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How to List All Triggers in PostgreSQL

Summary: in this tutorial, you will learn how to list all triggers in the current database or triggers associated with a specific table in PostgreSQL.

Listing all triggers using SQL statement

To list all triggers along with their associated tables in the current database, you can use the information_schema.triggers system view.

For example, the following statement retrieves the triggers with their associated tables in the current database from the information_schema.triggers view:

SELECT
  event_object_table AS table_name,
  trigger_name
FROM
  information_schema.triggers
GROUP BY
  table_name,
  trigger_name
ORDER BY
  table_name,
  trigger_name;

Sample output:

table_name |         trigger_name
------------+-------------------------------
 employees  | after_delete_employee_trigger
 members    | after_insert_member_trigger
 products   | before_delete_product_trigger
 salaries   | after_update_salary_trigger
(4 rows)

If you want to list all triggers associated with a specific table, you can filter the event_object_table column by specifying the table name in the WHERE clause.

For example, the following query lists all triggers associated with the employees table in the current database:

SELECT
  event_object_table AS table_name,
  trigger_name
FROM
  information_schema.triggers
WHERE
  event_object_table = 'employees'
GROUP BY
  table_name,
  trigger_name
ORDER BY
  table_name,
  trigger_name;

Output:

table_name |         trigger_name
------------+-------------------------------
 employees  | after_delete_employee_trigger
(1 row)

To make it more convenient, you can create a user-defined function that wraps the above query.

For example, the following creates a function named get_triggers() that returns all triggers with their associated tables in the current database:

create or replace function get_triggers()
returns table (
	table_name text,
	trigger_name text
)
language plpgsql
as
$$
begin
	return query select
	  trg.event_object_table::text AS table_name,
	  trg.trigger_name::text
	from
	  information_schema.triggers trg
	group by
	  table_name,
	  trg.trigger_name
	order by
	  table_name,
	  trg.trigger_name;
end;
$$;

The following statement shows how to call the get_triggers() function:

SELECT * FROM get_triggers();

The following creates a function get_triggers() that accepts a table name and returns all the triggers of the table:

create or replace function get_triggers(
	p_table_name text
)
returns table (
	table_name text,
	trigger_name text
)
language plpgsql
as
$$
begin
	return query select
	  event_object_table::text AS table_name,
	  trg.trigger_name::text
	from
	  information_schema.triggers trg
	where
	   event_object_table = p_table_name
	group by
	  table_name,
	  trg.trigger_name
	order by
	  table_name,
	  trg.trigger_name;
end;
$$;

The following statement uses the get_triggers(text) function to retrieve all triggers of the employees table:

SELECT * FROM get_triggers('employees');

Listing all triggers using the pg_trigger view

pg_trigger is a system view that provides information about triggers defined in the database. Here are some important columns:

ColumnDescription
tgnameThe name of the trigger.
tgrelidThe object ID of the table or view to which the trigger belongs.
tgfoidThe object ID of the function is called when the trigger fires.
tgtypeThe type of the trigger, such as BEFORE, AFTER, or INSTEAD OF.
tgenabledThe status of the trigger, either enabled or disabled.
tgisinternalThe boolean indicator indicates whether the trigger is a system-generated trigger or a user-defined trigger.

For example, the following statement retrieves all user-defined triggers of the employees table from the pg_trigger view:

SELECT
  tgname AS trigger_name
FROM
  pg_trigger
WHERE
  tgrelid = 'employees' :: regclass
  AND tgisinternal = false
ORDER BY
  trigger_name;

Output:

trigger_name
-------------------------------
 after_delete_employee_trigger
(1 row)

Listing all triggers using psql

First, open the Command Prompt on Windows or Terminal on Unix-like systems and connect to the PostgreSQL server using psql:

psql -U postgres

Second, use the \dS command with a table name to list all the triggers associated with the table:

\dS table_name;

For example, the following command displays the employees table with its triggers:

\dS employees

Output:

Table "public.employees"
 Column |          Type          | Collation | Nullable |                Default
--------+------------------------+-----------+----------+---------------------------------------
 id     | integer                |           | not null | nextval('employees_id_seq'::regclass)
 name   | character varying(100) |           | not null |
 salary | numeric(10,2)          |           | not null |
Indexes:
    "employees_pkey" PRIMARY KEY, btree (id)
Triggers:
    after_delete_employee_trigger AFTER DELETE ON employees FOR EACH ROW EXECUTE FUNCTION archive_deleted_employee()

The last part of the output shows the triggers of the employees table.

Note that psql does not provide a command to list all triggers in the current database.

Summary

  • List all triggers in a database or a specific table using the information_schema.triggers or pg_trigger views.
  • Use psql command \dS table_name to display a table along with its associated triggers.

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