Reference v14
ECPGPlus has these language elements:
- C-preprocessor directives
- Supported C data types
- Type codes
- The SQLDA structure
- ECPGPlus statements
C-preprocessor directives
The ECPGPlus C-preprocessor enforces two behaviors that depend on the mode in which you invoke ECPGPlus:
PROC
mode- Non-
PROC
mode
Compiling in PROC mode
In PROC
mode, ECPGPlus allows you to:
- Declare host variables outside of an
EXEC SQL BEGIN/END DECLARE SECTION
. - Use any C variable as a host variable as long as its data type is compatible with ECPG.
When you invoke ECPGPlus in PROC
mode (by including the -C PROC
keywords), the ECPG compiler honors the following C-preprocessor directives:
Preprocessor directives are used to affect or direct the code that's received by the compiler. For example, consider the following code sample:
Suppose you invoke ECPGPlus with the following command-line arguments:
ECPGPlus copies the entire fragment, without change, to the output file. It sends only the following tokens to the ECPG parser:
On the other hand, suppose you invoke ECPGPlus with the following command-line arguments:
The ECPG parser receives the following tokens:
If your code uses preprocessor directives to filter the code that's sent to the compiler, the complete code is retained in the original code, while the ECPG parser sees only the processed token stream.
You can also use compatible syntax when executing the following preprocessor directives with an EXEC
directive:
For example, suppose your code includes the following:
You invoke ECPGPlus with the following command-line arguments:
ECPGPlus sends the following tokens to the output file and the ECPG parser:
Note
The EXEC ORACLE
preprocessor directives work only if you specify -C PROC
on the ECPG command line.
Using the SELECT_ERROR precompiler option
When using ECPGPlus in compatible mode, you can use the SELECT_ERROR
precompiler option to tell your program how to handle result sets that contain more rows than the host variable can accommodate. The syntax is:
The default value is YES
. A SELECT
statement returns an error message if the result set exceeds the capacity of the host variable. Specify NO
to suppress error messages when a SELECT
statement returns more rows than a host variable can accommodate.
Use SELECT_ERROR
with the EXEC ORACLE OPTION
directive.
Compiling in non-PROC mode
If you don't include the -C PROC
command-line option:
- C preprocessor directives are copied to the output file without change.
- You must declare the type and name of each C variable that you intend to use as a host variable in an
EXEC SQL BEGIN/END DECLARE
section.
When invoked in non-PROC
mode, ECPG implements the behavior described in the PostgreSQL core documentation.
Supported C data types
An ECPGPlus application must deal with two sets of data types: SQL data types (such as SMALLINT
, DOUBLE PRECISION
, and CHARACTER VARYING
) and C data types (like short
, double
, and varchar[n]
). When an application fetches data from the server, ECPGPlus maps each SQL data type to the type of the C variable into which the data is returned.
In general, ECPGPlus can convert most SQL server types into similar C types, but not all combinations are valid. For example, ECPGPlus tries to convert a SQL character value into a C integer value, but the conversion might fail at execution time if the SQL character value contains non-numeric characters.
The reverse is also true. When an application sends a value to the server, ECPGPlus tries to convert the C data type into the required SQL type. Again, the conversion might fail at execution time if the C value can't be converted into the required SQL type.
ECPGPlus can convert any SQL type into C character values (char[n]
or varchar[n]
). Although it's safe to convert any SQL type to or from char[n]
or varchar[n]
, it's often convenient to use more natural C types such as int
, double
, or float
.
The supported C data types are:
short
int
unsigned int
long long int
float
double
char[n+1]
varchar[n+1]
bool
- Any equivalent created by a
typedef
In addition to the numeric and character types supported by C, the pgtypeslib
runtime library offers custom data types, as well as functions to operate on those types, for dealing with date/time and exact numeric values:
timestamp
interval
date
decimal
numeric
To use a data type supplied by pgtypeslib
, you must #include
the proper header file.
Type codes
The following table contains the type codes for external data types. An external data type is used to indicate the type of a C host variable. When an application binds a value to a parameter or binds a buffer to a SELECT
-list item, set the type code in the corresponding SQLDA descriptor (descriptor->T[column])
to one of the following values:
Type code | Host variable type (C data type) |
---|---|
1, 2, 8, 11, 12, 15, 23, 24, 91, 94, 95, 96, 97 | char[] |
3 | int |
4, 7, 21 | float |
5, 6 | null-terminated string (char[length+1]) |
9 | varchar |
22 | double |
68 | unsigned int |
The following table contains the type codes for internal data types. An internal type code is used to indicate the type of a value as it resides in the database. The DESCRIBE SELECT LIST
statement populates the data type array (descriptor->T[column])
using the following values.
Internal type code | Server type |
---|---|
1 | VARCHAR2 |
2 | NUMBER |
8 | LONG |
11 | ROWID |
12 | DATE |
23 | RAW |
24 | LONG RAW |
96 | CHAR |
100 | BINARY FLOAT |
101 | BINARY DOUBLE |
104 | UROWID |
187 | TIMESTAMP |
188 | TIMESTAMP W/TIMEZONE |
189 | INTERVAL YEAR TO MONTH |
190 | INTERVAL DAY TO SECOND |
232 | TIMESTAMP LOCAL_TZ |
The SQLDA structure
Oracle Dynamic SQL method 4 uses the SQLDA data structure to hold the data and metadata for a dynamic SQL statement. A SQLDA structure can describe a set of input parameters corresponding to the parameter markers found in the text of a dynamic statement or the result set of a dynamic statement. The layout of the SQLDA structure is:
Parameters
N - maximum number of entries
The N
structure member contains the maximum number of entries that the SQLDA can describe. This member is populated by the sqlald()
function when you allocate the SQLDA structure. Before using a descriptor in an OPEN
or FETCH
statement, you must set N
to the actual number of values described.
