PostgreSQL / PostGIS - Advanced Driver Information
The information collected in that page deal with advanced topics, not found in the OGR PostgreSQL driver Information page.
Multiple geometry columns
The PostgreSQL driver supports accessing tables with multiple PostGIS geometry columns.
OGR supports reading, updating, creating tables with multiple PostGIS geometry columns (following RFC 41 : Support for multiple geometry fields in OGR) For such a table, a single OGR layer will be reported with as many geometry fields as there are geometry columns in the table.
For backward compatibility, it is also possible to query a layer with GetLayerByName() with a name formatted like 'foo(bar)' where 'foo' is a table and 'bar' a geometry column.
Layers
Even when PostGIS is enabled, if the user
defines the environment variable PG_LIST_ALL_TABLES=YES
(and does not specify tables=), all regular user tables and named views
will be treated as layers. However, tables with multiple geometry column
will only be reported once in that mode. So this variable is mainly
useful when PostGIS is enabled to find out tables with no spatial data,
or views without an entry in geometry_columns table.
In any case, all user tables can be queried explicitly with GetLayerByName()
Regular (non-spatial) tables can be accessed, and will return features with attributes, but not geometry. If the table has a "wkb_geometry" field, it will be treated as a spatial table. The type of the field is inspected to determine how to read it. It can be a PostGIS geometry field, which is assumed to come back in OGC WKT, or type BYTEA or OID in which case it is used as a source of OGC WKB geometry.
Tables inherited from spatial tables are supported.
If there is an "ogc_fid" field, it will be used to set the feature id of the features, and not treated as a regular field.
The layer name may be of the form "schema.table". The schema must exist, and the user needs to have write permissions for the target and the public schema.
If the user defines the environment variable
PG_SKIP_VIEWS=YES
(and does not specify tables=), only the regular user tables will be treated as layers. The default action is to include the views. This variable is particularly useful when you want to copy the data into another format while avoiding the redundant data from the views.
Named views
When PostGIS is enabled for the accessed database, named views are supported, provided that there is an entry in the geometry_columns tables. But, note that the AddGeometryColumn() SQL function doesn't accept adding an entry for a view (only for regular tables). So, that must usually be done by hand with a SQL statement like :
"INSERT INTO geometry_columns VALUES ( '', 'public', 'name_of_my_view', 'name_of_geometry_column', 2, 4326, 'POINT');"
It is also possible to use named views without inserting a row in the geometry_columns table. For that, you need to explicitly specify the name of the view in the "tables=" option of the connection string. See above. The drawback is that OGR will not be able to report a valid SRS and figure out the right geometry type.
Retrieving FID of newly inserted feature
The FID of a feature (i.e. usually the value of the OGC_FID column for the feature) inserted into a table with CreateFeature(), in non-copy mode, will be retrieved from the database and can be obtained with GetFID(). One side-effect of this new behavior is that you must be careful if you re-use the same feature object in a loop that makes insertions. After the first iteration, the FID will be set to a non-null value, so at the second iteration, CreateFeature() will try to insert the new feature with the FID of the previous feature, which will fail as you cannot insert 2 features with same FID. So in that case you must explicitly reset the FID before calling CreateFeature(), or use a fresh feature object.
Snippet example in Python :
feat = ogr.Feature(lyr.GetLayerDefn())
for i in range(100):
feat.SetFID(-1) # Reset FID to null value
lyr.CreateFeature(feat)
print('The feature has been assigned FID %d' % feat.GetFID())
or :
for i in range(100):
feat = ogr.Feature(lyr.GetLayerDefn())
lyr.CreateFeature(feat)
print('The feature has been assigned FID %d' % feat.GetFID())
Old GDAL behavior can be obtained by setting the configuration
option OGR_PG_RETRIEVE_FID
to FALSE.
Issues with transactions
Efficient sequential reading in PostgreSQL requires to be done within a transaction (technically this is a CURSOR WITHOUT HOLD). So the PG driver will implicitly open such a transaction if none is currently opened as soon as a feature is retrieved. This transaction will be released if ResetReading() is called (provided that no other layer is still being read).
If within such an implicit transaction, an explicit dataset level StartTransaction() is issued, the PG driver will use a SAVEPOINT to emulate properly the transaction behavior while making the active cursor on the read layer still opened.
If an explicit transaction is opened with dataset level StartTransaction() before reading a layer, this transaction will be used for the cursor that iterates over the layer. When explicitly committing or rolling back the transaction, the cursor will become invalid, and ResetReading() should be issued again to restart reading from the beginning.
As calling SetAttributeFilter() or SetSpatialFilter() implies an implicit ResetReading(), they have the same effect as ResetReading(). That is to say, while an implicit transaction is in progress, the transaction will be committed (if no other layer is being read), and a new one will be started again at the next GetNextFeature() call. On the contrary, if they are called within an explicit transaction, the transaction is maintained.
