ALTER PROCEDURE
ALTER PROCEDURE
ALTER PROCEDURE - change the definition of a procedure
Synopsis
ALTER PROCEDUREname
[ ( [ [argmode
] [argname
]argtype
[, ...] ] ) ]action
[ ... ] [ RESTRICT ] ALTER PROCEDUREname
[ ( [ [argmode
] [argname
]argtype
[, ...] ] ) ] RENAME TOnew_name
ALTER PROCEDUREname
[ ( [ [argmode
] [argname
]argtype
[, ...] ] ) ] OWNER TO {new_owner
| CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER } ALTER PROCEDUREname
[ ( [ [argmode
] [argname
]argtype
[, ...] ] ) ] SET SCHEMAnew_schema
ALTER PROCEDUREname
[ ( [ [argmode
] [argname
]argtype
[, ...] ] ) ] [ NO ] DEPENDS ON EXTENSIONextension_name
whereaction
is one of: [ EXTERNAL ] SECURITY INVOKER | [ EXTERNAL ] SECURITY DEFINER SETconfiguration_parameter
{ TO | = } {value
| DEFAULT } SETconfiguration_parameter
FROM CURRENT RESETconfiguration_parameter
RESET ALL
Description
ALTER PROCEDURE
changes the definition of a
procedure.
You must own the procedure to use
ALTER PROCEDURE
.
To change a procedure's schema, you must also have
CREATE
privilege on the new schema.
To alter the owner, you must also be a direct or indirect member of the new
owning role, and that role must have
CREATE
privilege on
the procedure's schema. (These restrictions enforce that altering the owner
doesn't do anything you couldn't do by dropping and recreating the procedure.
However, a superuser can alter ownership of any procedure anyway.)
Parameters
-
name
-
The name (optionally schema-qualified) of an existing procedure. If no argument list is specified, the name must be unique in its schema.
-
argmode
-
The mode of an argument:
IN
,OUT
,INOUT
, orVARIADIC
. If omitted, the default isIN
. -
argname
-
The name of an argument. Note that
ALTER PROCEDURE
does not actually pay any attention to argument names, since only the argument data types are used to determine the procedure's identity. -
argtype
-
The data type(s) of the procedure's arguments (optionally schema-qualified), if any. See DROP PROCEDURE for the details of how the procedure is looked up using the argument data type(s).
-
new_name
-
The new name of the procedure.
-
new_owner
-
The new owner of the procedure. Note that if the procedure is marked
SECURITY DEFINER
, it will subsequently execute as the new owner. -
new_schema
-
The new schema for the procedure.
-
extension_name
-
The name of the extension that the procedure is to depend on.
-
[ EXTERNAL ] SECURITY INVOKER
[ EXTERNAL ] SECURITY DEFINER
-
Change whether the procedure is a security definer or not. The key word
EXTERNAL
is ignored for SQL conformance. See CREATE PROCEDURE for more information about this capability. -
configuration_parameter
value
-
Add or change the assignment to be made to a configuration parameter when the procedure is called. If
value
isDEFAULT
or, equivalently,RESET
is used, the procedure-local setting is removed, so that the procedure executes with the value present in its environment. UseRESET ALL
to clear all procedure-local settings.SET FROM CURRENT
saves the value of the parameter that is current whenALTER PROCEDURE
is executed as the value to be applied when the procedure is entered.See SET and Chapter 20 for more information about allowed parameter names and values.
-
RESTRICT
-
Ignored for conformance with the SQL standard.
Examples
To rename the procedure
insert_data
with two arguments
of type
integer
to
insert_record
:
ALTER PROCEDURE insert_data(integer, integer) RENAME TO insert_record;
To change the owner of the procedure
insert_data
with
two arguments of type
integer
to
joe
:
ALTER PROCEDURE insert_data(integer, integer) OWNER TO joe;
To change the schema of the procedure
insert_data
with
two arguments of type
integer
to
accounting
:
ALTER PROCEDURE insert_data(integer, integer) SET SCHEMA accounting;
To mark the procedure
insert_data(integer, integer)
as
being dependent on the extension
myext
:
ALTER PROCEDURE insert_data(integer, integer) DEPENDS ON EXTENSION myext;
To adjust the search path that is automatically set for a procedure:
ALTER PROCEDURE check_password(text) SET search_path = admin, pg_temp;
To disable automatic setting of
search_path
for a procedure:
ALTER PROCEDURE check_password(text) RESET search_path;
The procedure will now execute with whatever search path is used by its caller.
Compatibility
This statement is partially compatible with the
ALTER
PROCEDURE
statement in the SQL standard. The standard allows more
properties of a procedure to be modified, but does not provide the
ability to rename a procedure, make a procedure a security definer,
attach configuration parameter values to a procedure,
or change the owner, schema, or volatility of a procedure. The standard also
requires the
RESTRICT
key word, which is optional in
PostgreSQL
.