V - data values
The V
structure member is a pointer to an array of data values.
- For a
SELECT
-list descriptor,V
points to an array of values returned by aFETCH
statement. Each member in the array corresponds to a column in the result set. - For a bind descriptor,
V
points to an array of parameter values. You must populate the values in this array before opening a cursor that uses the descriptor.
Your application must allocate the space required to hold each value. See displayResultSet for an example of how to allocate space for SELECT
-list values.
L - length of each data value
The L
structure member is a pointer to an array of lengths. Each member of this array must indicate the amount of memory available in the corresponding member of the V
array. For example, if V[5]
points to a buffer large enough to hold a 20-byte NULL-terminated string, L[5]
must contain the value 21 (20 bytes for the characters in the string plus 1 byte for the NULL-terminator). Your application must set each member of the L
array.
T - data types
The T
structure member points to an array of data types, one for each column (or parameter) described by the descriptor.
- For a bind descriptor, you must set each member of the
T
array to tell ECPGPlus the data type of each parameter. - For a
SELECT
-list descriptor, theDESCRIBE SELECT LIST
statement sets each member of theT
array to reflect the type of data found in the corresponding column.
You can change any member of the T
array before executing a FETCH
statement to force ECPGPlus to convert the corresponding value to a specific data type. For example, if the DESCRIBE SELECT LIST
statement indicates that a given column is of type DATE
, you can change the corresponding T
member to request that the next FETCH
statement return that value in the form of a NULL-terminated string. Each member of the T
array is a numeric type code (see Type Codes for a list of type codes). The type codes returned by a DESCRIBE SELECT LIST
statement differ from those expected by a FETCH
statement. After executing a DESCRIBE SELECT LIST
statement, each member of T
encodes a data type and a flag indicating whether the corresponding column is nullable. You can use the sqlnul()
function to extract the type code and nullable flag from a member of the T array. The signature of the sqlnul()
function is as follows:
For example, to find the type code and nullable flag for the third column of a descriptor named results, invoke sqlnul()
as follows:
I - indicator variables
The I
structure member points to an array of indicator variables. This array is allocated for you when your application calls the sqlald()
function to allocate the descriptor.
- For a
SELECT
-list descriptor, each member of theI
array indicates whether the corresponding column contains a NULL (non-zero) or non-NULL (zero) value. - For a bind parameter, your application must set each member of the
I
array to indicate whether the corresponding parameter value is NULL.
F - number of entries
The F
structure member indicates how many values are described by the descriptor. The N
structure member indicates the maximum number of values that the descriptor can describe. F
indicates the actual number of values. The value of the F
member is set by ECPGPlus when you execute a DESCRIBE
statement. F
can be positive, negative, or zero.
- For a
SELECT
-list descriptor,F
contains a positive value if the number of columns in the result set is equal to or less than the maximum number of values permitted by the descriptor (as determined by theN
structure member). It contains 0 if the statement isn't aSELECT
statement. It contains a negative value if the query returns more columns than allowed by theN
structure member. - For a bind descriptor,
F
contains a positive number if the number of parameters found in the statement is less than or equal to the maximum number of values permitted by the descriptor (as determined by theN
structure member). It contains 0 if the statement contains no parameters markers. It contains a negative value if the statement contains more parameter markers than allowed by theN
structure member.
If F
contains a positive number (after executing a DESCRIBE
statement), that number reflects the count of columns in the result set (for a SELECT
-list descriptor) or the number of parameter markers found in the statement (for a bind descriptor). If F
contains a negative value, you can compute the absolute value of F
to discover how many values or parameter markers are required. For example, if F
contains -24
after describing a SELECT
list, you know that the query returns 24 columns.
S - column/parameter names
The S
structure member points to an array of NULL-terminated strings.
- For a
SELECT
-list descriptor, theDESCRIBE SELECT LIST
statement sets each member of this array to the name of the corresponding column in the result set. - For a bind descriptor, the
DESCRIBE BIND VARIABLES
statement sets each member of this array to the name of the corresponding bind variable.
In this release, the name of each bind variable is determined by the left-to-right order of the parameter marker within the query. For example, the name of the first parameter is always ?0
, the name of the second parameter is always ?1
, and so on.
M - maximum column/parameter name length
The M
structure member points to an array of lengths. Each member in this array specifies the maximum length of the corresponding member of the S
array (that is, M[0]
specifies the maximum length of the column/parameter name found at S[0]
). This array is populated by the sqlald()
function.
C - actual column/parameter name length
The C
structure member points to an array of lengths. Each member in this array specifies the actual length of the corresponding member of the S
array (that is, C[0]
specifies the actual length of the column/parameter name found at S[0]
).
This array is populated by the DESCRIBE
statement.
X - indicator variable names
The X
structure member points to an array of NULL-terminated strings. Each string represents the name of a NULL indicator for the corresponding value.
