El día Dienstag, Juli 05, 2022 a las 10:40:40 +0200, Laurenz Albe escribió: > On Tue, 2022-07-05 at 09:51 +0200, Matthias Apitz wrote: > > We're using the SQL function currtid2() to get the new CTID of a row > > when this was UPDATEd. > > > > Investigating cases of failing updates, it turns out that the old CTID > > has only a limited lifetime; one can check this with SQL: > > > > sisis=# select ctid, d01gsi from d01buch where d01gsi = '0240564'; > > ctid | d01gsi > > ------------+----------------------------- > > (29036,11) | 0240564 > > > > now I update the row and afterwards pick up the new CTID based on the > > old one (29036,11): > > > > sisis=# UPDATE d01buch set d01ort='Wolfratshausen' where d01gsi='0240564'; > > UPDATE 1 > > sisis=# SELECT currtid2('d01buch'::text, '(29036,11)'::tid); > > currtid2 > > ----------- > > (29036,7) > > > > Now I go and pick up a coffe in our kitchen and check again: > > > > sisis=# SELECT currtid2('d01buch'::text, '(29036,11)'::tid); > > currtid2 > > ------------ > > (29036,11) > > > > i.e. the function now only returns it argument. and not the new CTID > > anymore. > > > > Why is this? And what triggers exactly that the old CTID can't be used > > anymore? > > It is probably the fault of your coffee. Correct, the coffee machine is broken and never does show when the milk powder is empty already :-) > Another explanation could be that the HOT chain was pruned while you were away. What exactly means "the HOT chain was pruned"? What is the HOT chain? Thanks matthias -- Matthias Apitz, ✉ guru@xxxxxxxxxxx, http://www.unixarea.de/ +49-176-38902045 Public GnuPG key: http://www.unixarea.de/key.pub