The goal is this: I have a set of values to go into table A
, and a set of values to go into table B
. The values going into B
reference values in A
(via a foreign key), so after inserting the A
values I need to know how to reference them when inserting the B
values. I need this to be as fast as possible.
I made the B
values insert with a bulk copy from:
def bulk_insert_copyfrom(cursor, table_name, field_names, values):
if not values: return
print "bulk copy from prepare..."
str_vals = "\n".join("\t".join(adapt(val).getquoted() for val in cur_vals) for cur_vals in values)
strf = StringIO(str_vals)
print "bulk copy from execute..."
cursor.copy_from(strf, table_name, columns=tuple(field_names))
This was far faster than doing an INSERT VALUES ... RETURNING id
query. I'd like to do the same for the A
values, but I need to know the id
s of the inserted rows.
Is there any way to execute a bulk copy from in this fashion, but to get the id
field (primary key) of the rows that are inserted, such that I know which id
associates with which value
?
If not, what would the best way to accomplish my goal?
EDIT: Sample data on request:
a_val1 = [1, 2, 3]
a_val2 = [4, 5, 6]
a_vals = [a_val1, a_val2]
b_val1 = [a_val2, 5, 6, 7]
b_val2 = [a_val1, 100, 200, 300]
b_val3 = [a_val2, 9, 14, 6]
b_vals = [b_val1, b_val2, b_val3]
I want to insert the a_vals
, then insert the b_vals
, using foreign keys instead of references to the list objects.