This array isn't used by ECPGPlus but is provided for compatibility with Pro*C applications.
Y - maximum indicator name length
The Y
structure member points to an array of lengths. Each member in this array specifies the maximum length of the corresponding member of the X
array (that is, Y[0]
specifies the maximum length of the indicator name found at X[0]
).
This array isn't used by ECPGPlus but is provided for compatibility with Pro*C applications.
Z - actual indicator name length
The Z
structure member points to an array of lengths. Each member in this array specifies the actual length of the corresponding member of the X
array (that is, Z[0]
specifies the actual length of the indicator name found at X[0]
).
This array isn't used by ECPGPlus but is provided for compatibility with Pro*C applications.
ECPGPlus statements
An embedded SQL statement allows your client application to interact with the server. An embedded directive is an instruction to the ECPGPlus compiler.
You can embed any EDB Postgres Advanced Server SQL statement in a C program. Each statement must begin with the keywords EXEC SQL
and must be terminated with a semi-colon (;). In the C program, a SQL statement takes the form:
Where sql_command_body
represents a standard SQL statement. You can use a host variable anywhere that the SQL statement expects a value expression. For more information about substituting host variables for value expressions, see Declaring host variables.
ECPGPlus extends the PostgreSQL server-side syntax for some statements. Syntax differences are noted in the reference information that follows. For a complete reference to the supported syntax of other SQL commands, see the PostgreSQL core documentation.
ALLOCATE DESCRIPTOR
Use the ALLOCATE DESCRIPTOR
statement to allocate an SQL descriptor area:
Where:
array_size
is a variable that specifies the number of array elements to allocate for the descriptor.array_size
can be anINTEGER
value or a host variable.descriptor_name
is the host variable that contains the name of the descriptor or the name of the descriptor. This value can take the form of an identifier, a quoted string literal, or of a host variable.variable_count
specifies the maximum number of host variables in the descriptor. The default value ofvariable_count
is100
.
The following code fragment allocates a descriptor named emp_query
that can be processed as an array (emp_array)
:
CALL
Use the CALL
statement to invoke a procedure or function on the server. The CALL
statement works only on EDB Postgres Advanced Server. The CALL
statement comes in two forms. The first form is used to call a function:
The second form is used to call a procedure:
Where:
program_name
is the name of the stored procedure or function that theCALL
statement invokes. The program name can be schema qualified, package qualified, or both. If you don't specify the schema or package in which the program resides, ECPGPlus uses the value ofsearch_path
to locate the program.actual_arguments
specifies a comma-separated list of arguments required by the program. Eachactual_argument
corresponds to a formal argument expected by the program. Each formal argument can be anIN
parameter, anOUT
parameter, or anINOUT
parameter.:ret_variable
specifies a host variable that receives the value returned if the program is a function.:ret_indicator
specifies a host variable that receives the indicator value returned if the program is a function.
For example, the following statement invokes the get_job_desc
function with the value contained in the :ename
host variable and captures the value returned by that function in the :job
host variable:
CLOSE
Use the CLOSE
statement to close a cursor and free any resources currently in use by the cursor. A client application can't fetch rows from a closed cursor. The syntax of the CLOSE
statement is:
Where cursor_name
is the name of the cursor closed by the statement. The cursor name can take the form of an identifier or of a host variable.
The OPEN
statement initializes a cursor. Once initialized, a cursor result set remains unchanged unless the cursor is reopened. You don't need to CLOSE
a cursor before reopening it.
To manually close a cursor named emp_cursor
, use the command:
A cursor is automatically closed when an application terminates.
COMMIT
Use the COMMIT
statement to complete the current transaction, making all changes permanent and visible to other users. The syntax is:
Where database_name
is the name of the database or host variable that contains the name of the database in which the work resides. This value can take the form of an unquoted string literal or of a host variable.
For compatibility, ECPGPlus accepts the COMMENT
clause without error but doesn't store any text included with the COMMENT
clause.
Include the RELEASE
clause to close the current connection after performing the commit.
For example, the following command commits all work performed on the dept
database and closes the current connection:
By default, statements are committed only when a client application performs a COMMIT
statement. Include the -t
option when invoking ECPGPlus to specify for a client application to invoke AUTOCOMMIT
functionality. You can also control AUTOCOMMIT
functionality in a client application with the following statements:
CONNECT
Use the CONNECT
statement to establish a connection to a database. The CONNECT
statement is available in two forms. One form is compatible with Oracle databases, and the other is not.
The first form is compatible with Oracle databases:
Where:
user_name
is a host variable that contains the role that the client application uses to connect to the server.password
is a host variable that contains the password associated with that role.connection_id
is a host variable that contains a slash-delimited user name and password used to connect to the database.
Include the AT
clause to specify the database to which the connection is established. database_name
is the name of the database to which the client is connecting. Specify the value in the form of a variable or as a string literal.
Include the USING
clause to specify a host variable that contains a null-terminated string identifying the database to which to establish the connection.
The ALTER AUTHORIZATION
clause is supported for syntax compatibility only. ECPGPlus parses the ALTER AUTHORIZATION
clause and reports a warning.
