Your trigger simplified and optimized, should be considerably faster:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION detect_cycle()
RETURNS TRIGGER
LANGUAGE plpgsql AS
$func$
BEGIN
IF EXISTS (
WITH RECURSIVE search_graph(parentid, path, cycle) AS ( -- relevant columns
-- check ahead, makes 1 step less
SELECT g.parentid, ARRAY[g.id, g.parentid], (g.id = g.parentid)
FROM node g
WHERE g.id = NEW.id -- only test starting from new row
UNION ALL
SELECT g.parentid, sg.path || g.parentid, g.parentid = ANY(sg.path)
FROM search_graph sg
JOIN node g ON g.id = sg.parentid
WHERE NOT sg.cycle
)
SELECT FROM search_graph
WHERE cycle
LIMIT 1 -- stop evaluation at first find
)
THEN
RAISE EXCEPTION 'Loop detected!';
ELSE
RETURN NEW;
END IF;
END
$func$;
You don't need dynamic SQL, you don't need to count, you don't need all the columns and you don't need to test the whole table for every single row.
CREATE TRIGGER detect_cycle_after_update
AFTER INSERT OR UPDATE ON node
FOR EACH ROW EXECUTE PROCEDURE detect_cycle();
An INSERT
like this has to be prohibited, too:
INSERT INTO node (id, name,parentid) VALUES (8,'D',9), (9,'E',8);