Rules allow the “query tree” of an incoming query to be rewritten. One common usage is to implement views, including updatable view. - Wikipedia
The goal for this lesson: To learn how to create new rules for the database.
Say you want to log every change of phone_no in your people table in to a people_log table. So you set up a new table:
create table people_log (name text, time timestamp default NOW());
In the next step, create a rule that logs every change of a phone_no in the people table into the people_log table:
create rule people_log as on update to people
where NEW.phone_no <> OLD.phone_no
do insert into people_log values (OLD.name);
To test that the rule works, let’s modify a phone number:
update people set phone_no = '082 555 1234' where id = 2;
Check that the people table was updated correctly:
select * from people where id=2;
id | name | house_no | street_id | phone_no
----+------------+----------+-----------+--------------
2 | Joe Bloggs | 3 | 2 | 082 555 1234
(1 row)
Now, thanks to the rule we created, the people_log table will look like this:
select * from people_log;
name | time
------------+----------------------------
Joe Bloggs | 2014-01-11 14:15:11.953141
(1 row)
Poznámka
The value of the time field will depend on the current date and time.
Rules allow you to automatically add or change data in your database to reflect changes in other parts of the database.
The next module will introduce you to Spatial Database using PostGIS, which takes these database concepts and applies them to GIS data.