Using the first form of the CONNECT
statement, a client application might establish a connection with a host variable named user
that contains the identity of the connecting role and a host variable named password
that contains the associated password using the following command:
A client application can also use the first form of the CONNECT
statement to establish a connection using a single host variable named :connection_id
. In the following example, connection_id
contains the slash-delimited role name and associated password for the user:
The syntax of the second form of the CONNECT
statement is:
Where credentials
is one of the following:
In the second form:
database_name
is the name or identity of the database to which the client is connecting. Specify database_name
as a variable or as a string literal in one of the following forms:
Where:
hostname
is the name or IP address of the server on which the database resides.port
is the port on which the server listens.You can also specify a value of
DEFAULT
to establish a connection with the default database, using the default role name. If you specifyDEFAULT
as the target database, don't include aconnection_name
orcredentials
.connection_name
is the name of the connection to the database.connection_name
takes the form of an identifier (that is, not a string literal or a variable). You can open multiple connections by providing a uniqueconnection_name
for each connection.If you don't specify a name for a connection,
ecpglib
assigns a name ofDEFAULT
to the connection. You can refer to the connection by name (DEFAULT
) in anyEXEC SQL
statement.CURRENT
is the most recently opened or the connection mentioned in the most-recentSET CONNECTION TO
statement. If you don't refer to a connection by name in anEXEC SQL
statement, ECPG assumes the name of the connection to beCURRENT
.user_name
is the role used to establish the connection with the EDB Postgres Advanced Server database. The privileges of the specified role are applied to all commands performed through the connection.password
is the password associated with the specifieduser_name
.
The following code fragment uses the second form of the CONNECT
statement to establish a connection to a database named edb
using the role alice
and the password associated with that role, 1safepwd
:
The name of the connection is acctg_conn
. You can use the connection name when changing the connection name using the SET CONNECTION
statement.
DEALLOCATE DESCRIPTOR
Use the DEALLOCATE DESCRIPTOR
statement to free memory in use by an allocated descriptor. The syntax of the statement is:
Where descriptor_name
is the name of the descriptor. This value can take the form of a quoted string literal or of a host variable.
The following example deallocates a descriptor named emp_query
:
DECLARE CURSOR
Use the DECLARE CURSOR
statement to define a cursor. The syntax of the statement is:
Where:
database_name
is the name of the database on which the cursor operates. This value can take the form of an identifier or of a host variable. If you don't specify a database name, the default value ofdatabase_name
is the default database.cursor_name
is the name of the cursor.select_statement
is the text of theSELECT
statement that defines the cursor result set. TheSELECT
statement can't contain anINTO
clause.statement_name
is the name of a SQL statement or block that defines the cursor result set.
The following example declares a cursor named employees
:
The cursor generates a result set that contains the employee number, employee name, salary, and commission for each employee record that's stored in the emp
table.
DECLARE DATABASE
Use the DECLARE DATABASE
statement to declare a database identifier for use in subsequent SQL statements (for example, in a CONNECT
statement). The syntax is:
Where database_name
specifies the name of the database.
The following example shows declaring an identifier for the acctg
database:
After invoking the command declaring acctg
as a database identifier, you can reference the acctg
database by name when establishing a connection or in AT
clauses.
This statement has no effect and is provided for Pro*C compatibility only.
DECLARE STATEMENT
Use the DECLARE STATEMENT
directive to declare an identifier for an SQL statement. EDB Postgres Advanced Server supports two versions of the DECLARE STATEMENT
directive:
Where:
statement_name
specifies the identifier associated with the statement.database_name
specifies the name of the database. This value may take the form of an identifier or of a host variable that contains the identifier.
A typical usage sequence that includes the DECLARE STATEMENT
directive is:
This statement has no effect and is provided for Pro*C compatibility only.
DELETE
Use the DELETE
statement to delete one or more rows from a table. The syntax for the ECPGPlus DELETE
statement is the same as the syntax for the SQL statement, but you can use parameter markers and host variables any place that an expression is allowed. The syntax is:
- Include the
FOR exec_count
clause to specify the number of times the statement executes. This clause is valid only if theVALUES
clause references an array or a pointer to an array. table
is the name (optionally schema qualified) of an existing table. Include theONLY
clause to limit processing to the specified table. If you don't include theONLY
clause, any tables inheriting from the named table are also processed.alias
is a substitute name for the target table.using_list
is a list of table expressions, allowing columns from other tables to appear in theWHERE
condition.- Include the
WHERE
clause to specify the rows to delete. If you don't include aWHERE
clause in the statement,DELETE
deletes all rows from the table, leaving the table definition intact. condition
is an expression, host variable, or parameter marker that returns a value of typeBOOLEAN
. Those rows for whichcondition
returns true are deleted.cursor_name
is the name of the cursor to use in theWHERE CURRENT OF
clause. The row to be deleted is the one most recently fetched from this cursor. The cursor must be a nongrouping query on theDELETE
statements target table. You can't specifyWHERE CURRENT OF
in aDELETE
statement that includes a Boolean condition.
The RETURN/RETURNING
clause specifies an output_expression
or host_variable_list
that's returned by the DELETE
command after each row is deleted:
output_expression
is an expression to be computed and returned by theDELETE
command after each row is deleted.output_name
is the name of the returned column. Include * to return all columns.host_variable_list
is a comma-separated list of host variables and optional indicator variables. Each host variable receives a corresponding value from theRETURNING
clause.
