Predefined Database Augmentations

These augmentations are specified in the config.yaml configuration file distributed with Pyrseas' dbaugment.

Columns

These are predefined column specifications that can be added to tables, e.g., in various audit column combinations (see Audit Columns below).

  • created_by_ip_address: An INET column to record the IP address which originated the current row.
  • created_by_user: A VARCHAR(63) column to record the user, e.g., CURRENT_USER, who created the current row.
  • created_date: A DATE column that defaults to CURRENT_DATE.
  • created_timestamp: A TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE column to record the date and time when the current row was created.
  • modified_by_ip_address: An INET column to record the IP address which originated the last modification to the current row.
  • modified_by_user: A VARCHAR(63) column to record the user, e.g., CURRENT_USER, who last modified the current row.
  • modified_timestamp: A TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE column to record the date and time when the current row was last modified.

Functions

The following are predefined trigger functions which are used to implement various augmentations. The source for each function, written in PL/pgSQL, is specified in a function template, named with a functempl_ prefixed to the function name.

  • Audit when modified (audit_modified): This function provides the CURRENT_TIMESTAMP value for audit columns.
  • Default audit (audit_default): This function provides the CURRENT_USER and CURRENT_TIMESTAMP for audit columns.
  • Full audit (audit_full): For SQL INSERTs, this function provides values for the user who created the row, the CURRENT_TIMESTAMP and the IP address for both the created_ and modified_ audit columns. For UPDATEs, it retains the existing values in the created_ columns and supplies current values for the modified_ columns.

In addition, the following helper functions are defined in schema pyrseas:

  • get_session_variable
  • set_session_variable

A variant of get_session_variable is invoked by the audit_full function to retrieve the actual (logged-on) user and IP address. In web applications, the user that connects to the database is typically the system user running the web server, rather than the web application user. The application can invoke the pyrseas.set_session_variable function to supply the application user and IP address so that the audit trail will reflect the application context corrrectly.

Audit Columns

These are predefined combinations of columns to be added to tables to record audit trail information. They may also include triggers to be invoked to maintain the column values.

  • created_date_only: This is the simplest audit trail that adds a created_date column which defaults to the CURRENT_DATE.
  • modified_only: This is another simple audit trail. It adds a modified_timestamp column which is supplied by a trigger named table_name_20_audit_modified_only.
  • default: This is the default for audit columns. It adds the columns modified_by_user and modified_timestamp and a trigger named table_name_20_aud_default to fill in the columns.
  • full: This is the most extensive audit trail combination. It adds created_ and modified_ columns for user, IP address and timestamp. It also adds a trigger named table_name_20_audit_full.