hubert depesz lubaczewski <depesz@xxxxxxxxxx> writes: > so - as you can see in one query, the value changes in plpgsql. and i need some > id that will be unchanged within one end-user-supplied query. AFAIR, the only state that's guaranteed to work like that is statement_timestamp. Of course you have to worry whether your machine is fast enough to do more than one client interaction within whatever the clock resolution is. I think the real question here is why you want this behavior at all; to me it smells of not having thought the problem through correctly. As an example of why this bothers me: what if the user's query is rewritten into several queries by a RULE? Should you consider each of those to be a separate user-issued SQL command? Does your answer change if you know that the user himself prepared the RULE? (Do you think users will be happy if statement X followed by statement Y acts differently in a rule than elsewhere?) regards, tom lane ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 4: Have you searched our list archives? http://archives.postgresql.org/