For example, the following statement deletes all rows from the emp
table, where the sal
column contains a value greater than the value specified in the host variable, :max_sal:
For more information about using the DELETE
statement, see the PostgreSQL core documentation.
DESCRIBE
Use the DESCRIBE
statement to find the number of input values required by a prepared statement or the number of output values returned by a prepared statement. The DESCRIBE
statement is used to analyze a SQL statement whose shape is unknown at the time you write your application.
The DESCRIBE
statement populates an SQLDA
descriptor. To populate a SQL descriptor, use the ALLOCATE DESCRIPTOR
and DESCRIBE...DESCRIPTOR
statements.
Where:
statement_name
is the identifier associated with a prepared SQL statement or PL/SQL block.descriptor
is the name of C variable of typeSQLDA*
. You must allocate the space for the descriptor by callingsqlald()
and initialize the descriptor before executing theDESCRIBE
statement.
When you execute the first form of the DESCRIBE
statement, ECPG populates the given descriptor with a description of each input variable required by the statement. For example, given two descriptors:
You might prepare a query that returns information from the emp
table:
The command requires one input variable for the parameter marker (?).
After describing the bind variables for this statement, you can examine the descriptor to find the number of variables required and the type of each variable.
When you execute the second form, ECPG populates the given descriptor with a description of each value returned by the statement. For example, the following statement returns three values:
After describing the select list for this statement, you can examine the descriptor to find the number of returned values and the name and type of each value.
Before executing the statement, you must bind a variable for each input value and a variable for each output value. The variables that you bind for the input values specify the actual values used by the statement. The variables that you bind for the output values tell ECPGPlus where to put the values when you execute the statement.
This is alternative Pro*C-compatible syntax for the DESCRIBE DESCRIPTOR
statement.
DESCRIBE DESCRIPTOR
Use the DESCRIBE DESCRIPTOR
statement to retrieve information about a SQL statement and store that information in a SQL descriptor. Before using DESCRIBE DESCRIPTOR
, you must allocate the descriptor with the ALLOCATE DESCRIPTOR
statement. The syntax is:
Where:
statement_name
is the name of a prepared SQL statement.descriptor_name
is the name of the descriptor.descriptor_name
can be a quoted string value or a host variable that contains the name of the descriptor.
If you include the INPUT
clause, ECPGPlus populates the given descriptor with a description of each input variable required by the statement.
For example, given two descriptors:
You might prepare a query that returns information from the emp
table:
The command requires one input variable for the parameter marker (?).
After describing the bind variables for this statement, you can examine the descriptor to find the number of variables required and the type of each variable.
If you don't specify the INPUT
clause, DESCRIBE DESCRIPTOR
populates the specified descriptor with the values returned by the statement.
If you include the OUTPUT
clause, ECPGPlus populates the given descriptor with a description of each value returned by the statement.
For example, the following statement returns three values:
After describing the select list for this statement, you can examine the descriptor to find the number of returned values and the name and type of each value.
DISCONNECT
Use the DISCONNECT
statement to close the connection to the server. The syntax is:
Where connection_name
is the connection name specified in the CONNECT
statement used to establish the connection. If you don't specify a connection name, the current connection is closed.
Include the CURRENT
keyword to specify for ECPGPlus to close the connection used most recently.
Include the DEFAULT
keyword to specify for ECPGPlus to close the connection named DEFAULT
. If you don't specify a name when opening a connection, ECPGPlus assigns the name DEFAULT
to the connection.
Include the ALL
keyword to close all active connections.
The following example creates a connection named hr_connection
that connects to the hr
database and then disconnects from the connection:
EXECUTE
Use the EXECUTE
statement to execute a statement previously prepared using an EXEC SQL PREPARE
statement. The syntax is:
Where:
array_size
is an integer value or a host variable that contains an integer value that specifies the number of rows to process. If you omit theFOR
clause, the statement is executed once for each member of the array.statement_name
specifies the name assigned to the statement when the statement was created using theEXEC SQL PREPARE
statement.
Include the USING
clause to supply values for parameters in the prepared statement:
- Include the
DESCRIPTOR
SQLDA_descriptor
clause to provide an SQLDA descriptor value for a parameter. - Use a
host_variable
(and an optionalindicator_variable
) to provide a user-specified value for a parameter.
The following example creates a prepared statement that inserts a record into the emp
table:
Each time you invoke the prepared statement, provide fresh parameter values for the statement:
EXECUTE DESCRIPTOR
Use the EXECUTE
statement to execute a statement previously prepared by an EXEC SQL PREPARE
statement, using an SQL descriptor. The syntax is:
Where:
array_size
is an integer value or a host variable that contains an integer value that specifies the number of rows to process. If you omit theFOR
clause, the statement is executed once for each member of the array.statement_identifier
specifies the identifier assigned to the statement with theEXEC SQL PREPARE
statement.descriptor_name
specifies the name of a descriptor (as a single-quoted string literal), or a host variable that contains the name of a descriptor.
Include the USING
clause to specify values for any input parameters required by the prepared statement.
Include the INTO
clause to specify a descriptor into which the EXECUTE
statement writes the results returned by the prepared statement.
