43.13. Porting from Oracle PL/SQL
This section explains differences between PostgreSQL 's PL/pgSQL language and Oracle's PL/SQL language, to help developers who port applications from Oracle ® to PostgreSQL .
PL/pgSQL is similar to PL/SQL in many aspects. It is a block-structured, imperative language, and all variables have to be declared. Assignments, loops, and conditionals are similar. The main differences you should keep in mind when porting from PL/SQL to PL/pgSQL are:
-
If a name used in a SQL command could be either a column name of a table or a reference to a variable of the function, PL/SQL treats it as a column name. This corresponds to PL/pgSQL 's
plpgsql.variable_conflict
=use_column
behavior, which is not the default, as explained in Section 43.11.1 . It's often best to avoid such ambiguities in the first place, but if you have to port a large amount of code that depends on this behavior, settingvariable_conflict
may be the best solution. -
In PostgreSQL the function body must be written as a string literal. Therefore you need to use dollar quoting or escape single quotes in the function body. (See Section 43.12.1 .)
-
Data type names often need translation. For example, in Oracle string values are commonly declared as being of type
varchar2
, which is a non-SQL-standard type. In PostgreSQL , use typevarchar
ortext
instead. Similarly, replace typenumber
withnumeric
, or use some other numeric data type if there's a more appropriate one. -
Instead of packages, use schemas to organize your functions into groups.
-
Since there are no packages, there are no package-level variables either. This is somewhat annoying. You can keep per-session state in temporary tables instead.
-
Integer
FOR
loops withREVERSE
work differently: PL/SQL counts down from the second number to the first, while PL/pgSQL counts down from the first number to the second, requiring the loop bounds to be swapped when porting. This incompatibility is unfortunate but is unlikely to be changed. (See Section 43.6.5.5 .) -
FOR
loops over queries (other than cursors) also work differently: the target variable(s) must have been declared, whereas PL/SQL always declares them implicitly. An advantage of this is that the variable values are still accessible after the loop exits. -
There are various notational differences for the use of cursor variables.
43.13.1. Porting Examples
Example 43.9 shows how to port a simple function from PL/SQL to PL/pgSQL .
Example 43.9. Porting a Simple Function from PL/SQL to PL/pgSQL
Here is an Oracle PL/SQL function:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION cs_fmt_browser_version(v_name varchar2, v_version varchar2) RETURN varchar2 IS BEGIN IF v_version IS NULL THEN RETURN v_name; END IF; RETURN v_name || '/' || v_version; END; / show errors;
Let's go through this function and see the differences compared to PL/pgSQL :
-
The type name
varchar2
has to be changed tovarchar
ortext
. In the examples in this section, we'll usevarchar
, buttext
is often a better choice if you do not need specific string length limits. -
The
RETURN
key word in the function prototype (not the function body) becomesRETURNS
in PostgreSQL . Also,IS
becomesAS
, and you need to add aLANGUAGE
clause because PL/pgSQL is not the only possible function language. -
In PostgreSQL , the function body is considered to be a string literal, so you need to use quote marks or dollar quotes around it. This substitutes for the terminating
/
in the Oracle approach. -
The
show errors
command does not exist in PostgreSQL , and is not needed since errors are reported automatically.
This is how this function would look when ported to PostgreSQL :
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION cs_fmt_browser_version(v_name varchar, v_version varchar) RETURNS varchar AS $$ BEGIN IF v_version IS NULL THEN RETURN v_name; END IF; RETURN v_name || '/' || v_version; END; $$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
Example 43.10 shows how to port a function that creates another function and how to handle the ensuing quoting problems.
Example 43.10. Porting a Function that Creates Another Function from PL/SQL to PL/pgSQL
The following procedure grabs rows from a
SELECT
statement and builds a large function
with the results in
IF
statements, for the
sake of efficiency.
