230

Postgres 8.4 and greater databases contain common tables in public schema and company specific tables in company schema.
company schema names always start with 'company' and end with the company number.
So there may be schemas like:

public
company1
company2
company3
...
companynn

An application always works with a single company.
The search_path is specified accordingly in odbc or npgsql connection string, like:

search_path='company3,public'

How would you check if a given table exists in a specified companyn schema?

eg:

select isSpecific('company3','tablenotincompany3schema')

should return false, and

select isSpecific('company3','tableincompany3schema')

should return true.

In any case, the function should check only companyn schema passed, not other schemas.

If a given table exists in both public and the passed schema, the function should return true.
It should work for Postgres 8.4 or later.

1
  • 1
    IF EXISTS ... IF NOT EXISTS .. without [ ]
    – mercury
    Mar 9, 2021 at 19:17

3 Answers 3

412

It depends on what you want to test exactly.

Information schema?

To find "whether the table exists" (no matter who's asking), querying the information schema (information_schema.tables) is incorrect, strictly speaking, because (per documentation):

Only those tables and views are shown that the current user has access to (by way of being the owner or having some privilege).

The query provided by @kong can return FALSE, but the table can still exist. It answers the question:

How to check whether a table (or view) exists, and the current user has access to it?

SELECT EXISTS (
   SELECT FROM information_schema.tables 
   WHERE  table_schema = 'schema_name'
   AND    table_name   = 'table_name'
   );

The information schema is mainly useful to stay portable across major versions and across different RDBMS. But the implementation is slow, because Postgres has to use sophisticated views to comply to the standard (information_schema.tables is a rather simple example). And some information (like OIDs) gets lost in translation from the system catalogs - which actually carry all information.

System catalogs

Your question was:

How to check whether a table exists?

SELECT EXISTS (
   SELECT FROM pg_catalog.pg_class c
   JOIN   pg_catalog.pg_namespace n ON n.oid = c.relnamespace
   WHERE  n.nspname = 'schema_name'
   AND    c.relname = 'table_name'
   AND    c.relkind = 'r'    -- only tables
   );

Use the system catalogs pg_class and pg_namespace directly, which is also considerably faster. However, per documentation on pg_class:

The catalog pg_class catalogs tables and most everything else that has columns or is otherwise similar to a table. This includes indexes (but see also pg_index), sequences, views, materialized views, composite types, and TOAST tables;

For this particular question you can also use the system view pg_tables. A bit simpler and more portable across major Postgres versions (which is hardly of concern for this basic query):

SELECT EXISTS (
   SELECT FROM pg_tables
   WHERE  schemaname = 'schema_name'
   AND    tablename  = 'table_name'
   );

Identifiers have to be unique among all objects mentioned above. If you want to ask:

How to check whether a name for a table or similar object in a given schema is taken?

SELECT EXISTS (
   SELECT FROM pg_catalog.pg_class c
   JOIN   pg_catalog.pg_namespace n ON n.oid = c.relnamespace
   WHERE  n.nspname = 'schema_name'
   AND    c.relname = 'table_name'
   );

Alternative: cast to regclass

SELECT 'schema_name.table_name'::regclass;

This raises an exception if the (optionally schema-qualified) table (or other object occupying that name) does not exist.

If you do not schema-qualify the table name, a cast to regclass defaults to the search_path and returns the OID for the first table found - or an exception if the table is in none of the listed schemas. Note that the system schemas pg_catalog and pg_temp (the schema for temporary objects of the current session) are automatically part of the search_path.

You can use that and catch a possible exception in a function. Example:

A query like above avoids possible exceptions and is therefore slightly faster.

Note that the each component of the name is treated as identifier here - as opposed to above queries where names are given as literal strings. Identifiers are cast to lower case unless double-quoted. If you have forced otherwise illegal identifiers with double-quotes, those need to be included. Like:

SELECT '"Dumb_SchName"."FoolishTbl"'::regclass;

See:

to_regclass(rel_name) in Postgres 9.4+

Much simpler now:

SELECT to_regclass('schema_name.table_name');

Same as the cast, but it returns ...

... null rather than throwing an error if the name is not found

12
  • 4
    from shell: [[ `psql dbname -tAc "SELECT EXISTS (SELECT 1 FROM information_schema.tables WHERE table_schema = 'ejabberd' AND table_name = 'users');"` = 't' ]]
    – brauliobo
    Mar 8, 2015 at 0:46
  • 1
    Is there any reason you're not using pg_tables?
    – m0meni
    Jan 9, 2017 at 16:46
  • 1
    pg_tables is actually a good idea for "How to check whether a table exists?" (Checking for tables only, not for other purposes, like explained above. Also, pg_tables is a view involving several tables (pg_class, pg_namespace, pg_tablespace), which is a bit more expensive. The most important reason: I am used to query pg_class directly and didn't think of pg_tables when writing this answer. I added it above now, thanks. Jan 10, 2017 at 4:48
  • 1
    @sage88: Right, I removed my incorrect comment. You can use pg_my_temp_schema() to get the OID of the actual temp schema if it exists. (But views in the information_schema don't include OIDs. You could SELECT nspname FROM pg_namespace WHERE OID = pg_my_temp_schema()) Your test has several weaknesses. A correct test would be table_schema LIKE 'pg\_temp\_%' or stricter: table_schema ~ '^pg_temp_\d+$'. Jan 23, 2017 at 0:03
  • 1
    @PeterKrauss You will get that error if you try to use the to_regclass function on a version of postgres older than 9.4. Must have 9.4+
    – spetz83
    Nov 14, 2017 at 16:20
55

Perhaps use information_schema:

SELECT EXISTS(
    SELECT * 
    FROM information_schema.tables 
    WHERE 
      table_schema = 'company3' AND 
      table_name = 'tableincompany3schema'
);
0

For PostgreSQL 9.3 or less...Or who likes all normalized to text

Three flavors of my old SwissKnife library: relname_exists(anyThing), relname_normalized(anyThing) and relnamechecked_to_array(anyThing). All checks from pg_catalog.pg_class table, and returns standard universal datatypes (boolean, text or text[]).

/**
 * From my old SwissKnife Lib to your SwissKnife. License CC0.
 * Check and normalize to array the free-parameter relation-name.
 * Options: (name); (name,schema), ("schema.name"). Ignores schema2 in ("schema.name",schema2).
 */
CREATE FUNCTION relname_to_array(text,text default NULL) RETURNS text[] AS $f$
     SELECT array[n.nspname::text, c.relname::text]
     FROM   pg_catalog.pg_class c JOIN pg_catalog.pg_namespace n ON n.oid = c.relnamespace,
            regexp_split_to_array($1,'\.') t(x) -- not work with quoted names
     WHERE  CASE
              WHEN COALESCE(x[2],'')>'' THEN n.nspname = x[1]      AND c.relname = x[2]
              WHEN $2 IS NULL THEN           n.nspname = 'public'  AND c.relname = $1
              ELSE                           n.nspname = $2        AND c.relname = $1
            END
$f$ language SQL IMMUTABLE;

CREATE FUNCTION relname_exists(text,text default NULL) RETURNS boolean AS $wrap$
  SELECT EXISTS (SELECT relname_to_array($1,$2))
$wrap$ language SQL IMMUTABLE;

CREATE FUNCTION relname_normalized(text,text default NULL,boolean DEFAULT true) RETURNS text AS $wrap$
  SELECT COALESCE(array_to_string(relname_to_array($1,$2), '.'), CASE WHEN $3 THEN '' ELSE NULL END)
$wrap$ language SQL IMMUTABLE;

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