'yymmdd') || '0000000000');
v_inc := v_next_val - v_curr_id;
execute immediate ' alter sequence sequence increment by ' || v_inc ;
select sequence.nextval into v_curr_id from dual;
execute immediate ' alter sequence sequence increment by 1';
else
dbms_output.put_line('exception : file not found');
end if;
RETURN 'ID'||v_curr_id;
END;
FUNCTION UNIQUE2(
seq IN NUMBER
) RETURN VARCHAR2
AS
i NUMBER := seq;
s VARCHAR2(9);
r NUMBER(2,0);
BEGIN
WHILE i > 0 LOOP
r := MOD( i, 36 );
i := ( i - r ) / 36;
IF ( r < 10 ) THEN
s := TO_CHAR(r) || s;
ELSE
s := CHR( 55 + r ) || s;
END IF;
END LOOP;
RETURN 'ID'||LPAD( s, 14, '0' );
END;
Creating a Sequence:
CREATE SEQUENCE SEQ_CM_LC_FINAL_STATUS
MINVALUE 1 MAXVALUE 999999999999999999999999999
INCREMENT BY 1 START WITH 1 CACHE 20 NOORDER NOCYCLE;
Adding a Trigger
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER CM_LC_FINAL_STATUS_TRIGGER
BEFORE INSERT
ON CM_LC_FINAL_STATUS
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
:NEW.LC_FINAL_STATUS_NO := SEQ_CM_LC_FINAL_STATUS.NEXTVAL;
END;
The first step is to create a SEQUENCE in your database, which is a data object that multiple users can access to automatically generate incremented values. As discussed in the documentation, a sequence in Oracle prevents duplicate values from being created simultaneously because multiple users are effectively forced to “take turns” before each sequential item is generated. –
Finally, we’ll create our SEQUENCE that will be utilized later to actually generate the unique, auto incremented value. –
While we have our table created and ready to go, our sequence is thus far just sitting there but never being put to use. This is where TRIGGERS come in. Similar to an event in modern programming languages, a TRIGGER in Oracle is a stored procedure that is executed when a particular event occurs. Typically a TRIGGER will be configured to fire when a table is updated or a record is deleted, providing a bit of cleanup when necessary. –
In our case, we want to execute our TRIGGER prior to INSERT into our CM_LC_FINAL_STATUS table, ensuring our SEQUENCE is incremented and that new value is passed onto our primary key column.
create trigger t1_trigger
before insert on AUDITLOGS
for each row
begin
select t1_seq.nextval into :new.id from dual;
end;
only I have to just change the table name (AUDITLOGS) with your table name and new.id with new.column_name
oracle has sequences AND identity columns in 12c
http://www.oracle-base.com/articles/12c/identity-columns-in-oracle-12cr1.php#identity-columns
I found this but not sure what rdb 7 is
http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/products/rdb/0307-identity-columns-128126.pdf
Maybe just try this simple script:
http://www.hlavaj.sk/ai.php
Result is:
CREATE SEQUENCE TABLE_PK_SEQ;
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER TR_SEQ_TABLE BEFORE INSERT ON TABLE FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
SELECT TABLE_PK_SEQ.NEXTVAL
INTO :new.PK
FROM dual;
END;
It appears that there is no concept of AUTO_INCREMENT in Oracle, up until and including version 11g.
How can I create a column that behaves like auto increment in Oracle 11g?
There is no such thing as "auto_increment" or "identity" columns in Oracle as of Oracle 11g. However, you can model it easily with a sequence and a trigger:
Table definition:
CREATE TABLE departments (
ID NUMBER(10) NOT NULL,
DESCRIPTION VARCHAR2(50) NOT NULL);
ALTER TABLE departments ADD (
CONSTRAINT dept_pk PRIMARY KEY (ID));
CREATE SEQUENCE dept_seq START WITH 1;
Trigger definition:
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER dept_bir
BEFORE INSERT ON departments
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
SELECT dept_seq.NEXTVAL
INTO :new.id
FROM dual;
END;
/
UPDATE:
IDENTITY column is now available on Oracle 12c:
create table t1 (
c1 NUMBER GENERATED by default on null as IDENTITY,
c2 VARCHAR2(10)
);
or specify starting and increment values, also preventing any insert into the identity column (GENERATED ALWAYS) (again, Oracle 12c+ only)
create table t1 (
c1 NUMBER GENERATED ALWAYS as IDENTITY(START with 1 INCREMENT by 1),
c2 VARCHAR2(10)
);
Alternatively, Oracle 12 also allows to use a sequence as a default value:
CREATE SEQUENCE dept_seq START WITH 1;
CREATE TABLE departments (
ID NUMBER(10) DEFAULT dept_seq.nextval NOT NULL,
DESCRIPTION VARCHAR2(50) NOT NULL);
ALTER TABLE departments ADD (
CONSTRAINT dept_pk PRIMARY KEY (ID));
SYS_GUID returns a GUID-- a globally unique ID. A SYS_GUID is a RAW(16). It does not generate an incrementing numeric value.
