Control structures are probably the most useful (and important) part of PL/pgSQL. With PL/pgSQL's control structures, you can manipulate PostgreSQL data in a very flexible and powerful way.
There are two commands available that allow you to return data
from a function: RETURN and RETURN
NEXT.
RETURN
RETURN expression;
RETURN with an expression terminates the
function and returns the value of
expression to the caller. This form
is used for PL/pgSQL functions that do
not return a set.
In a function that returns a scalar type, the expression's result will automatically be cast into the function's return type as described for assignments. But to return a composite (row) value, you must write an expression delivering exactly the requested column set. This may require use of explicit casting.
If you declared the function with output parameters, write just
RETURN with no expression. The current values
of the output parameter variables will be returned.
If you declared the function to return void, a
RETURN statement can be used to exit the function
early; but do not write an expression following
RETURN.
The return value of a function cannot be left undefined. If
control reaches the end of the top-level block of the function
without hitting a RETURN statement, a run-time
error will occur. This restriction does not apply to functions
with output parameters and functions returning void,
however. In those cases a RETURN statement is
automatically executed if the top-level block finishes.
Some examples:
-- functions returning a scalar type RETURN 1 + 2; RETURN scalar_var; -- functions returning a composite type RETURN composite_type_var; RETURN (1, 2, 'three'::text); -- must cast columns to correct types
RETURN NEXT and RETURN QUERYRETURN NEXTexpression; RETURN QUERYquery; RETURN QUERY EXECUTEcommand-string[ USINGexpression[, ... ] ];
When a PL/pgSQL function is declared to return
SETOF , the procedure
to follow is slightly different. In that case, the individual
items to return are specified by a sequence of sometypeRETURN
NEXT or RETURN QUERY commands, and
then a final RETURN command with no argument
is used to indicate that the function has finished executing.
RETURN NEXT can be used with both scalar and
composite data types; with a composite result type, an entire
“table” of results will be returned.
RETURN QUERY appends the results of executing
a query to the function's result set. RETURN
NEXT and RETURN QUERY can be freely
intermixed in a single set-returning function, in which case
their results will be concatenated.
RETURN NEXT and RETURN
QUERY do not actually return from the function —
they simply append zero or more rows to the function's result
set. Execution then continues with the next statement in the
PL/pgSQL function. As successive
RETURN NEXT or RETURN
QUERY commands are executed, the result set is built
up. A final RETURN, which should have no
argument, causes control to exit the function (or you can just
let control reach the end of the function).
RETURN QUERY has a variant
RETURN QUERY EXECUTE, which specifies the
query to be executed dynamically. Parameter expressions can
be inserted into the computed query string via USING,
in just the same way as in the EXECUTE command.
If you declared the function with output parameters, write just
RETURN NEXT with no expression. On each
execution, the current values of the output parameter
variable(s) will be saved for eventual return as a row of the
result. Note that you must declare the function as returning
SETOF record when there are multiple output
parameters, or SETOF
when there is just one output parameter of type
sometypesometype, in order to create a set-returning
function with output parameters.
Here is an example of a function using RETURN
NEXT:
CREATE TABLE foo (fooid INT, foosubid INT, fooname TEXT);
INSERT INTO foo VALUES (1, 2, 'three');
INSERT INTO foo VALUES (4, 5, 'six');
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION get_all_foo() RETURNS SETOF foo AS
$BODY$
DECLARE
r foo%rowtype;
BEGIN
FOR r IN
SELECT * FROM foo WHERE fooid > 0
LOOP
-- can do some processing here
RETURN NEXT r; -- return current row of SELECT
END LOOP;
RETURN;
END
$BODY$
LANGUAGE plpgsql;
SELECT * FROM get_all_foo();
Here is an example of a function using RETURN
QUERY:
CREATE FUNCTION get_available_flightid(date) RETURNS SETOF integer AS
$BODY$
BEGIN
RETURN QUERY SELECT flightid
FROM flight
WHERE flightdate >= $1
AND flightdate < ($1 + 1);
-- Since execution is not finished, we can check whether rows were returned
-- and raise exception if not.
