A solution in a single SQL statement. Requires PostgreSQL 8.4 or later though.
Consider the following demo:
Test setup:
CREATE TEMP TABLE tbl (
id serial PRIMARY KEY
,txt text UNIQUE -- obviously there is unique column (or set of columns)
);
INSERT INTO tbl(txt) VALUES ('one'), ('two');
INSERT / SELECT command:
WITH v AS (SELECT 'three'::text AS txt)
,s AS (SELECT id FROM tbl JOIN v USING (txt))
,i AS (
INSERT INTO tbl (txt)
SELECT txt
FROM v
WHERE NOT EXISTS (SELECT * FROM s)
RETURNING id
)
SELECT id, 'i'::text AS src FROM i
UNION ALL
SELECT id, 's' FROM s;
The first CTE v is not strictly necessary, but achieves that you have to enter your values only once.
The second CTE s selects the id
from tbl
if the "row" exists.
The third CTE i inserts the "row" into tbl
if (and only if) it does not exist, returning id
.
The final SELECT
returns the id
. I added a column src
indicating the "source" - whether the "row" pre-existed and id
comes from a SELECT, or the "row" was new and so is the id
.
This version should be as fast as possible as it does not need an additional SELECT from tbl
and uses the CTEs instead.
To make this safe against possible race conditions in a multi-user environment:
Also for updated techniques using the new UPSERT in Postgres 9.5 or later:
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