If you want to create an incrementing numeric key, you'll want to create a sequence.
CREATE SEQUENCE name_of_sequence
START WITH 1
INCREMENT BY 1
CACHE 100;
You would then either use that sequence in your INSERT statement
INSERT INTO name_of_table( primary_key_column, <<other columns>> )
VALUES( name_of_sequence.nextval, <<other values>> );
Or you can define a trigger that automatically populates the primary key value using the sequence
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER trigger_name
BEFORE INSERT ON table_name
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
SELECT name_of_sequence.nextval
INTO :new.primary_key_column
FROM dual;
END;
If you are using Oracle 11.1 or later, you can simplify the trigger a bit
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER trigger_name
BEFORE INSERT ON table_name
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
:new.primary_key_column := name_of_sequence.nextval;
END;
If you really want to use SYS_GUID
CREATE TABLE table_name (
primary_key_column raw(16) default sys_guid() primary key,
<<other columns>>
)
In Oracle 12c onward you could do something like,
CREATE TABLE MAPS
(
MAP_ID INTEGER GENERATED ALWAYS AS IDENTITY (START WITH 1 INCREMENT BY 1) NOT NULL,
MAP_NAME VARCHAR(24) NOT NULL,
UNIQUE (MAP_ID, MAP_NAME)
);
And in Oracle (Pre 12c).
-- create table
CREATE TABLE MAPS
(
MAP_ID INTEGER NOT NULL ,
MAP_NAME VARCHAR(24) NOT NULL,
UNIQUE (MAP_ID, MAP_NAME)
);
-- create sequence
CREATE SEQUENCE MAPS_SEQ;
-- create tigger using the sequence
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER MAPS_TRG
BEFORE INSERT ON MAPS
FOR EACH ROW
WHEN (new.MAP_ID IS NULL)
BEGIN
SELECT MAPS_SEQ.NEXTVAL
INTO :new.MAP_ID
FROM dual;
END;
/
Here are three flavors:
numeric. Simple increasing numeric value, e.g. 1,2,3,....
GUID. globally univeral identifier, as a RAW datatype.
GUID (string). Same as above, but as a string which might be easier to handle in some languages.
x is the identity column. Substitute FOO with your table name in each of the examples.
-- numerical identity, e.g. 1,2,3...
create table FOO (
x number primary key
);
create sequence FOO_seq;
create or replace trigger FOO_trg
before insert on FOO
for each row
begin
select FOO_seq.nextval into :new.x from dual;
end;
/
-- GUID identity, e.g. 7CFF0C304187716EE040488AA1F9749A
-- use the commented out lines if you prefer RAW over VARCHAR2.
create table FOO (
x varchar(32) primary key -- string version
-- x raw(32) primary key -- raw version
);
create or replace trigger FOO_trg
before insert on FOO
for each row
begin
select cast(sys_guid() as varchar2(32)) into :new.x from dual; -- string version
-- select sys_guid() into :new.x from dual; -- raw version
end;
/
update:
Oracle 12c introduces these two variants that don't depend on triggers:
create table mytable(id number default mysequence.nextval);
create table mytable(id number generated as identity);
The first one uses a sequence in the traditional way; the second manages the value internally.
Oracle Database 12c introduced Identity, an auto-incremental (system-generated) column.
In the previous database versions (until 11g), you usually implement an Identity by creating a Sequence and a Trigger.
From 12c onward, you can create your own Table and define the column that has to be generated as an Identity.
Assuming you mean a column like the SQL Server identity column?
In Oracle, you use a SEQUENCE to achieve the same functionality. I'll see if I can find a good link and post it here.
