210

I have a table with over million rows. I need to reset sequence and reassign id column with new values (1, 2, 3, 4... etc...). Is any easy way to do that?

4
  • 8
    The real question: why on earth would you want to do that? Presumably the ID is the primary key, so there is no benefit whatsoever in changing the primary key. A primary key is a meaningless (in your case artifical) value. "Renumbering" it does not serve any sensible purpose in a relational database.
    – user330315
    Jan 13, 2011 at 22:08
  • 2
    Initially I had the app running locally, then I copied the data onto production. But ids there didn't start from 1. So the ordering turned out as follows: 150, 151..., 300, 1, 2... And it would cause duplicate id errors eventually I suppose, if I hadn't renumbered the ids. Additionally, order by id is generally better than order by created_at. And here's what worked for me.
    – x-yuri
    Mar 30, 2015 at 12:52
  • 1
    The point of doing this is so that you can continue to use a regular int instead of bigint for a primary key in a database that continues to increment the sequential key but constantly receives new data. You'll quickly run into the signed integer limit, and if retaining extant id isn't important, this process will bring you back to manageable id numbers.
    – Ben Wilson
    Jun 25, 2019 at 13:35
  • 1
    Another use for this is testing. You want to reset a table to a known state before starting each test and that requires ids to be reset.
    – Safa Alai
    May 14, 2020 at 23:22

16 Answers 16

319

If you don't want to retain the ordering of ids, then you can

ALTER SEQUENCE seq RESTART WITH 1;
UPDATE t SET idcolumn=nextval('seq');

I doubt there's an easy way to do that in the order of your choice without recreating the whole table.

5
  • 5
    Shouldn't that be ALTER SEQUENCE seq RESTART WITH 1;? Jul 12, 2013 at 8:29
  • 13
    This might cause duplicate ids. To prevent this, you can first set all to very high values: UPDATE t SET idcolumn=1000000+ nextval('seq'); then run the above script.
    – tahagh
    Nov 28, 2013 at 13:15
  • 10
    SELECT setval('seq', 1, FALSE) should do the same (here, the third argument, FALSE, does the magic, as it shows that nextval must be 1 instead of 2) Sep 22, 2015 at 14:43
  • @VassilenDontchev, absolutely. Sep 22, 2015 at 19:36
  • For postgres if you get an error about Unsafe query: 'Update' statement without 'where' updates all table rows at once you can add WHERE idcolumn > 0 Sep 21, 2022 at 18:26
145

With PostgreSQL 8.4 or newer there is no need to specify the WITH 1 anymore. The start value that was recorded by CREATE SEQUENCE or last set by ALTER SEQUENCE START WITH will be used (most probably this will be 1).

Reset the sequence:

ALTER SEQUENCE tablename_id_seq RESTART;

Then update the table's ID column:

UPDATE tablename SET id = DEFAULT;

Source: PostgreSQL Docs

4
  • 7
    This seems like the best answer as it avoids making assumptions about the start value of the sequence.
    – sheepdog
    Oct 2, 2018 at 3:50
  • 3
    Best answer for my case too. I combine this answer with this one, which explains the ALTER SEQUENCE command ... so I changed 'seq' by mytable_id_seq where 'mytable' is my table name and 'id' is the name of my serial column
    – Javi
    May 4, 2020 at 9:19
  • That's interesting how setval('seq', 1) giving nextval result as 2, but restarting sequence giving nextval as 1. and setval('seq', 0) giving exception Oct 21, 2022 at 7:53
  • Straight to the point, the perfect answer Feb 29 at 10:11
54

Reset the sequence:

SELECT setval('sequence_name', 0);

Updating current records:

UPDATE foo SET id = DEFAULT;
1
  • 7
    Sequence could have a minimum value greater than 0. (And the default minimum value used by type serial and CREATE SEQUENCE is 1!) Apr 11, 2018 at 3:16
43

The best way to reset a sequence to start back with number 1 is to execute the following:

ALTER SEQUENCE <tablename>_<id>_seq RESTART WITH 1

So, for example for the users table it would be:

ALTER SEQUENCE users_id_seq RESTART WITH 1
41

Just for simplifying and clarifying the proper usage of ALTER SEQUENCE and SELECT setval for resetting the sequence:

ALTER SEQUENCE sequence_name RESTART WITH 1;

is equivalent to

SELECT setval('sequence_name', 1, FALSE);

Either of the statements may be used to reset the sequence and you can get the next value by nextval('sequence_name') as stated here also:

nextval('sequence_name')
1
  • 1
    Thanks Ali. I've just noticed it's crucial to set that 3rd parameter to false with the setval function
    – DavidHyogo
    Mar 7, 2018 at 15:11
23