The following example executes the prepared statement, give_raise
, using the values contained in the descriptor stmtText:
EXECUTE...END EXEC
Use the EXECUTE…END-EXEC
statement to embed an anonymous block into a client application. The syntax is:
Where:
database_name
is the database identifier or a host variable that contains the database identifier. If you omit theAT
clause, the statement executes on the current default database.anonymous_block
is an inline sequence of PL/pgSQL or SPL statements and declarations. You can include host variables and optional indicator variables in the block. Each such variable is treated as anIN/OUT
value.
The following example executes an anonymous block:
Note
The EXECUTE…END EXEC
statement is supported only by EDB Postgres Advanced Server.
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE
Use the EXECUTE IMMEDIATE
statement to execute a string that contains a SQL command. The syntax is:
Where:
database_name
is the database identifier or a host variable that contains the database identifier. If you omit theAT
clause, the statement executes on the current default database.command_text
is the command executed by theEXECUTE IMMEDIATE
statement.
This dynamic SQL statement is useful when you don't know the text of an SQL statement when writing a client application. For example, a client application might prompt a trusted user for a statement to execute. After the user provides the text of the statement as a string value, the statement is then executed with an EXECUTE IMMEDIATE
command.
The statement text can't contain references to host variables. If the statement might contain parameter markers or returns one or more values, use the PREPARE
and DESCRIBE
statements.
The following example executes the command contained in the :command_text
host variable:
FETCH
Use the FETCH
statement to return rows from a cursor into an SQLDA descriptor or a target list of host variables. Before using a FETCH
statement to retrieve information from a cursor, you must prepare the cursor using DECLARE
and OPEN
statements. The statement syntax is:
Where:
array_size
is an integer value or a host variable that contains an integer value specifying the number of rows to fetch. If you omit theFOR
clause, the statement is executed once for each member of the array.cursor
is the name of the cursor from which rows are being fetched or a host variable that contains the name of the cursor.
If you include a USING
clause, the FETCH
statement populates the specified SQLDA descriptor with the values returned by the server.
If you include an INTO
clause, the FETCH
statement populates the host variables (and optional indicator variables) specified in the target_list
.
The following code fragment declares a cursor named employees
that retrieves the employee number
, name
, and salary
from the emp
table:
FETCH DESCRIPTOR
Use the FETCH DESCRIPTOR
statement to retrieve rows from a cursor into an SQL descriptor. The syntax is:
Where:
array_size
is an integer value or a host variable that contains an integer value specifying the number of rows to fetch. If you omit theFOR
clause, the statement is executed once for each member of the array.cursor
is the name of the cursor from which rows are fetched or a host variable that contains the name of the cursor. The client mustDECLARE
andOPEN
the cursor before calling theFETCH DESCRIPTOR
statement.descriptor_name
specifies the name of a descriptor (as a single-quoted string literal) or a host variable that contains the name of a descriptor. Prior to use, the descriptor must be allocated using anALLOCATE DESCRIPTOR
statement.
Include the INTO
clause to specify a SQL descriptor into which the EXECUTE
statement writes the results returned by the prepared statement.
The following example allocates a descriptor named row_desc
that holds the description and the values of a specific row in the result set. It then declares and opens a cursor for a prepared statement (my_cursor
), before looping through the rows in result set, using a FETCH
to retrieve the next row from the cursor into the descriptor:
GET DESCRIPTOR
Use the GET DESCRIPTOR
statement to retrieve information from a descriptor. The GET DESCRIPTOR
statement comes in two forms. The first form returns the number of values (or columns) in the descriptor.
The second form returns information about a specific value (specified by the VALUE column_number
clause):
Where:
array_size
is an integer value or a host variable that contains an integer value that specifies the number of rows to process. If you specify anarray_size
, thehost_variable
must be an array of that size. For example, ifarray_size
is10
,:host_variable
must be a 10-member array ofhost_variables
. If you omit theFOR
clause, the statement is executed once for each member of the array.descriptor_name
specifies the name of a descriptor as a single-quoted string literal or a host variable that contains the name of a descriptor.
Include the VALUE
clause to specify the information retrieved from the descriptor.
column_number
identifies the position of the variable in the descriptor.host_variable
specifies the name of the host variable that receives the value of the item.descriptor_item
specifies the type of the retrieved descriptor item.
ECPGPlus implements the following descriptor_item
types:
TYPE
LENGTH
OCTET_LENGTH
RETURNED_LENGTH
RETURNED_OCTET_LENGTH
PRECISION
SCALE
NULLABLE
INDICATOR
DATA
NAME
The following code fragment shows using a GET DESCRIPTOR
statement to obtain the number of columns entered in a user-provided string:
The example allocates an SQL descriptor named parse_desc
before using a PREPARE
statement to check the syntax of the string provided by the user :stmt
. A DESCRIBE
statement moves the user-provided string into the descriptor, parse_desc
. The call to EXEC SQL GET DESCRIPTOR
interrogates the descriptor to discover the number of columns (:col_count)
in the result set.
INSERT
Use the INSERT
statement to add one or more rows to a table. The syntax for the ECPGPlus INSERT
statement is the same as the syntax for the SQL statement, but you can use parameter markers and host variables any place that a value is allowed. The syntax is:
Include the FOR exec_count
clause to specify the number of times the statement executes. This clause is valid only if the VALUES
clause references an array or a pointer to an array.
table
specifies the (optionally schema-qualified) name of an existing table.column
is the name of a column in the table. The column name can be qualified with a subfield name or array subscript. Specify theDEFAULT VALUES
clause to use default values for all columns.expression
is the expression, value, host variable, or parameter marker that's assigned to the corresponding column. SpecifyDEFAULT
to fill the corresponding column with its default value.query
specifies aSELECT
statement that supplies the rows to insert.output_expression
is an expression that's computed and returned by theINSERT
command after each row is inserted. The expression can refer to any column in the table. Specify * to return all columns of the inserted rows.output_name
specifies a name to use for a returned column.