Update: looks like you found it yourself. Here is the link anyway:
http://www.techonthenet.com/oracle/sequences.php
Trigger and Sequence can be used when you want serialized number that anyone can easily read/remember/understand. But if you don't want to manage ID Column (like emp_id) by this way, and value of this column is not much considerable, you can use SYS_GUID() at Table Creation to get Auto Increment like this.
CREATE TABLE <table_name>
(emp_id RAW(16) DEFAULT SYS_GUID() PRIMARY KEY,
name VARCHAR2(30));
Now your emp_id column will accept "globally unique identifier value".
you can insert value in table by ignoring emp_id column like this.
INSERT INTO <table_name> (name) VALUES ('name value');
So, it will insert unique value to your emp_id Column.
Starting with Oracle 12c there is support for Identity columns in one of two ways:
Sequence + Table - In this solution you still create a sequence as you normally would, then you use the following DDL:
CREATE TABLE MyTable
(ID NUMBER DEFAULT MyTable_Seq.NEXTVAL,
...)
Table Only - In this solution no sequence is explicitly specified. You would use the following DDL:
CREATE TABLE MyTable (ID NUMBER GENERATED AS IDENTITY, ...)
If you use the first way it is backward compatible with the existing way of doing things. The second is a little more straightforward and is more inline with the rest of the RDMS systems out there.
it is called Identity Columns and it is available only from oracle Oracle 12c
CREATE TABLE identity_test_tab
(
id NUMBER GENERATED ALWAYS AS IDENTITY,
description VARCHAR2 (30)
);
example of insert into Identity Columns as below
INSERT INTO identity_test_tab (description) VALUES ('Just DESCRIPTION');
1 row created.
you can NOT do insert like below
INSERT INTO identity_test_tab (id, description) VALUES (NULL, 'ID=NULL and DESCRIPTION');
ERROR at line 1: ORA-32795: cannot insert into a generated always
identity column
INSERT INTO identity_test_tab (id, description) VALUES (999, 'ID=999 and DESCRIPTION');
ERROR at line 1: ORA-32795: cannot insert into a generated always
identity column
useful link
Here is complete solution w.r.t exception/error handling for auto increment, this solution is backward compatible and will work on 11g & 12c, specifically if application is in production.
Please replace 'TABLE_NAME' with your appropriate table name
--checking if table already exisits
BEGIN
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'DROP TABLE TABLE_NAME';
EXCEPTION WHEN OTHERS THEN NULL;
END;
/
--creating table
CREATE TABLE TABLE_NAME (
ID NUMBER(10) PRIMARY KEY NOT NULL,
.
.
.
);
--checking if sequence already exists
BEGIN
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'DROP SEQUENCE TABLE_NAME_SEQ';
EXCEPTION WHEN OTHERS THEN NULL;
END;
--creating sequence
/
CREATE SEQUENCE TABLE_NAME_SEQ START WITH 1 INCREMENT BY 1 MINVALUE 1 NOMAXVALUE NOCYCLE CACHE 2;
--granting rights as per required user group
/
GRANT SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE ON TABLE_NAME TO USER_GROUP;
-- creating trigger
/
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER TABLE_NAME_TS BEFORE INSERT OR UPDATE ON TABLE_NAME FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
-- auto increment column
SELECT TABLE_NAME_SEQ.NextVal INTO :New.ID FROM dual;
-- You can also put some other required default data as per need of your columns, for example
SELECT SYS_CONTEXT('USERENV', 'SESSIONID') INTO :New.SessionID FROM dual;
SELECT SYS_CONTEXT('USERENV','SERVER_HOST') INTO :New.HostName FROM dual;
SELECT SYS_CONTEXT('USERENV','OS_USER') INTO :New.LoginID FROM dual;
.
.
.
