I found a couple of other questions on this topic. This one...

mysql_insert_id alternative for postgresql

...and the manual seem to indicate that you can call lastval() any time and it will work as expected. But this one...

Postgresql and PHP: is the currval a efficent way to retrieve the last row inserted id, in a multiuser application?

...seems to state that it has to be within a transaction. So my question is this: can I just wait as long as I like before querying for lastval() (without a transaction)? And is that reliable in the face of many concurrent connections?

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Sequences depends on session not on transaction. But it is not good to wait and execute other queries meanwhile, you may receive lastval of other query. – jordani Jun 27 '11 at 0:01
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2 Answers

up vote 3 down vote accepted

Yes, the sequence functions provide multiuser-safe methods for obtaining successive sequence values from sequence objects.

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I'm so glad to see that sequences are now ANSI -- AUTOINCREMENT/IDENTITY are too limiting. – OMG Ponies Jun 26 '11 at 18:24
Excellent, thanks. – Jonah Jun 26 '11 at 18:26
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INSERT, UPDATE and DELETE in PostgreSQL have a RETURNING clause which means you can do:

INSERT INTO ....
RETURNING id;

Then the query will return the value it inserted for id for each row inserted. Saves a roundtrip to the server.

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Thanks very much for this answer! Exactly what I needed, halves the number of queries I need to make for certain operations. – PROGRAM_IX Apr 17 at 13:31
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