PostgreSQL has various server-side function interfaces. Server-side functions can be written in SQL, PLPGSQL, TCL, or C. Trigger functions can be written in any of these languages except SQL. Note that STATEMENT-level trigger events are not supported in the current version. You can currently specify BEFORE or AFTER on INSERT, DELETE or UPDATE of a tuple as a trigger event.
If a trigger event occurs, the trigger manager (called by the Executor) sets up a TriggerData information structure (described below) and calls the trigger function to handle the event.
The trigger function must be defined before the trigger is created as a function taking no arguments and returning opaque. If the function is written in C, it must use the "version 1" function manager interface.
The syntax for creating triggers is as follows:
CREATE TRIGGER trigger [ BEFORE | AFTER ] [ INSERT | DELETE | UPDATE [ OR ... ] ] ON relation FOR EACH [ ROW | STATEMENT ] EXECUTE PROCEDURE procedure (args);
where the arguments are:
The name of the trigger is used if you ever have to delete the trigger. It is used as an argument to the DROP TRIGGER command.
Determines whether the function is called before or after the event.
The next element of the command determines on what event(s) will trigger the function. Multiple events can be specified separated by OR.
The relation name determines which table the event applies to.
The FOR EACH clause determines whether the trigger is fired for each affected row or before (or after) the entire statement has completed.
The procedure name is the function called.
The arguments passed to the function in the TriggerData structure. The purpose of passing arguments to the function is to allow different triggers with similar requirements to call the same function.
Also, procedure may be used for triggering different relations (these functions are named as general trigger functions).
As example of using both features above, there could be a general function that takes as its arguments two field names and puts the current user in one and the current timestamp in the other. This allows triggers to be written on INSERT events to automatically track creation of records in a transaction table for example. It could also be used as a "last updated" function if used in an UPDATE event.
Trigger functions return HeapTuple to the calling Executor. This is ignored for triggers fired after an INSERT, DELETE or UPDATE operation but it allows BEFORE triggers to:
Return NULL to skip the operation for the current tuple (and so the tuple will not be inserted/updated/deleted).
Return a pointer to another tuple (INSERT and UPDATE only) which will be inserted (as the new version of the updated tuple if UPDATE) instead of original tuple.
Note that there is no initialization performed by the CREATE TRIGGER handler. This will be changed in the future. Also, if more than one trigger is defined for the same event on the same relation, the order of trigger firing is unpredictable. This may be changed in the future.
If a trigger function executes SQL-queries (using SPI) then these queries may fire triggers again. This is known as cascading triggers. There is no explicit limitation on the number of cascade levels.
If a trigger is fired by INSERT and inserts a new tuple in the same relation then this trigger will be fired again. Currently, there is nothing provided for synchronization (etc) of these cases but this may change. At the moment, there is function funny_dup17() in the regress tests which uses some techniques to stop recursion (cascading) on itself...