END;
/
Query to create auto increment in oracle. In below query incrmnt column value will be auto incremented wheneever a new row is inserted
CREATE TABLE table1(
id RAW(16) NOT NULL ENABLE,
incrmnt NUMBER(10,0) GENERATED ALWAYS AS IDENTITY
MINVALUE 1 MAXVALUE 999999999999999999999999999 INCREMENT BY 1 START WITH 1 NOORDER NOCYCLE NOT NULL ENABLE,
CONSTRAINT PK_table1 PRIMARY KEY (id) ENABLE);
This is how I did this on an existing table and column (named id):
UPDATE table SET id=ROWNUM;
DECLARE
maxval NUMBER;
BEGIN
SELECT MAX(id) INTO maxval FROM table;
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'DROP SEQUENCE table_seq';
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'CREATE SEQUENCE table_seq START WITH '|| TO_CHAR(TO_NUMBER(maxval)+1) ||' INCREMENT BY 1 NOMAXVALUE';
END;
CREATE TRIGGER table_trigger
BEFORE INSERT ON table
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
:new.id := table_seq.NEXTVAL;
END;
FUNCTION GETUNIQUEID_2 RETURN VARCHAR2
AS
v_curr_id NUMBER;
v_inc NUMBER;
v_next_val NUMBER;
pragma autonomous_transaction;
begin
CREATE SEQUENCE sequnce
START WITH YYMMDD0000000001
INCREMENT BY 1
NOCACHE
select sequence.nextval into v_curr_id from dual;
if(substr(v_curr_id,0,6)= to_char(sysdate,'yymmdd')) then
v_next_val := to_number(to_char(SYSDATE+1, 'yymmdd') || '0000000000');
v_inc := v_next_val - v_curr_id;
execute immediate ' alter sequence sequence increment by ' || v_inc ;
select sequence.nextval into v_curr_id from dual;
execute immediate ' alter sequence sequence increment by 1';
else
dbms_output.put_line('exception : file not found');
end if;
RETURN 'ID'||v_curr_id;
END;
FUNCTION UNIQUE2(
seq IN NUMBER
) RETURN VARCHAR2
AS
i NUMBER := seq;
s VARCHAR2(9);
r NUMBER(2,0);
BEGIN
WHILE i > 0 LOOP
r := MOD( i, 36 );
i := ( i - r ) / 36;
IF ( r < 10 ) THEN
s := TO_CHAR(r) || s;
ELSE
s := CHR( 55 + r ) || s;
END IF;
END LOOP;
RETURN 'ID'||LPAD( s, 14, '0' );
END;
Creating a Sequence:
CREATE SEQUENCE SEQ_CM_LC_FINAL_STATUS
MINVALUE 1 MAXVALUE 999999999999999999999999999
INCREMENT BY 1 START WITH 1 CACHE 20 NOORDER NOCYCLE;
Adding a Trigger
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER CM_LC_FINAL_STATUS_TRIGGER
BEFORE INSERT
ON CM_LC_FINAL_STATUS
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
:NEW.LC_FINAL_STATUS_NO := SEQ_CM_LC_FINAL_STATUS.NEXTVAL;
END;
The first step is to create a SEQUENCE in your database, which is a data object that multiple users can access to automatically generate incremented values. As discussed in the documentation, a sequence in Oracle prevents duplicate values from being created simultaneously because multiple users are effectively forced to “take turns” before each sequential item is generated. –
Finally, we’ll create our SEQUENCE that will be utilized later to actually generate the unique, auto incremented value. –
While we have our table created and ready to go, our sequence is thus far just sitting there but never being put to use. This is where TRIGGERS come in. Similar to an event in modern programming languages, a TRIGGER in Oracle is a stored procedure that is executed when a particular event occurs. Typically a TRIGGER will be configured to fire when a table is updated or a record is deleted, providing a bit of cleanup when necessary. –
In our case, we want to execute our TRIGGER prior to INSERT into our CM_LC_FINAL_STATUS table, ensuring our SEQUENCE is incremented and that new value is passed onto our primary key column.
create trigger t1_trigger
before insert on AUDITLOGS
for each row
begin
select t1_seq.nextval into :new.id from dual;
end;
only I have to just change the table name (AUDITLOGS) with your table name and new.id with new.column_name
oracle has sequences AND identity columns in 12c
http://www.oracle-base.com/articles/12c/identity-columns-in-oracle-12cr1.php#identity-columns
I found this but not sure what rdb 7 is
http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/products/rdb/0307-identity-columns-128126.pdf
Maybe just try this simple script:
http://www.hlavaj.sk/ai.php
Result is:
CREATE SEQUENCE TABLE_PK_SEQ;
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER TR_SEQ_TABLE BEFORE INSERT ON TABLE FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
SELECT TABLE_PK_SEQ.NEXTVAL
INTO :new.PK
FROM dual;
END;