I think this will be a bit esoteric but wanted to throw this out there in case anyone's tried anything like this, or if someone's already tried and found it to be impossible.
We have a table that needs a uniqueness constraint on a certain set of columns, but it also has a "soft delete" indicator. Records that have been marked as "deleted" should not be included in the uniqueness check.
That's all fine, I could solve this easily with a unique function-based index. However, what complicates matters is that if we're going to implement this constraint in the database, it must be a deferred constraint, because of the way Hibernate works. If it can't be done, we'll have to omit the constraint, and I'd prefer not to if at all possible.
For example:
CREATE TABLE jkemp_test
( id NUMBER NOT NULL
, deleted_ind CHAR(1) DEFAULT 'N' NOT NULL);
CREATE UNIQUE INDEX jkemp_test_funique
ON jkemp_test
(CASE WHEN deleted_ind = 'N' THEN id END);
-- make this use the function-based index, maybe?
ALTER TABLE jkemp_test
ADD CONSTRAINT jkemp_test_unique
UNIQUE (id)
DEFERRABLE INITIALLY DEFERRED;
INSERT INTO jkemp_test VALUES (1,'N');
INSERT INTO jkemp_test VALUES (2,'N');
COMMIT;
UPDATE jkemp_test SET deleted_ind='Y' WHERE id=1;
COMMIT;
-- depending on whether the constraint is deferred or not, either
-- the insert or the commit will fail "unique constraint violated"
INSERT INTO jkemp_test VALUES (1,'N');
COMMIT;
A win-win scenario would be for the last commit to succeed, while still allowing the constraint to be deferred. (I'm aware that the existence of the unique index means that the constraint is not currently deferred.)
Our only option at the moment is to implement the constraint using the application, which will not be as reliable. Also, we don't want to change the data model too much (e.g. we could move the deleted rows to a different table, e.g. JKEMP_TEST_DELETED
, but that would involve too much complication in the application).
This is on Oracle 11.2.0.1.0.