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221 lines
5.3 KiB
Plaintext
221 lines
5.3 KiB
Plaintext
$PostgreSQL: pgsql/contrib/dblink/doc/cursor,v 1.6 2006/03/11 04:38:29 momjian Exp $
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==================================================================
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Name
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dblink_open -- Opens a cursor on a remote database
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Synopsis
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dblink_open(text cursorname, text sql [, bool fail_on_error])
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dblink_open(text connname, text cursorname, text sql [, bool fail_on_error])
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Inputs
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connname
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if three arguments are present, the first is taken as the specific
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connection name to use; otherwise the unnamed connection is assumed
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cursorname
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a reference name for the cursor
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sql
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sql statement that you wish to execute on the remote host
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e.g. "select * from pg_class"
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fail_on_error
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If true (default when not present) then an ERROR thrown on the remote side
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of the connection causes an ERROR to also be thrown locally. If false, the
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remote ERROR is locally treated as a NOTICE, and the return value is set
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to 'ERROR'.
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Outputs
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Returns status = "OK"
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Note
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1) dblink_connect(text connstr) must be executed first
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2) dblink_open starts an explicit transaction. If, after using dblink_open,
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you use dblink_exec to change data, and then an error occurs or you use
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dblink_disconnect without a dblink_close first, your change *will* be
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lost. Also, using dblink_close explicitly ends the transaction and thus
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effectively closes *all* open cursors.
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Example usage
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test=# select dblink_connect('dbname=postgres');
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dblink_connect
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----------------
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OK
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(1 row)
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test=# select dblink_open('foo','select proname, prosrc from pg_proc');
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dblink_open
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-------------
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OK
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(1 row)
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==================================================================
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Name
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dblink_fetch -- Returns a set from an open cursor on a remote database
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Synopsis
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dblink_fetch(text cursorname, int32 howmany [, bool fail_on_error])
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dblink_fetch(text connname, text cursorname, int32 howmany [, bool fail_on_error])
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Inputs
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connname
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if three arguments are present, the first is taken as the specific
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connection name to use; otherwise the unnamed connection is assumed
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cursorname
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The reference name for the cursor
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howmany
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Maximum number of rows to retrieve. The next howmany rows are fetched,
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starting at the current cursor position, moving forward. Once the cursor
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has positioned to the end, no more rows are produced.
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fail_on_error
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If true (default when not present) then an ERROR thrown on the remote side
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of the connection causes an ERROR to also be thrown locally. If false, the
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remote ERROR is locally treated as a NOTICE, and no rows are returned.
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Outputs
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Returns setof record
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Note
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On a mismatch between the number of return fields as specified in the FROM
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clause, and the actual number of fields returned by the remote cursor, an
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ERROR will be thrown. In this event, the remote cursor is still advanced
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by as many rows as it would have been if the ERROR had not occurred.
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Example usage
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test=# select dblink_connect('dbname=postgres');
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dblink_connect
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----------------
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OK
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(1 row)
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test=# select dblink_open('foo','select proname, prosrc from pg_proc where proname like ''bytea%''');
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dblink_open
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-------------
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OK
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(1 row)
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test=# select * from dblink_fetch('foo',5) as (funcname name, source text);
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funcname | source
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----------+----------
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byteacat | byteacat
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byteacmp | byteacmp
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byteaeq | byteaeq
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byteage | byteage
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byteagt | byteagt
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(5 rows)
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test=# select * from dblink_fetch('foo',5) as (funcname name, source text);
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funcname | source
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-----------+-----------
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byteain | byteain
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byteale | byteale
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bytealike | bytealike
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bytealt | bytealt
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byteane | byteane
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(5 rows)
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test=# select * from dblink_fetch('foo',5) as (funcname name, source text);
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funcname | source
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------------+------------
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byteanlike | byteanlike
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byteaout | byteaout
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(2 rows)
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test=# select * from dblink_fetch('foo',5) as (funcname name, source text);
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funcname | source
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----------+--------
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(0 rows)
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==================================================================
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Name
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dblink_close -- Closes a cursor on a remote database
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Synopsis
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dblink_close(text cursorname [, bool fail_on_error])
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dblink_close(text connname, text cursorname [, bool fail_on_error])
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Inputs
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connname
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if two arguments are present, the first is taken as the specific
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connection name to use; otherwise the unnamed connection is assumed
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cursorname
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a reference name for the cursor
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fail_on_error
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If true (default when not present) then an ERROR thrown on the remote side
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of the connection causes an ERROR to also be thrown locally. If false, the
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remote ERROR is locally treated as a NOTICE, and the return value is set
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to 'ERROR'.
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Outputs
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Returns status = "OK"
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Note
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dblink_connect(text connstr) or dblink_connect(text connname, text connstr)
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must be executed first.
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Example usage
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test=# select dblink_connect('dbname=postgres');
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dblink_connect
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----------------
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OK
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(1 row)
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test=# select dblink_open('foo','select proname, prosrc from pg_proc');
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dblink_open
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-------------
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OK
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(1 row)
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test=# select dblink_close('foo');
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dblink_close
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--------------
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OK
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(1 row)
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select dblink_connect('myconn','dbname=regression');
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dblink_connect
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----------------
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OK
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(1 row)
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select dblink_open('myconn','foo','select proname, prosrc from pg_proc');
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dblink_open
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-------------
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OK
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(1 row)
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select dblink_close('myconn','foo');
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dblink_close
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--------------
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OK
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(1 row)
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