This is the Oracle version:
CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE cs_update_referrer_type_proc IS CURSOR referrer_keys IS SELECT * FROM cs_referrer_keys ORDER BY try_order; func_cmd VARCHAR(4000); BEGIN func_cmd := 'CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION cs_find_referrer_type(v_host IN VARCHAR2, v_domain IN VARCHAR2, v_url IN VARCHAR2) RETURN VARCHAR2 IS BEGIN'; FOR referrer_key IN referrer_keys LOOP func_cmd := func_cmd || ' IF v_' || referrer_key.kind || ' LIKE ''' || referrer_key.key_string || ''' THEN RETURN ''' || referrer_key.referrer_type || '''; END IF;'; END LOOP; func_cmd := func_cmd || ' RETURN NULL; END;'; EXECUTE IMMEDIATE func_cmd; END; / show errors;
Here is how this function would end up in PostgreSQL :
CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE cs_update_referrer_type_proc() AS $func$ DECLARE referrer_keys CURSOR IS SELECT * FROM cs_referrer_keys ORDER BY try_order; func_body text; func_cmd text; BEGIN func_body := 'BEGIN'; FOR referrer_key IN referrer_keys LOOP func_body := func_body || ' IF v_' || referrer_key.kind || ' LIKE ' || quote_literal(referrer_key.key_string) || ' THEN RETURN ' || quote_literal(referrer_key.referrer_type) || '; END IF;' ; END LOOP; func_body := func_body || ' RETURN NULL; END;'; func_cmd := 'CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION cs_find_referrer_type(v_host varchar, v_domain varchar, v_url varchar) RETURNS varchar AS ' || quote_literal(func_body) || ' LANGUAGE plpgsql;' ; EXECUTE func_cmd; END; $func$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
Notice how the body of the function is built separately and passed
through
quote_literal
to double any quote marks in it. This
technique is needed because we cannot safely use dollar quoting for
defining the new function: we do not know for sure what strings will
be interpolated from the
referrer_key.key_string
field.
(We are assuming here that
referrer_key.kind
can be
trusted to always be
host
,
domain
, or
url
, but
referrer_key.key_string
might be
anything, in particular it might contain dollar signs.) This function
is actually an improvement on the Oracle original, because it will
not generate broken code when
referrer_key.key_string
or
referrer_key.referrer_type
contain quote marks.
Example 43.11
shows how to port a function
with
OUT
parameters and string manipulation.
PostgreSQL
does not have a built-in
instr
function, but you can create one
using a combination of other
functions. In
Section 43.13.3
there is a
PL/pgSQL
implementation of
instr
that you can use to make your porting
easier.
Example 43.11. Porting a Procedure With String Manipulation and
OUT
Parameters from
PL/SQL
to
PL/pgSQL
The following Oracle PL/SQL procedure is used to parse a URL and return several elements (host, path, and query).
This is the Oracle version:
CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE cs_parse_url( v_url IN VARCHAR2, v_host OUT VARCHAR2, -- This will be passed back v_path OUT VARCHAR2, -- This one too v_query OUT VARCHAR2) -- And this one IS a_pos1 INTEGER; a_pos2 INTEGER; BEGIN v_host := NULL; v_path := NULL; v_query := NULL; a_pos1 := instr(v_url, '//'); IF a_pos1 = 0 THEN RETURN; END IF; a_pos2 := instr(v_url, '/', a_pos1 + 2); IF a_pos2 = 0 THEN v_host := substr(v_url, a_pos1 + 2); v_path := '/'; RETURN; END IF; v_host := substr(v_url, a_pos1 + 2, a_pos2 - a_pos1 - 2); a_pos1 := instr(v_url, '?', a_pos2 + 1); IF a_pos1 = 0 THEN v_path := substr(v_url, a_pos2); RETURN; END IF; v_path := substr(v_url, a_pos2, a_pos1 - a_pos2); v_query := substr(v_url, a_pos1 + 1); END; / show errors;
Here is a possible translation into PL/pgSQL :
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION cs_parse_url( v_url IN VARCHAR, v_host OUT VARCHAR, -- This will be passed back v_path OUT VARCHAR, -- This one too v_query OUT VARCHAR) -- And this one AS $$ DECLARE a_pos1 INTEGER; a_pos2 INTEGER; BEGIN v_host := NULL; v_path := NULL; v_query := NULL; a_pos1 := instr(v_url, '//'); IF a_pos1 = 0 THEN RETURN; END IF; a_pos2 := instr(v_url, '/', a_pos1 + 2); IF a_pos2 = 0 THEN v_host := substr(v_url, a_pos1 + 2); v_path := '/'; RETURN; END IF; v_host := substr(v_url, a_pos1 + 2, a_pos2 - a_pos1 - 2); a_pos1 := instr(v_url, '?', a_pos2 + 1); IF a_pos1 = 0 THEN v_path := substr(v_url, a_pos2); RETURN; END IF; v_path := substr(v_url, a_pos2, a_pos1 - a_pos2); v_query := substr(v_url, a_pos1 + 1); END; $$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
This function could be used like this:
SELECT * FROM cs_parse_url('http://foobar.com/query.cgi?baz');
Example 43.12 shows how to port a procedure that uses numerous features that are specific to Oracle.
