Global Data in PL/Tcl
| PostgreSQL 9.6.10 Documentation | |||
|---|---|---|---|
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Sometimes it is useful to have some global data that is held between two calls to a function or is shared between different functions. This is easily done in PL/Tcl, but there are some restrictions that must be understood.
For security reasons, PL/Tcl executes functions called by any one SQL role in a separate Tcl interpreter for that role. This prevents accidental or malicious interference by one user with the behavior of another user's PL/Tcl functions. Each such interpreter will have its own values for any "global" Tcl variables. Thus, two PL/Tcl functions will share the same global variables if and only if they are executed by the same SQL role. In an application wherein a single session executes code under multiple SQL roles (via SECURITY DEFINER functions, use of SET ROLE , etc) you may need to take explicit steps to ensure that PL/Tcl functions can share data. To do that, make sure that functions that should communicate are owned by the same user, and mark them SECURITY DEFINER . You must of course take care that such functions can't be used to do anything unintended.
All PL/TclU functions used in a session execute in the same Tcl interpreter, which of course is distinct from the interpreter(s) used for PL/Tcl functions. So global data is automatically shared between PL/TclU functions. This is not considered a security risk because all PL/TclU functions execute at the same trust level, namely that of a database superuser.
  To help protect PL/Tcl functions from unintentionally interfering
     with each other, a global
     array is made available to each function via the
  
   upvar
  
  command. The global name of this variable is the function's internal
     name, and the local name is
  
   GD
  
  .  It is recommended that
  
   GD
  
  be used
     for persistent private data of a function.  Use regular Tcl global
     variables only for values that you specifically intend to be shared among
     multiple functions.  (Note that the
  
   GD
  
  arrays are only
     global within a particular interpreter, so they do not bypass the
     security restrictions mentioned above.)
 
  An example of using
  
   GD
  
  appears in the
  
   spi_execp
  
  example below.