With the above rules, the below examples show the SQL instructions that are run when using the OGR API in different scenarios.
lyr1->GetNextFeature() BEGIN (implicit)
DECLARE cur1 CURSOR FOR SELECT * FROM lyr1
FETCH 1 IN cur1
lyr1->SetAttributeFilter('xxx')
--> lyr1->ResetReading() CLOSE cur1
COMMIT (implicit)
lyr1->GetNextFeature() BEGIN (implicit)
DECLARE cur1 CURSOR FOR SELECT * FROM lyr1 WHERE xxx
FETCH 1 IN cur1
lyr2->GetNextFeature() DECLARE cur2 CURSOR FOR SELECT * FROM lyr2
FETCH 1 IN cur2
lyr1->GetNextFeature() FETCH 1 IN cur1
lyr2->GetNextFeature() FETCH 1 IN cur2
lyr1->CreateFeature(f) INSERT INTO cur1 ...
lyr1->SetAttributeFilter('xxx')
--> lyr1->ResetReading() CLOSE cur1
COMMIT (implicit)
lyr1->GetNextFeature() DECLARE cur1 CURSOR FOR SELECT * FROM lyr1 WHERE xxx
FETCH 1 IN cur1
lyr1->ResetReading() CLOSE cur1
lyr2->ResetReading() CLOSE cur2
COMMIT (implicit)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
ds->StartTransaction() BEGIN
lyr1->GetNextFeature() DECLARE cur1 CURSOR FOR SELECT * FROM lyr1
FETCH 1 IN cur1
lyr2->GetNextFeature() DECLARE cur2 CURSOR FOR SELECT * FROM lyr2
FETCH 1 IN cur2
lyr1->CreateFeature(f) INSERT INTO cur1 ...
lyr1->SetAttributeFilter('xxx')
--> lyr1->ResetReading() CLOSE cur1
COMMIT (implicit)
lyr1->GetNextFeature() DECLARE cur1 CURSOR FOR SELECT * FROM lyr1 WHERE xxx
FETCH 1 IN cur1
lyr1->ResetReading() CLOSE cur1
lyr2->ResetReading() CLOSE cur2
ds->CommitTransaction() COMMIT
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
ds->StartTransaction() BEGIN
lyr1->GetNextFeature() DECLARE cur1 CURSOR FOR SELECT * FROM lyr1
FETCH 1 IN cur1
lyr1->CreateFeature(f) INSERT INTO cur1 ...
ds->CommitTransaction() CLOSE cur1 (implicit)
COMMIT
lyr1->GetNextFeature() FETCH 1 IN cur1 ==> Error since the cursor was closed with the commit. Explicit ResetReading() required before
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
lyr1->GetNextFeature() BEGIN (implicit)
DECLARE cur1 CURSOR FOR SELECT * FROM lyr1
FETCH 1 IN cur1
ds->StartTransaction() SAVEPOINT savepoint
lyr1->CreateFeature(f) INSERT INTO cur1 ...
ds->CommitTransaction() RELEASE SAVEPOINT savepoint
lyr1->ResetReading() CLOSE cur1
COMMIT (implicit)
Note: in reality, the PG drivers fetches 500 features at once. The FETCH 1 is for clarity of the explanation.
Advanced Examples
This example shows using ogrinfo to list only the layers specified by the tables= options.
ogrinfo -ro PG:'dbname=warmerda tables=table1,table2'
This example shows using ogrinfo to query a table 'foo' with multiple geometry columns ('geom1' and 'geom2').
ogrinfo -ro -al PG:dbname=warmerda 'foo(geom2)'
This example show how to list only the layers inside the schema apt200810 and apt200812. The layer names will be prefixed by the name of the schema they belong to.
ogrinfo -ro PG:'dbname=warmerda schemas=apt200810,apt200812'
This example shows using ogrinfo to list only the layers inside the schema named apt200810. Note that the layer names will not be prefixed by apt200810 as only one schema is listed.
ogrinfo -ro PG:'dbname=warmerda schemas=apt200810'
This example shows how to convert a set of shapefiles inside the apt200810 directory into an existing Postgres schema apt200810. In that example, we could have use the schemas= option instead.
ogr2ogr -f PostgreSQL "PG:dbname=warmerda active_schema=apt200810" apt200810
This example shows how to convert all the tables inside the schema apt200810 as a set of shapefiles inside the apt200810 directory. Note that the layer names will not be prefixed by apt200810 as only one schema is listed
ogr2ogr apt200810 PG:'dbname=warmerda schemas=apt200810'
This example shows how to overwrite an existing table in an existing schema. Note the use of -nln to specify the qualified layer name.
ogr2ogr -overwrite -f PostgreSQL "PG:dbname=warmerda" mytable.shp mytable -nln myschema.mytable
Note that using -lco SCHEMA=mytable instead of -nln would not have worked in that case (see #2821 for more details).
If you need to overwrite many tables located in a schema at once, the -nln option is not the more appropriate, so it might be more convenient to use the active_schema connection string. The following example will overwrite, if necessary, all the PostgreSQL tables corresponding to a set of shapefiles inside the apt200810 directory :
ogr2ogr -overwrite -f PostgreSQL "PG:dbname=warmerda active_schema=apt200810" apt200810