Example 43.12. Porting a Procedure from PL/SQL to PL/pgSQL
The Oracle version:
CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE cs_create_job(v_job_id IN INTEGER) IS a_running_job_count INTEGER; BEGIN LOCK TABLE cs_jobs IN EXCLUSIVE MODE; SELECT count(*) INTO a_running_job_count FROM cs_jobs WHERE end_stamp IS NULL; IF a_running_job_count > 0 THEN COMMIT; -- free lock raise_application_error(-20000, 'Unable to create a new job: a job is currently running.'); END IF; DELETE FROM cs_active_job; INSERT INTO cs_active_job(job_id) VALUES (v_job_id); BEGIN INSERT INTO cs_jobs (job_id, start_stamp) VALUES (v_job_id, now()); EXCEPTION WHEN dup_val_on_index THEN NULL; -- don't worry if it already exists END; COMMIT; END; / show errors
This is how we could port this procedure to PL/pgSQL :
CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE cs_create_job(v_job_id integer) AS $$ DECLARE a_running_job_count integer; BEGIN LOCK TABLE cs_jobs IN EXCLUSIVE MODE; SELECT count(*) INTO a_running_job_count FROM cs_jobs WHERE end_stamp IS NULL; IF a_running_job_count > 0 THEN COMMIT; -- free lock RAISE EXCEPTION 'Unable to create a new job: a job is currently running'; -- (1) END IF; DELETE FROM cs_active_job; INSERT INTO cs_active_job(job_id) VALUES (v_job_id); BEGIN INSERT INTO cs_jobs (job_id, start_stamp) VALUES (v_job_id, now()); EXCEPTION WHEN unique_violation THEN -- (2) -- don't worry if it already exists END; COMMIT; END; $$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
The syntax of
|
|
The exception names supported by PL/pgSQL are different from Oracle's. The set of built-in exception names is much larger (see Appendix A ). There is not currently a way to declare user-defined exception names, although you can throw user-chosen SQLSTATE values instead. |
43.13.2. Other Things to Watch For
This section explains a few other things to watch for when porting Oracle PL/SQL functions to PostgreSQL .
43.13.2.1. Implicit Rollback after Exceptions
In
PL/pgSQL
, when an exception is caught by an
EXCEPTION
clause, all database changes since the block's
BEGIN
are automatically rolled back. That is, the behavior
is equivalent to what you'd get in Oracle with:
BEGIN SAVEPOINT s1; ... code here ... EXCEPTION WHEN ... THEN ROLLBACK TO s1; ... code here ... WHEN ... THEN ROLLBACK TO s1; ... code here ... END;
If you are translating an Oracle procedure that uses
SAVEPOINT
and
ROLLBACK TO
in this style,
your task is easy: just omit the
SAVEPOINT
and
ROLLBACK TO
. If you have a procedure that uses
SAVEPOINT
and
ROLLBACK TO
in a different way
then some actual thought will be required.
