I have this table in an Oracle DB which has a primary key defined on 3 of the data columns. I want to drop the primary key constraint to allow rows with duplicate data for those columns, and create a new column, 'id', to contain an auto-incrementing integer ID for these rows. I know how to create a sequence and trigger to add an auto-incrementing ID for new rows added to the table, but is it possible to write a PL/SQL statement to add unique IDs to all the rows that are already in the table?
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Once you have created the sequence:
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If you're just using an integer for a sequence you could update the id with the rownum. e.g.
You then need to reset the sequence to the next valid id. |
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Is this what you need?
This assumes you don't care what order your primary keys are in. |
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First you should check your PCTFREE... is there enough room for every row to get longer? If you chose a very small PCTFREE or your data has lots of lenght-increasing updates, you might begin chaining every row to do this as an update. You almost certainly better to do this as a CTAS. Create table t2 as select seq.nextval, t1.* from t1. drop t1 rename t2 to t1. |
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