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This section is for those who want to develop the
ecpg interface. It
describes how the things work. The ambition is to make this section
contain things for those that want to have a look inside and the section
on How to use it should be enough for all normal questions.
So, read this before looking at the internals of the
ecpg. If
you are not interested in how it really works, skip this section.
The first four lines written to the output are constant additions by ecpg.
These are two comments and two include lines necessary for the interface to the
library.
Then the preprocessor works in one pass only, reading the input file and
writing to the output as it goes along. Normally it just echoes
everything to the output without looking at it further.
When it comes to an EXEC SQL statements it intervenes and
changes them depending on what it is.
The EXEC SQL statement can be one of these:
Declare sections
Declare sections begins with
exec sql begin declare section;
and ends with
exec sql end declare section;
In the section only variable declarations are allowed. Every variable
declare within this section is also entered in a list of variables
indexed on their name together with the corresponding type.
In particular the definition of a structure or union also has to be listed
inside a declare section. Otherwise ecpg cannot
handle these types since it simply does not know the definition.
The declaration is echoed to the file to make the variable a normal
C-variable also.
The special types VARCHAR and VARCHAR2 are converted into a named struct
for every variable. A declaration like:
VARCHAR var[180];
is converted into
struct varchar_var { int len; char arr[180]; } var;
Include statements
An include statement looks like:
exec sql include filename;
Note that this is NOT the same as
#include <filename.h>
Instead the file specified is parsed by ecpg
itself. So the contents of the specified file is included in the resulting C
code. This way you are able to specify EXEC SQL commands in an include file.
Connect statement
A connect statement looks like:
exec sql connect to connection target;
It creates a connection to the specified database.
The connection target can be specified in the
following ways:
dbname[@server][:port][as connection
name][user user name]
tcp:postgresql://server[:port][/dbname][as
connection name][user user name]
unix:postgresql://server[:port][/dbname][as
connection name][user user name]
character variable[as
connection name][user user name]
character string[as
connection name][user]
default
user
There are also different ways to specify the user name:
userid
userid/password
userid identified by password
userid using password
Finally the userid and the password. Each may be a constant text, a
character variable or a chararcter string.
Disconnect statements
A disconnect statement looks loke:
exec sql disconnect [connection target];
It closes the connection to the specified database.
The connection target can be specified in the
following ways:
connection name
default
current
all
Open cursor statement
An open cursor statement looks like:
exec sql open cursor;
and is ignore and not copied from the output.
Commit statement
A commit statement looks like
exec sql commit;
and is translated on the output to
ECPGcommit(__LINE__);
Rollback statement
A rollback statement looks like
exec sql rollback;
and is translated on the output to
ECPGrollback(__LINE__);
Other statements
Other SQL statements are other statements that start with
exec sql and ends with ;.
Everything inbetween is treated
as an SQL statement and parsed for variable substitution.
Variable substitution occur when a symbol starts with a colon
(:). Then a variable with that name is looked for among
the variables that were previously declared within a declare section and
depending on the variable being for input or output the pointers to the
variables are written to the output to allow for access by the function.
For every variable that is part of the SQL request
the function gets another ten arguments:
The type as a special symbol.
A pointer to the value or a pointer to the pointer.
The size of the variable if it is a char or varchar.
Number of elements in the array (for array fetches).
The offset to the next element in the array (for array fetches)
The type of the indicator variable as a special symbol.
A pointer to the value of the indicator variable or a pointer to the pointer of the indicator variable.
0.
Number of elements in the indicator array (for array fetches).
The offset to the next element in the indicator array (for array fetches)
Here is a complete example describing the output of the preprocessor of a
file foo.pgc:
exec sql begin declare section;
int index;
int result;
exec sql end declare section;
...
exec sql select res into :result from mytable where index = :index;
is translated into:
/* Processed by ecpg (2.6.0) */
/* These two include files are added by the preprocessor */
#include <ecpgtype.h>;
#include <ecpglib.h>;
/* exec sql begin declare section */
#line 1 "foo.pgc"
int index;
int result;
/* exec sql end declare section */
...
ECPGdo(__LINE__, NULL, "select res from mytable where index = ? ",
ECPGt_int,&(index),1L,1L,sizeof(int),
ECPGt_NO_INDICATOR, NULL , 0L, 0L, 0L, ECPGt_EOIT,
ECPGt_int,&(result),1L,1L,sizeof(int),
ECPGt_NO_INDICATOR, NULL , 0L, 0L, 0L, ECPGt_EORT);
#line 147 "foo.pgc"
(the indentation in this manual is added for readability and not
something that the preprocessor can do.)
The most important function in the library is the ECPGdo
function. It takes a variable amount of arguments. Hopefully we will not run
into machines with limits on the amount of variables that can be
accepted by a vararg function. This could easily add up to 50 or so
arguments.
The arguments are:
A line number
This is a line number for the original line used in error messages only.
A string
This is the SQL request that is to be issued.
This request is modified
by the input variables, i.e. the variables that where not known at
compile time but are to be entered in the request. Where the variables
should go the string contains ";".
Input variables
As described in the section about the preprocessor every input variable
gets ten arguments.
ECPGt_EOIT
An enum telling that there are no more input variables.
Output variables
As described in the section about the preprocessor every input variable
gets ten arguments. These variables are filled by the function.
ECPGt_EORT
An enum telling that there are no more variables.
All the SQL statements are performed in one transaction
unless you issue a commit transaction. To get this auto-transaction going
the first statement or the first after statement after a commit or rollback
always begins a transaction. To disable this feature per default use the
-t option on the commandline.
To be completed: entries describing the other entries.