Does Postgres have any way to say ALTER TABLE foo ADD CONSTRAINT bar ...
which will just ignore the command if the constraint already exists, so that it doesn't raise an error?
This might help, although it may be a bit of a dirty hack:
create or replace function create_constraint_if_not_exists (
t_name text, c_name text, constraint_sql text
)
returns void AS
$$
begin
-- Look for our constraint
if not exists (select constraint_name
from information_schema.constraint_column_usage
where table_name = t_name and constraint_name = c_name) then
execute constraint_sql;
end if;
end;
$$ language 'plpgsql'
Then call with:
SELECT create_constraint_if_not_exists(
'foo',
'bar',
'ALTER TABLE foo ADD CONSTRAINT bar CHECK (foobies < 100);')
Updated:
As per Webmut's answer below suggesting:
ALTER TABLE foo DROP CONSTRAINT IF EXISTS bar;
ALTER TABLE foo ADD CONSTRAINT bar ...;
That's probably fine in your development database, or where you know you can shut out the apps that depend on this database for a maintenance window.
But if this is a lively mission critical 24x7 production environment you don't really want to be dropping constraints willy nilly like this. Even for a few milliseconds there's a short window where you're no longer enforcing your constraint which may allow errant values to slip through. That may have unintended consequences leading to considerable business costs at some point down the road.