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I have this table in which I want to have maximum 300 rows of data:

CREATE TABLE "ADMIN"."SESSIONS" 
   (    "SESSIONID" VARCHAR2(30 BYTE), 
    "SESSIONTYPE" NUMBER(*,0), 
    "USERID" VARCHAR2(30 BYTE), 
    "ACTIVITYSTART" TIMESTAMP (6), 
    "ACTIVITYEND" TIMESTAMP (6), 
    "ACTIVITY" CLOB, 
    "USERNAME" VARCHAR2(30 BYTE), 
    "IPADDRESS" VARCHAR2(30 BYTE), 
    "LOGINTIME" TIMESTAMP (6), 
    "LOGOUTTIME" TIMESTAMP (6)
   ) SEGMENT CREATION IMMEDIATE 

Can you tell me how I can insert into the table only if the maximum number is not reached? I want to do this using prepared statement.

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  • It's not difficult if there will be only one thread which performs the insert and more difficult if there will be several threads. What's your case?
    – Multisync
    Nov 8, 2014 at 14:13
  • How important is this restriction? You can allow to insert more than 300 rows and then use job to delete unnecessary rows, you can use view with condition rownum <=300 to hide them...
    – Dmitriy
    Nov 8, 2014 at 21:42
  • how about this: INSERT INTO SESSIONS (SESSIONID, SESSIONTYPE, USERID, ACTIVITYSTART, ACTIVITYEND, ACTIVITY, USERNAME, IPADDRESS, LOGINTIME, LOGOUTTIME) select ?, null, ?, sysdate, sysdate, ?, 'admina', ?, sysdate, sysdate FROM SESSIONS having COUNT(*) < ?; Nov 8, 2014 at 21:45
  • Please explain why you wan to do this.
    – APC
    Nov 9, 2014 at 15:44

2 Answers 2

1

I would normally close this question as a duplicate of Creating a table with max number of rows (ORACLE). Basically, it's nearly impossible and if you need to do this you're probably doing something wrong. You don't want to be calculating the number of records in a table prior to inserting into it - this is a lot of excess work.

However, given the names of the column names in your table there's probably an easier way of doing this. Alter the SESSIONS parameter to be 300. This will restrict your database to 300 concurrent sessions. If an attempt is made to create a 301st session the error ORA-00018 maximum number of sessions exceeded will be raised. If you are restricting the number of concurrent users you may have to be relatively aggressive about dropping unused connections - it depends on the number of users you're expecting.

If you still need to maintain the table after this then you can use BEFORE LOGON and BEFORE LOGOFF triggers to maintain it (though I'm not sure what ACTIVITYEND and LOGOUTTIME could be used for), the BEFORE LOGIN trigger would insert into the table and the BEFORE LOGOFF would delete from it.

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  • is there any other solution? Nov 8, 2014 at 14:36
  • If I knew of one I'd have posted it @Peter; that doesn't mean one doesn't exist.
    – Ben
    Nov 8, 2014 at 20:05
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Add an ID column to your table, control its values using a sequence as suggested by Jeffrey Kemp in Creating a table with max number of rows (ORACLE) to which @Ben has been pointing.

(Sorry - not allowed to comment, yet. So if this helps, credit Ben, please. Otherwise: What else is needed?)

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