Automate schema migrations using DizzleORM and GitHub Actions - Manage thousands of tenants with this workflow

PostgreSQL DROP TRIGGER Statement

Summary: in this tutorial, you will learn how to use the PostgreSQL DROP TRIGGER statement to drop a trigger from a table.

Introduction to PostgreSQL DROP TRIGGER statement

To delete a trigger from a table, you use the DROP TRIGGER statement with the following syntax:

DROP TRIGGER [IF EXISTS] trigger_name
ON table_name
[ CASCADE | RESTRICT ];

In this syntax:

  • First, specify the name of the trigger you want to delete after the DROP TRIGGER keywords.
  • Next, use IF EXISTS to conditionally delete the trigger only if it exists. Deleting a non-existing trigger without specifying the IF EXISTS statement results in an error. If you use IF EXISTS to delete a non-existing trigger, PostgreSQL issues a notice instead. The IF EXISTS is optional.
  • Then, specify the name of the table to which the trigger belongs. If the table belongs to a specific schema, you can use the schema-qualified name of the table such as schema_name.table_name.
  • After that, use the CASCADE option to drop objects that depend on the trigger automatically. Note that CASCADE option will also delete objects that depend on objects that depend on the trigger.
  • Finally, use the RESTRICT option to refuse to drop the trigger if any objects depend on it. By default, the DROP TRIGGER statement uses RESTRICT.

In SQL standard, trigger names are not local to tables so the DROP TRIGGER statement does not have the table to which the trigger belongs:

DROP TRIGGER trigger_name;

PostgreSQL DROP TRIGGER statement example

First, create a function that validates the username of a staff. The username is not null and its length must be at least 8.

CREATE FUNCTION check_staff_user()
    RETURNS TRIGGER
AS $$
BEGIN
    IF length(NEW.username) < 8 OR NEW.username IS NULL THEN
        RAISE EXCEPTION 'The username cannot be less than 8 characters';
    END IF;
    IF NEW.NAME IS NULL THEN
        RAISE EXCEPTION 'Username cannot be NULL';
    END IF;
    RETURN NEW;
END;
$$
LANGUAGE plpgsql;

Second, create a new trigger on the staff table of the sample database to check the username of a staff. This trigger will fire whenever you insert or update a row in the staff table:

CREATE TRIGGER username_check
    BEFORE INSERT OR UPDATE
ON staff
FOR EACH ROW
    EXECUTE PROCEDURE check_staff_user();

PostgreSQL DROP Trigger ExampleThird, use the DROP TRIGGER statement to delete the username_check trigger:

DROP TRIGGER username_check
ON staff;

Summary

  • Use the PostgreSQL DROP TRIGGER statement to delete a trigger from a table.

Last updated on

Was this page helpful?