INSERT

Creates new rows in a table.

Synopsis

  1. INSERT INTO <table> [( <column> [, ...] )]
  2. {DEFAULT VALUES | VALUES ( {<expression> | DEFAULT} [, ...] )
  3. [, ...] | <query>}

Description

INSERT inserts new rows into a table. One can insert one or more rows specified by value expressions, or zero or more rows resulting from a query.

The target column names may be listed in any order. If no list of column names is given at all, the default is the columns of the table in their declared order. The values supplied by the VALUES clause or query are associated with the explicit or implicit column list left-to-right.

Each column not present in the explicit or implicit column list will be filled with a default value, either its declared default value or null if there is no default.

If the expression for any column is not of the correct data type, automatic type conversion will be attempted.

You must have INSERT privilege on a table in order to insert into it.

Note: HAWQ supports 127 concurrent inserts currently.

Outputs On successful completion, an INSERT command returns a command tag of the form:

  1. INSERT oid
  2. count

The count is the number of rows inserted. If count is exactly one, and the target table has OIDs, then oid is the OID assigned to the inserted row. Otherwise oid is zero.

Parameters

The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing table.

The name of a column in table. The column name can be qualified with a subfield name or array subscript, if needed. (Inserting into only some fields of a composite column leaves the other fields null.)

DEFAULT VALUES

All columns will be filled with their default values.

An expression or value to assign to the corresponding column.

DEFAULT

The corresponding column will be filled with its default value.

A query (SELECT statement) that supplies the rows to be inserted. Refer to the SELECT statement for a description of the syntax.

Examples

Insert a single row into table films:

  1. INSERT INTO films VALUES ('UA502', 'Bananas', 105,
  2. '1971-07-13', 'Comedy', '82 minutes');

In this example, the length column is omitted and therefore it will have the default value:

  1. INSERT INTO films (code, title, did, date_prod, kind) VALUES
  2. ('T_601', 'Yojimbo', 106, '1961-06-16', 'Drama');

This example uses the DEFAULT clause for the date_prod column rather than specifying a value:

  1. INSERT INTO films VALUES ('UA502', 'Bananas', 105, DEFAULT,
  2. 'Comedy', '82 minutes');

To insert a row consisting entirely of default values:

  1. INSERT INTO films DEFAULT VALUES;

To insert multiple rows using the multirow VALUES syntax:

  1. INSERT INTO films (code, title, did, date_prod, kind) VALUES
  2. ('B6717', 'Tampopo', 110, '1985-02-10', 'Comedy'),
  3. ('HG120', 'The Dinner Game', 140, DEFAULT, 'Comedy');

This example inserts some rows into table films from a table tmp_films with the same column layout as films:

  1. INSERT INTO films SELECT * FROM tmp_films WHERE date_prod <
  2. '2004-05-07';

Compatibility

INSERT conforms to the SQL standard. The case in which a column name list is omitted, but not all the columns are filled from the VALUES clause or query, is disallowed by the standard.

Possible limitations of the query clause are documented under SELECT.

See Also

COPY, SELECT, CREATE EXTERNAL TABLE