Both provided solutions did not work for me;

> SELECT setval('seq', 0);
ERROR:  setval: value 0 is out of bounds for sequence "seq" (1..9223372036854775807)

setval('seq', 1) starts the numbering with 2, and ALTER SEQUENCE seq START 1 starts the numbering with 2 as well, because seq.is_called is true (Postgres version 9.0.4)

The solution that worked for me is:

> ALTER SEQUENCE seq RESTART WITH 1;
> UPDATE foo SET id = DEFAULT;
1
  • 1
    Same problem here. Your solution works for PostgreSQL 8.3.10 as well.
    – PeqNP
    Dec 13, 2012 at 22:37
8

To retain order of the rows:

UPDATE thetable SET rowid=col_serial FROM 
(SELECT rowid, row_number() OVER ( ORDER BY lngid) AS col_serial FROM thetable ORDER BY lngid) AS t1 
WHERE thetable.rowid=t1.rowid;
8
SELECT SETVAL('seq_my_table_pk_id', (SELECT MAX(my_table_pk_id) + 1 FROM my_table));
5

FYI: If you need to specify a new startvalue between a range of IDs (256 - 10000000 for example):

SELECT setval('"Sequence_Name"', 
       (SELECT coalesce(MAX("ID"),255) 
           FROM "Table_Name" 
           WHERE "ID" < 10000000 and "ID" >= 256)+1
       ); 
5

Just resetting the sequence and updating all rows may cause duplicate id errors. In many cases you have to update all rows twice. First with higher ids to avoid the duplicates, then with the ids you actually want.

Please avoid to add a fixed amount to all ids (as recommended in other comments). What happens if you have more rows than this fixed amount? Assuming the next value of the sequence is higher than all the ids of the existing rows (you just want to fill the gaps), i would do it like:

UPDATE table SET id = DEFAULT;
ALTER SEQUENCE seq RESTART;
UPDATE table SET id = DEFAULT;
5

In my case, I achieved this with:

ALTER SEQUENCE table_tabl_id_seq RESTART WITH 6;

Where my table is named table

1
  • 2
    Thanks for including a concrete example with your table name. The other answers were a bit too ambiguous. Feb 26, 2018 at 9:35
5

In my case sequences in all tables had been corrupted after importing the wrong sql file. SELECT nextval('table_name_id_seq'); was returning less than max value of the id column. So, I created sql script to recover all sequences for each table:

DO
$$
DECLARE
   rec  record;
   table_seq text;
BEGIN
   FOR rec IN
      SELECT *
      FROM   pg_tables
      WHERE  tablename NOT LIKE 'pg\_%'
      ORDER  BY tablename
   LOOP
      table_seq := rec.tablename || '_id_seq';
     
      RAISE NOTICE '%', table_seq;
      EXECUTE format(E'SELECT setval(\'%I\', COALESCE((SELECT MAX(id)+1 FROM %I), 1), false);',
            table_seq, rec.tablename);
      
   END LOOP;
END
$$;

Note: If you don't have the id column on any of your tables, you would either update the logic or handle them separately based on the logic above.

4

For example, to update the value of sequence "SEQ_A" using the maximum value of the "FIELD_ID" field of table "TAB_B," you can use the following command:

SELECT setval('SEQ_A', (SELECT max(FIELD_ID) FROM TAB_B));

This command selects the maximum value of the "FIELD_ID" field of table "TAB_B" and sets it as the next value of sequence "SEQ_A."

1
  • Thank you for answering, @sennin. While your answer is absolutely correct, it mainly repeats things that were answered years ago already. Jan 17, 2023 at 13:58
2

If you are using pgAdmin3, expand 'Sequences,' right click on a sequence, go to 'Properties,' and in the 'Definition' tab change 'Current value' to whatever value you want. There is no need for a query.

2
  • 3
    Your answer adds no value if you don't at least tell us what tool you are using.
    – 11101101b
    Feb 19, 2014 at 15:47
  • 3
    This is the easiest way, obviously I think he is saying pg admin 3
    – MvcCmsJon
    May 7, 2015 at 20:07
1

Inspired by the other answers here, I created an SQL function to do a sequence migration. The function moves a primary key sequence to a new contiguous sequence starting with any value (>= 1) either inside or outside the existing sequence range.

I explain here how I used this function in a migration of two databases with the same schema but different values into one database.