The following example adds a row to the employees
table:
Note
The INSERT
statement uses a host variable :ename
to specify the value of the ename
column.
For more information about using the INSERT
statement, see the PostgreSQL core documentation.
OPEN
Use the OPEN
statement to open a cursor. The syntax is:
parameters
is one of the following:
Where:
array_size
is an integer value or a host variable that contains an integer value specifying the number of rows to fetch. If you omit theFOR
clause, the statement is executed once for each member of the array.cursor
is the name of the cursor being opened.parameters
is eitherDESCRIPTOR SQLDA_descriptor
or a comma-separated list ofhost variables
and optionalindicator variables
that initialize the cursor. If specifying anSQLDA_descriptor
, the descriptor must be initialized with aDESCRIBE
statement.
The OPEN
statement initializes a cursor using the values provided in parameters
. Once initialized, the cursor result set remains unchanged unless the cursor is closed and reopened. A cursor is automatically closed when an application terminates.
The following example declares a cursor named employees
that queries the emp
table. It returns the employee number
, name
, salary
, and commission
of an employee whose name matches a user-supplied value stored in the host variable :emp_name
.
After declaring the cursor, the example uses an OPEN
statement to make the contents of the cursor available to a client application.
OPEN DESCRIPTOR
Use the OPEN DESCRIPTOR
statement to open a cursor with a SQL descriptor. The syntax is:
Where:
array_size
is an integer value or a host variable that contains an integer value specifying the number of rows to fetch. If you omit theFOR
clause, the statement is executed once for each member of the array.cursor
is the name of the cursor being opened.descriptor_name
specifies the name of an SQL descriptor in the form of a single-quoted string literal or a host variable that contains the name of an SQL descriptor that contains the query that initializes the cursor.
For example, the following statement opens a cursor named emp_cursor
using the host variable :employees
:
PREPARE
Prepared statements are useful when a client application must perform a task multiple times. The statement is parsed, written, and planned only once rather than each time the statement is executed. This approach saves repetitive processing time.
Use the PREPARE
statement to prepare a SQL statement or PL/pgSQL block for execution. The statement is available in two forms. The first form is:
The second form is:
Where:
database_name
is the database identifier or a host variable that contains the database identifier against which the statement executes. If you omit theAT
clause, the statement executes against the current default database.statement_name
is the identifier associated with a prepared SQL statement or PL/SQL block.sql_statement
can take the form of aSELECT
statement, a single-quoted string literal, or a host variable that contains the text of an SQL statement.
To include variables in a prepared statement, substitute placeholders ($1, $2, $3
, and so on) for statement values that might change when you PREPARE
the statement. When you EXECUTE
the statement, provide a value for each parameter. Provide the values in the order in which they replace placeholders.
The following example creates a prepared statement named add_emp
that inserts a record into the emp
table:
Each time you invoke the statement, provide fresh parameter values for the statement:
Note
A client application must issue a PREPARE
statement in each session in which a statement executes. Prepared statements persist only for the duration of the current session.
ROLLBACK
Use the ROLLBACK
statement to abort the current transaction and discard any updates made by the transaction. The syntax is:
Where database_name
is the database identifier or a host variable that contains the database identifier against which the statement executes. If you omit the AT
clause, the statement executes against the current default database.
Include the TO
clause to abort any commands that executed after the specified savepoint
. Use the SAVEPOINT
statement to define the savepoint
. If you omit the TO
clause, the ROLLBACK
statement aborts the transaction, discarding all updates.
Include the RELEASE
clause to cause the application to execute an EXEC SQL COMMIT RELEASE
and close the connection.
Use the following statement to roll back a complete transaction:
Invoking this statement aborts the transaction, undoing all changes, erasing any savepoints, and releasing all transaction locks. Suppose you include a savepoint (my_savepoint
in the following example):
Only the portion of the transaction that occurred after the my_savepoint
is rolled back. my_savepoint
is retained, but any savepoints created after my_savepoint
are erased.
Rolling back to a specified savepoint releases all locks acquired after the savepoint.
SAVEPOINT
Use the SAVEPOINT
statement to define a savepoint. A savepoint is a marker in a transaction. You can use a ROLLBACK
statement to abort the current transaction, returning the state of the server to its condition prior to the specified savepoint. The syntax of a SAVEPOINT
statement is:
Where:
database_name
is the database identifier or a host variable that contains the database identifier against which the savepoint resides. If you omit theAT
clause, the statement executes against the current default database.savepoint_name
is the name of the savepoint. If you reuse asavepoint_name
, the original savepoint is discarded.
You can establish savepoints only in a transaction block. A transaction block can contain multiple savepoints.
