Adding -general back into this... No, I don't think there's any way to trigger on this programmatically, though there has been talk from time-to-time about adding support for triggers on DDL. In the meantime you'll just need to scan the system tables for new indexes. I'm also wondering if there's some other, better way to do what you ultimately are trying to do. Adding a function based on CREATE INDEX seems extremely odd, at least to me. > From: zu zu [mailto:rlhsiao@xxxxxxxxx] > Hi Jim, > > Thank you for the message. > Actually what I wanted to do is: > whenever a user defines a new index, I will automatically generate 2 > functions (specific to that index) in the database. > Of course, I can achieve this by, for instance, check if there's new > index defined every night and if so, generate corresponding > functions. Since most of the time, my database won't have drastic > changes at all so this would be a waste of computational power. > Originally I thought rule and trigger are the perfect > solution for this. > Now it seems that it's not possible to achieve this. > > Do you know other ways to achieve this? > > Thanks > Ruey-Lung > > Jim C. Nasby wrote: > > On Sun, Jan 08, 2006 at 06:35:06PM -0800, rlhsiao@xxxxxxxxx wrote: > > > >> Hi, > >> > >> I have to archieve functions like this: > >> When users define a new index, I will do something (for instance, > >> increase an counter in my table or do some other > statistics). However, > >> I defined rule for insert on pg_class and when the entry > is actually an > >> index, I do my thing. Obviously my rule is never > executed. If I create > >> a similar rule for a table I defined, it works. Does this > mean that I > >> can't create rules for system tables? If not, does anyone > know how to > >> do this? > >> > > > > Many system operations completely bypass the 'normal' > access methods for > > touching the system tables, so generally you can't do things like > > triggers or rules. > > > > Depending on what you need to do there may be other ways to > accomplish > > it, though. For example, it's trivial to get a count of indexes on a > > table... > > -- Jim C. Nasby, Sr. Engineering Consultant jnasby@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Pervasive Software http://pervasive.com work: 512-231-6117 vcard: http://jim.nasby.net/pervasive.vcf cell: 512-569-9461