Funzione trigger molto generica, trovata lì:https://www. cybertec-postgresql.com/en/tracking-changes-in-postgresql/
Tabella per memorizzare la cronologia:
CREATE SCHEMA logging;
CREATE TABLE logging.t_history (
id serial,
tstamp timestamp DEFAULT now(),
schemaname text,
tabname text,
operation text,
who text DEFAULT current_user,
new_val json,
old_val json
);
L'innesco:
CREATE FUNCTION change_trigger() RETURNS trigger AS $$
BEGIN
IF TG_OP = 'INSERT'
THEN INSERT INTO logging.t_history (
tabname, schemaname, operation, new_val
) VALUES (
TG_RELNAME, TG_TABLE_SCHEMA, TG_OP, row_to_json(NEW)
);
RETURN NEW;
ELSIF TG_OP = 'UPDATE'
THEN
INSERT INTO logging.t_history (
tabname, schemaname, operation, new_val, old_val
)
VALUES (TG_RELNAME, TG_TABLE_SCHEMA, TG_OP, row_to_json(NEW), row_to_json(OLD));
RETURN NEW;
ELSIF TG_OP = 'DELETE'
THEN
INSERT INTO logging.t_history
(tabname, schemaname, operation, old_val)
VALUES (
TG_RELNAME, TG_TABLE_SCHEMA, TG_OP, row_to_json(OLD)
);
RETURN OLD;
END IF;
END;
$$ LANGUAGE 'plpgsql' SECURITY DEFINER;
Applicare il trigger:
CREATE TRIGGER t BEFORE INSERT OR UPDATE OR DELETE ON your_table
FOR EACH ROW EXECUTE PROCEDURE change_trigger();