To create a savepoint named my_savepoint
, include the statement:
SELECT
ECPGPlus extends support of the SQL SELECT
statement by providing the INTO host_variables
clause. The clause allows you to select specified information from an EDB Postgres Advanced Server database into a host variable. The syntax for the SELECT
statement is:
Where:
database_name
is the name of the database or host variable that contains the name of the database in which the table resides. This value can take the form of an unquoted string literal or of a host variable.host_variables
is a list of host variables populated by theSELECT
statement. If theSELECT
statement returns more than a single row,host_variables
must be an array.
ECPGPlus provides support for the additional clauses of the SQL SELECT
statement as documented in the PostgreSQL core documentation.
To use the INTO host_variables
clause, include the names of defined host variables when specifying the SELECT
statement. For example, the following SELECT
statement populates the :emp_name
and :emp_sal
host variables with a list of employee names and salaries:
The enhanced SELECT
statement also allows you to include parameter markers (question marks) in any clause where a value is allowed. For example, the following query contains a parameter marker in the WHERE
clause:
This SELECT
statement allows you to provide a value at runtime for the dept_no
parameter marker.
SET CONNECTION
There are at least three reasons you might need more than one connection in a given client application:
- You might want different privileges for different statements.
- You might need to interact with multiple databases in the same client.
- Multiple threads of execution in a client application can't share a connection concurrently.
The syntax for the SET CONNECTION
statement is:
Where connection_name
is the name of the connection to the database.
To use the SET CONNECTION
statement, open the connection to the database using the second form of the CONNECT
statement. Include the AS
clause to specify a connection_name
.
By default, the current thread uses the current connection. Use the SET CONNECTION
statement to specify a default connection for the current thread to use. The default connection is used only when you execute an EXEC SQL
statement that doesn't explicitly specify a connection name. For example, the following statement uses the default connection because it doesn't include an AT connection_name
clause:
This statement doesn't use the default connection because it specifies a connection name using the AT connection_name
clause:
For example, suppose a client application creates and maintains multiple connections using either of the following approaches:
It can change between the connections with the SET CONNECTION
statement:
or
The server uses the privileges associated with the connection when determining the privileges available to the connecting client. When using the acctg_conn
connection, the client has the privileges associated with the role alice
. When connected using hr_conn
, the client has the privileges associated with bob
.
SET DESCRIPTOR
Use the SET DESCRIPTOR
statement to assign a value to a descriptor area using information provided by the client application in the form of a host variable or an integer value. The statement comes in two forms. The first form is:
The second form is:
Where:
array_size
is an integer value or a host variable that contains an integer value specifying the number of rows to fetch. If you omit theFOR
clause, the statement executes once for each member of the array.descriptor_name
specifies the name of a descriptor as a single-quoted string literal or a host variable that contains the name of a descriptor.
Include the VALUE
clause to describe the information stored in the descriptor.
column_number
identifies the position of the variable within the descriptor.descriptor_item
specifies the type of the descriptor item.host_variable
specifies the name of the host variable that contains the value of the item.
ECPGPlus implements the following descriptor_item
types:
TYPE
LENGTH
[REF] INDICATOR
[REF] DATA
[REF] RETURNED LENGTH
For example, a client application might prompt a user for a dynamically created query:
To execute a dynamically created query, you must first prepare the query (parsing and validating the syntax of the query) and then describe the input parameters found in the query using the EXEC SQL DESCRIBE INPUT
statement.
After describing the query, the query_params
descriptor contains information about each parameter required by the query.
For this example, assume that the user entered:
In this case, the descriptor describes two parameters, one for sal > ?
and one for job = ?
.
To discover the number of parameter markers (question marks) in the query and therefore the number of values you must provide before executing the query, use:
Then, you can use EXEC SQL GET DESCRIPTOR
to retrieve the name of each parameter. You can also use EXEC SQL GET DESCRIPTOR
to retrieve the type of each parameter from the descriptor, along with the number of parameters. Or you can supply each value
in the form of a character string and ECPG converts that string into the required data type.
The data type of the first parameter is numeric
. The type of the second parameter is varchar
. The name of the first parameter is sal
. The name of the second parameter is job
.
Next, loop through each parameter, prompting the user for a value, and store those values in host variables. You can use GET DESCRIPTOR … COUNT
to find the number of parameters in the query.
Use GET DESCRIPTOR
to copy the name of the parameter into the param_name
host variable:
To associate a value
with each parameter, you use the EXEC SQL SET DESCRIPTOR
statement. For example:
Now, you can use the EXEC SQL EXECUTE DESCRIPTOR
statement to execute the prepared statement on the server.
UPDATE
Use an UPDATE
statement to modify the data stored in a table. The syntax is:
Where database_name
is the name of the database or host variable that contains the name of the database in which the table resides. This value can take the form of an unquoted string literal or of a host variable.
Include the FOR exec_count
clause to specify the number of times the statement executes. This clause is valid only if the SET
or WHERE
clause contains an array.
ECPGPlus provides support for the additional clauses of the SQL UPDATE
statement as documented in the PostgreSQL core documentation.
You can use a host variable in any clause that specifies a value. To use a host variable, substitute a defined variable for any value associated with any of the documented UPDATE
clauses.
The following UPDATE
statement changes the job description of an employee (identified by the :ename
host variable) to the value contained in the :new_job
host variable. It increases the employees salary by multiplying the current salary by the value in the :increase
host variable:
The enhanced UPDATE
statement also allows you to include parameter markers (question marks) in any clause where an input value is permitted. For example, we can write the same update statement with a parameter marker in the WHERE
clause: