44.6. PL/Perl Triggers
PL/Perl can be used to write trigger functions. In a trigger function,
the hash reference
$_TD
contains information about the
current trigger event.
$_TD
is a global variable,
which gets a separate local value for each invocation of the trigger.
The fields of the
$_TD
hash reference are:
-
$_TD->{new}{foo} -
NEWvalue of columnfoo -
$_TD->{old}{foo} -
OLDvalue of columnfoo -
$_TD->{name} -
Name of the trigger being called
-
$_TD->{event} -
Trigger event:
INSERT,UPDATE,DELETE,TRUNCATE, orUNKNOWN -
$_TD->{when} -
When the trigger was called:
BEFORE,AFTER,INSTEAD OF, orUNKNOWN -
$_TD->{level} -
The trigger level:
ROW,STATEMENT, orUNKNOWN -
$_TD->{relid} -
OID of the table on which the trigger fired
-
$_TD->{table_name} -
Name of the table on which the trigger fired
-
$_TD->{relname} -
Name of the table on which the trigger fired. This has been deprecated, and could be removed in a future release. Please use $_TD->{table_name} instead.
-
$_TD->{table_schema} -
Name of the schema in which the table on which the trigger fired, is
-
$_TD->{argc} -
Number of arguments of the trigger function
-
@{$_TD->{args}} -
Arguments of the trigger function. Does not exist if
$_TD->{argc}is 0.
Row-level triggers can return one of the following:
-
return; -
Execute the operation
-
"SKIP" -
Don't execute the operation
-
"MODIFY" -
Indicates that the
NEWrow was modified by the trigger function
Here is an example of a trigger function, illustrating some of the above:
CREATE TABLE test (
i int,
v varchar
);
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION valid_id() RETURNS trigger AS $$
if (($_TD->{new}{i} >= 100) || ($_TD->{new}{i} <= 0)) {
return "SKIP"; # skip INSERT/UPDATE command
} elsif ($_TD->{new}{v} ne "immortal") {
$_TD->{new}{v} .= "(modified by trigger)";
return "MODIFY"; # modify row and execute INSERT/UPDATE command
} else {
return; # execute INSERT/UPDATE command
}
$$ LANGUAGE plperl;
CREATE TRIGGER test_valid_id_trig
BEFORE INSERT OR UPDATE ON test
FOR EACH ROW EXECUTE PROCEDURE valid_id();