Re: proposal: schema variables
Gilles Darold <gilles.darold@dalibo.com>
Commits
GET /api/v1/messages/:b64id/commits
the thread's linked commits as JSON, with link sources.
API reference →
-
Move WAL sequence code into its own file
- a87987cafca6 19 (unreleased) cited
-
Add ExplainState argument to pg_plan_query() and planner().
- c83ac02ec730 19 (unreleased) cited
-
Don't include access/htup_details.h in executor/tuptable.h
- 1a8b5b11e48a 19 (unreleased) cited
-
Refactor to avoid code duplication in transformPLAssignStmt.
- b0fb2c6aa5a4 19 (unreleased) cited
-
Avoid including commands/dbcommands.h in so many places
- 325fc0ab14d1 19 (unreleased) cited
-
Restrict psql meta-commands in plain-text dumps.
- 71ea0d679543 19 (unreleased) cited
-
Split func.sgml into more manageable pieces
- 4e23c9ef65ac 19 (unreleased) cited
-
Fix squashing algorithm for query texts
- 0f65f3eec478 18.0 cited
-
EXPLAIN: Always use two fractional digits for row counts.
- 95dbd827f2ed 18.0 cited
-
Preliminary refactoring of plpgsql expression construction.
- a654af21ae52 18.0 cited
-
plpgsql: pure parser and reentrant scanner
- 7b27f5fd36cb 18.0 cited
-
Add some sanity checks in executor for query ID reporting
- 24f520594809 18.0 cited
-
Fix misleading error message context
- 4af123ad45bd 18.0 cited
-
Add macros for looping through a List without a ListCell.
- 14dd0f27d7cd 17.0 cited
Le 26/10/2017 à 09:21, Pavel Stehule a écrit :
> Hi,
>
> I propose a new database object - a variable. The variable is
> persistent object, that holds unshared session based not transactional
> in memory value of any type. Like variables in any other languages.
> The persistence is required for possibility to do static checks, but
> can be limited to session - the variables can be temporal.
>
> My proposal is related to session variables from Sybase, MSSQL or
> MySQL (based on prefix usage @ or @@), or package variables from
> Oracle (access is controlled by scope), or schema variables from DB2.
> Any design is coming from different sources, traditions and has some
> advantages or disadvantages. The base of my proposal is usage schema
> variables as session variables for stored procedures. It should to
> help to people who try to port complex projects to PostgreSQL from
> other databases.
>
> The Sybase (T-SQL) design is good for interactive work, but it is
> weak for usage in stored procedures - the static check is not
> possible. Is not possible to set some access rights on variables.
>
> The ADA design (used on Oracle) based on scope is great, but our
> environment is not nested. And we should to support other PL than
> PLpgSQL more strongly.
>
> There is not too much other possibilities - the variable that should
> be accessed from different PL, different procedures (in time) should
> to live somewhere over PL, and there is the schema only.
>
> The variable can be created by CREATE statement:
>
> CREATE VARIABLE public.myvar AS integer;
> CREATE VARIABLE myschema.myvar AS mytype;
>
> CREATE [TEMP] VARIABLE [IF NOT EXISTS] name AS type
> [ DEFAULT expression ] [[NOT] NULL]
> [ ON TRANSACTION END { RESET | DROP } ]
> [ { VOLATILE | STABLE } ];
>
> It is dropped by command DROP VARIABLE [ IF EXISTS] varname.
>
> The access rights is controlled by usual access rights - by commands
> GRANT/REVOKE. The possible rights are: READ, WRITE
>
> The variables can be modified by SQL command SET (this is taken from
> standard, and it natural)
>
> SET varname = expression;
>
> Unfortunately we use the SET command for different purpose. But I am
> thinking so we can solve it with few tricks. The first is moving our
> GUC to pg_catalog schema. We can control the strictness of SET
> command. In one variant, we can detect custom GUC and allow it, in
> another we can disallow a custom GUC and allow only schema variables.
> A new command LET can be alternative.
>
> The variables should be used in queries implicitly (without JOIN)
>
> SELECT varname;
>
> The SEARCH_PATH is used, when varname is located. The variables can be
> used everywhere where query parameters are allowed.
>
> I hope so this proposal is good enough and simple.
>
> Comments, notes?
>
> regards
>
> Pavel
>
>
Great feature that will help for migration. How will you handle CONSTANT
declaration? With Oracle it is possible to declare a constant as follow:
varname CONSTANT INTEGER := 500;
for a variable that can't be changed. Do you plan to add a CONSTANT or
READONLY keyword or do you want use GRANT on the object to deal with
this case?
Regards
--
Gilles Darold
Consultant PostgreSQL
http://dalibo.com - http://dalibo.org