Thanks ... I was afraid it would as messy as it is; unfortunately Oracle seems to have a way to gather at least some of this in one (ugly) SQL command and I was hoping for some equivalent trick.
Greg W.
(apologies for top-posting -- limited mail reader)
-----Original Message-----
From: Tom Lane [mailto:tgl@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Sat 8/4/2007 9:51 AM
To: Gregory Williamson
Cc: pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: List tables in reverse dependancy order
"Gregory Williamson" <Gregory.Williamson@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:
> I'm trying to create a procedure that would let me retrieve a list of =
> tables and views in a database that will be used to control the order in =
> which lookup data is created/loaded. So, much simplified, if table =
> references table B, which in turn references table A, we want output to =
> list table A, B and C in that order.
> I'm sure that this exists -- the pg_dump command must use some similar =
> algorithm to decide in which order to load tables, but I can't see to =
> puzzle this out.
pg_dump expends a fair amount of code on this problem; if you want to
handle the general case with circular references and so on, it's not
simple. You could do worse than to run "pg_dump -s" and postprocess
its output.
If you are only interested in simpler cases then you might be able to
find a simpler solution. For instance if you are only worried about
foreign-key linkages then looking into pg_constraint is much the
easiest way to find out about those.
regards, tom lane