Online Documentation Server
 ПОИСК
ods.com.ua Web
 КАТЕГОРИИ
Home
Programming
Net technology
Unixes
Security
RFC, HOWTO
Web technology
Data bases
Other docs

 


 ПОДПИСКА

 О КОПИРАЙТАХ
Вся предоставленная на этом сервере информация собрана нами из разных источников. Если Вам кажется, что публикация каких-то документов нарушает чьи-либо авторские права, сообщите нам об этом.




Procedural Languages

Chapter 49. Procedural Languages

Postgres supports the definition of procedural languages. In the case of a function or trigger procedure defined in a procedural language, the database has no built-in knowledge about how to interpret the function's source text. Instead, the task is passed to a handler that knows the details of the language. The handler itself is a special programming language function compiled into a shared object and loaded on demand.

Writing a handler for a new procedural language (PL) is outside the scope of this manual.

Installing Procedural Languages

Procedural Language Installation

A procedural language is installed in the database in three steps. (For the languages supplied with the standard distribution, the shell script createlang can be used instead of carrying out the details manually.)

  1. The shared object for the language handler must be compiled and installed. By default the handler for PL/pgSQL is built and installed into the database library directory. If Tcl/Tk support is configured in, the handler for PL/Tcl is also built and installed in the same location.

  2. The handler must be declared with the command

    CREATE FUNCTION handler_function_name ()
        RETURNS OPAQUE AS
        'path-to-shared-object' LANGUAGE 'C';
          
    The special return type of OPAQUE tells the database that this function does not return one of the defined SQL datatypes and is not directly usable in SQL statements.

  3. The PL must be declared with the command

    CREATE [ TRUSTED ] PROCEDURAL LANGUAGE 'language-name'
        HANDLER handler_function_name
        LANCOMPILER 'description';
          
    The optional keyword TRUSTED tells whether ordinary database users that have no superuser privileges should be allowed to use this language to create functions and trigger procedures. Since PL functions are executed inside the database backend, the TRUSTED flag should only be given for languages that don't allow access to database backends internals or the filesystem. The languages PL/pgSQL and PL/Tcl are known to be trusted.

Example

  1. The following command tells the database where to find the shared object for the PL/pgSQL language's call handler function.

    CREATE FUNCTION plpgsql_call_handler () RETURNS OPAQUE AS
        '/usr/local/pgsql/lib/plpgsql.so' LANGUAGE 'C';
          

  2. The command

    CREATE TRUSTED PROCEDURAL LANGUAGE 'plpgsql'
        HANDLER plpgsql_call_handler
        LANCOMPILER 'PL/pgSQL';
          

    then defines that the previously declared call handler function should be invoked for functions and trigger procedures where the language attribute is 'plpgsql'.

    PL handler functions have a special call interface that is different from regular C language functions. One of the arguments given to the handler is the object ID in the pg_proc tables entry for the function that should be executed. The handler examines various system catalogs to analyze the functions call arguments and it's return data type. The source text of the functions body is found in the prosrc attribute of pg_proc. Due to this, PL functions can be overloaded like SQL language functions. There can be multiple different PL functions having the same function name, as long as the call arguments differ.

    Procedural languages defined in the template1 database are automatically defined in all subsequently created databases. So the database administrator can decide which languages are available by default.



With any suggestions or questions please feel free to contact us