Continuing a transaction after primary key violation error

允我心安 提交于 2019-11-27 14:09:36
Matthew Wood

You can also use SAVEPOINTs in a transaction.

Pythonish pseudocode is illustrate from the application side:

database.execute("BEGIN")
foreach data_row in input_data_dictionary:
    database.execute("SAVEPOINT bulk_savepoint")
    try:
        database.execute("INSERT", table, data_row)
    except:
        database.execute("ROLLBACK TO SAVEPOINT bulk_savepoint")
        log_error(data_row)
        error_count = error_count + 1
    else:
        database.execute("RELEASE SAVEPOINT bulk_savepoint")

if error_count > error_threshold:
    database.execute("ROLLBACK")
else:
    database.execute("COMMIT")

Edit: Here's an actual example of this in action in psql based on a slight variation of the example in the documentation (SQL statements prefixed by ">"):

> CREATE TABLE table1 (test_field INTEGER NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY);
NOTICE:  CREATE TABLE / PRIMARY KEY will create implicit index "table1_pkey" for table "table1"
CREATE TABLE

> BEGIN;
BEGIN
> INSERT INTO table1 VALUES (1);
INSERT 0 1
> SAVEPOINT my_savepoint;
SAVEPOINT
> INSERT INTO table1 VALUES (1);
ERROR:  duplicate key value violates unique constraint "table1_pkey"
> ROLLBACK TO SAVEPOINT my_savepoint;
ROLLBACK
> INSERT INTO table1 VALUES (3);
INSERT 0 1
> COMMIT;
COMMIT
> SELECT * FROM table1;  
 test_field 
------------
          1
          3
(2 rows)

Note that the value 3 was inserted after the error, but still inside the same transaction!

The documentation for SAVEPOINT is at http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.4/static/sql-savepoint.html.

I would use a stored procedure to catch the exceptions on your unique violations. Example:

CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION my_insert(i_foo text, i_bar text)
  RETURNS boolean LANGUAGE plpgsql AS
$BODY$
begin   
    insert into foo(x, y) values(i_foo, i_bar);
    exception
        when unique_violation THEN -- nothing

    return true;
end;
$BODY$;

SELECT my_insert('value 1','another value');

You can do a rollback to the transaction or a rollback to a save point just before the code that raises the exception (cr is the cursor):

name = uuid.uuid1().hex
cr.execute('SAVEPOINT "%s"' % name)
try:
    # your failing query goes here
except Exception:
    cr.execute('ROLLBACK TO SAVEPOINT "%s"' % name)
    # your alternative code goes here 
else:
    cr.execute('RELEASE SAVEPOINT "%s"' % name)

This code assumes there is running transaction, otherwise you would not receive that error message.

Django postgresql backend creates cursors directly from psycopg. Maybe in the future they make a proxy class for the Django cursor, similar to the cursor of odoo. They extend the cursor with the following code (self is the cursor):

@contextmanager
@check
def savepoint(self):
    """context manager entering in a new savepoint"""
    name = uuid.uuid1().hex
    self.execute('SAVEPOINT "%s"' % name)
    try:
        yield
    except Exception:
        self.execute('ROLLBACK TO SAVEPOINT "%s"' % name)
        raise
    else:
        self.execute('RELEASE SAVEPOINT "%s"' % name)

That way the context makes your code easier, it will be:

try:
    with cr.savepoint():
        # your failing query goes here
except Exception:
    # your alternative code goes here 

and the code is more readable, because the transaction stuff is not there.

Or you can use SSIS and have the failed rows take a differnt path than the successful ones.

SInce you are usinga differnt database can you bulk insert the files to a staging table and then use SQL code to select only those records which do not have an exisitng id?

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