43.13.2.2.
EXECUTE
The
PL/pgSQL
version of
EXECUTE
works similarly to the
PL/SQL
version, but you have to remember to use
quote_literal
and
quote_ident
as described in
Section 43.5.4
. Constructs of the
type
EXECUTE 'SELECT * FROM $1';
will not work
reliably unless you use these functions.
43.13.2.3. Optimizing PL/pgSQL Functions
PostgreSQL gives you two function creation modifiers to optimize execution: " volatility " (whether the function always returns the same result when given the same arguments) and " strictness " (whether the function returns null if any argument is null). Consult the CREATE FUNCTION reference page for details.
When making use of these optimization attributes, your
CREATE FUNCTION
statement might look something
like this:
CREATE FUNCTION foo(...) RETURNS integer AS $$ ... $$ LANGUAGE plpgsql STRICT IMMUTABLE;
43.13.3. Appendix
This section contains the code for a set of Oracle-compatible
instr
functions that you can use to simplify
your porting efforts.
-- -- instr functions that mimic Oracle's counterpart -- Syntax: instr(string1, string2 [, n [, m]]) -- where [] denotes optional parameters. -- -- Search string1, beginning at the nth character, for the mth occurrence -- of string2. If n is negative, search backwards, starting at the abs(n)'th -- character from the end of string1. -- If n is not passed, assume 1 (search starts at first character). -- If m is not passed, assume 1 (find first occurrence). -- Returns starting index of string2 in string1, or 0 if string2 is not found. -- CREATE FUNCTION instr(varchar, varchar) RETURNS integer AS $$ BEGIN RETURN instr($1, $2, 1); END; $$ LANGUAGE plpgsql STRICT IMMUTABLE; CREATE FUNCTION instr(string varchar, string_to_search_for varchar, beg_index integer) RETURNS integer AS $$ DECLARE pos integer NOT NULL DEFAULT 0; temp_str varchar; beg integer; length integer; ss_length integer; BEGIN IF beg_index > 0 THEN temp_str := substring(string FROM beg_index); pos := position(string_to_search_for IN temp_str); IF pos = 0 THEN RETURN 0; ELSE RETURN pos + beg_index - 1; END IF; ELSIF beg_index < 0 THEN ss_length := char_length(string_to_search_for); length := char_length(string); beg := length + 1 + beg_index; WHILE beg > 0 LOOP temp_str := substring(string FROM beg FOR ss_length); IF string_to_search_for = temp_str THEN RETURN beg; END IF; beg := beg - 1; END LOOP; RETURN 0; ELSE RETURN 0; END IF; END; $$ LANGUAGE plpgsql STRICT IMMUTABLE; CREATE FUNCTION instr(string varchar, string_to_search_for varchar, beg_index integer, occur_index integer) RETURNS integer AS $$ DECLARE pos integer NOT NULL DEFAULT 0; occur_number integer NOT NULL DEFAULT 0; temp_str varchar; beg integer; i integer; length integer; ss_length integer; BEGIN IF occur_index <= 0 THEN RAISE 'argument ''%'' is out of range', occur_index USING ERRCODE = '22003'; END IF; IF beg_index > 0 THEN beg := beg_index - 1; FOR i IN 1..occur_index LOOP temp_str := substring(string FROM beg + 1); pos := position(string_to_search_for IN temp_str); IF pos = 0 THEN RETURN 0; END IF; beg := beg + pos; END LOOP; RETURN beg; ELSIF beg_index < 0 THEN ss_length := char_length(string_to_search_for); length := char_length(string); beg := length + 1 + beg_index; WHILE beg > 0 LOOP temp_str := substring(string FROM beg FOR ss_length); IF string_to_search_for = temp_str THEN occur_number := occur_number + 1; IF occur_number = occur_index THEN RETURN beg; END IF; END IF; beg := beg - 1; END LOOP; RETURN 0; ELSE RETURN 0; END IF; END; $$ LANGUAGE plpgsql STRICT IMMUTABLE;