First, the function (which prints the generated SQL commands so that it is clear what is actually happening):

CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION migrate_pkey_sequence
  ( arg_table      text
  , arg_column     text
  , arg_sequence   text
  , arg_next_value bigint  -- Must be >= 1
  )
RETURNS int AS $$
DECLARE
  result int;
  curr_value bigint = arg_next_value - 1;
  update_column1 text := format
    ( 'UPDATE %I SET %I = nextval(%L) + %s'
    , arg_table
    , arg_column
    , arg_sequence
    , curr_value
    );
  alter_sequence text := format
    ( 'ALTER SEQUENCE %I RESTART WITH %s'
    , arg_sequence
    , arg_next_value
    );
  update_column2 text := format
    ( 'UPDATE %I SET %I = DEFAULT'
    , arg_table
    , arg_column
    );
  select_max_column text := format
    ( 'SELECT coalesce(max(%I), %s) + 1 AS nextval FROM %I'
    , arg_column
    , curr_value
    , arg_table
    );
BEGIN
  -- Print the SQL command before executing it.
  RAISE INFO '%', update_column1;
  EXECUTE update_column1;
  RAISE INFO '%', alter_sequence;
  EXECUTE alter_sequence;
  RAISE INFO '%', update_column2;
  EXECUTE update_column2;
  EXECUTE select_max_column INTO result;
  RETURN result;
END $$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;

The function migrate_pkey_sequence takes the following arguments:

  1. arg_table: table name (e.g. 'example')
  2. arg_column: primary key column name (e.g. 'id')
  3. arg_sequence: sequence name (e.g. 'example_id_seq')
  4. arg_next_value: next value for the column after migration

It performs the following operations:

  1. Move the primary key values to a free range. I assume that nextval('example_id_seq') follows max(id) and that the sequence starts with 1. This also handles the case where arg_next_value > max(id).
  2. Move the primary key values to the contiguous range starting with arg_next_value. The order of key values are preserved but holes in the range are not preserved.
  3. Print the next value that would follow in the sequence. This is useful if you want to migrate the columns of another table and merge with this one.

To demonstrate, we use a sequence and table defined as follows (e.g. using psql):

# CREATE SEQUENCE example_id_seq
  START WITH 1
  INCREMENT BY 1
  NO MINVALUE
  NO MAXVALUE
  CACHE 1;
# CREATE TABLE example
  ( id bigint NOT NULL DEFAULT nextval('example_id_seq'::regclass)
  );

Then, we insert some values (starting, for example, at 3):

# ALTER SEQUENCE example_id_seq RESTART WITH 3;
# INSERT INTO example VALUES (DEFAULT), (DEFAULT), (DEFAULT);
-- id: 3, 4, 5

Finally, we migrate the example.id values to start with 1.

# SELECT migrate_pkey_sequence('example', 'id', 'example_id_seq', 1);
INFO:  00000: UPDATE example SET id = nextval('example_id_seq') + 0
INFO:  00000: ALTER SEQUENCE example_id_seq RESTART WITH 1
INFO:  00000: UPDATE example SET id = DEFAULT
 migrate_pkey_sequence
-----------------------
                     4
(1 row)

The result:

# SELECT * FROM example;
 id
----
  1
  2
  3
(3 rows)
1

Even the auto-increment column is not PK ( in this example it is called seq - aka sequence ) you could achieve that with a trigger :

DROP TABLE IF EXISTS devops_guide CASCADE;

SELECT 'create the "devops_guide" table'
;
   CREATE TABLE devops_guide (
      guid           UUID NOT NULL DEFAULT gen_random_uuid()
    , level          integer NULL
    , seq            integer NOT NULL DEFAULT 1
    , name           varchar (200) NOT NULL DEFAULT 'name ...'
    , description    text NULL
    , CONSTRAINT pk_devops_guide_guid PRIMARY KEY (guid)
    ) WITH (
      OIDS=FALSE
    );

-- START trg_devops_guide_set_all_seq
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION fnc_devops_guide_set_all_seq()
    RETURNS TRIGGER
    AS $$
       BEGIN
         UPDATE devops_guide SET seq=col_serial FROM
         (SELECT guid, row_number() OVER ( ORDER BY seq) AS col_serial FROM devops_guide ORDER BY seq) AS tmp_devops_guide
         WHERE devops_guide.guid=tmp_devops_guide.guid;

         RETURN NEW;
       END;
    $$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;

 CREATE TRIGGER trg_devops_guide_set_all_seq
  AFTER UPDATE OR DELETE ON devops_guide
  FOR EACH ROW
  WHEN (pg_trigger_depth() < 1)
  EXECUTE PROCEDURE fnc_devops_guide_set_all_seq();

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