IF NOT FOUND THEN
RAISE EXCEPTION 'No flight at %.', $1;
END IF;
RETURN;
END
$BODY$
LANGUAGE plpgsql;
-- Returns available flights or raises exception if there are no
-- available flights.
SELECT * FROM get_available_flightid(CURRENT_DATE);
The current implementation of RETURN NEXT
and RETURN QUERY stores the entire result set
before returning from the function, as discussed above. That
means that if a PL/pgSQL function produces a
very large result set, performance might be poor: data will be
written to disk to avoid memory exhaustion, but the function
itself will not return until the entire result set has been
generated. A future version of PL/pgSQL might
allow users to define set-returning functions
that do not have this limitation. Currently, the point at
which data begins being written to disk is controlled by the
work_mem
configuration variable. Administrators who have sufficient
memory to store larger result sets in memory should consider
increasing this parameter.
A procedure does not have a return value. A procedure can therefore end
without a RETURN statement. If you wish to use
a RETURN statement to exit the code early, write
just RETURN with no expression.
If the procedure has output parameters, the final values of the output parameter variables will be returned to the caller.
A PL/pgSQL function, procedure,
or DO block can call a procedure
using CALL. Output parameters are handled
differently from the way that CALL works in plain
SQL. Each INOUT parameter of the procedure must
correspond to a variable in the CALL statement, and
whatever the procedure returns is assigned back to that variable after
it returns. For example:
CREATE PROCEDURE triple(INOUT x int)
LANGUAGE plpgsql
AS $$
BEGIN
x := x * 3;
END;
$$;
DO $$
DECLARE myvar int := 5;
BEGIN
CALL triple(myvar);
RAISE NOTICE 'myvar = %', myvar; -- prints 15
END
$$;
IF and CASE statements let you execute
alternative commands based on certain conditions.
PL/pgSQL has three forms of IF:
IF ... THEN ... END IF
IF ... THEN ... ELSE ... END IF
IF ... THEN ... ELSIF ... THEN ... ELSE ... END IF
and two forms of CASE:
CASE ... WHEN ... THEN ... ELSE ... END CASE
CASE WHEN ... THEN ... ELSE ... END CASE
IF-THENIFboolean-expressionTHENstatementsEND IF;
IF-THEN statements are the simplest form of
IF. The statements between
THEN and END IF will be
executed if the condition is true. Otherwise, they are
skipped.
Example:
IF v_user_id <> 0 THEN
UPDATE users SET email = v_email WHERE user_id = v_user_id;
END IF;
IF-THEN-ELSEIFboolean-expressionTHENstatementsELSEstatementsEND IF;
IF-THEN-ELSE statements add to
IF-THEN by letting you specify an
alternative set of statements that should be executed if the
condition is not true. (Note this includes the case where the
condition evaluates to NULL.)
Examples:
IF parentid IS NULL OR parentid = ''
THEN
RETURN fullname;
ELSE
RETURN hp_true_filename(parentid) || '/' || fullname;
END IF;
IF v_count > 0 THEN
INSERT INTO users_count (count) VALUES (v_count);
RETURN 't';
ELSE
RETURN 'f';
END IF;
IF-THEN-ELSIFIFboolean-expressionTHENstatements[ ELSIFboolean-expressionTHENstatements[ ELSIFboolean-expressionTHENstatements... ] ] [ ELSEstatements] END IF;
Sometimes there are more than just two alternatives.
IF-THEN-ELSIF provides a convenient
method of checking several alternatives in turn.
The IF conditions are tested successively
until the first one that is true is found. Then the
associated statement(s) are executed, after which control
passes to the next statement after END IF.
(Any subsequent IF conditions are not
tested.) If none of the IF conditions is true,
then the ELSE block (if any) is executed.
Here is an example:
IF number = 0 THEN
result := 'zero';
ELSIF number > 0 THEN
result := 'positive';
ELSIF number < 0 THEN
result := 'negative';
ELSE
-- hmm, the only other possibility is that number is null
result := 'NULL';
END IF;
The key word ELSIF can also be spelled
ELSEIF.
An alternative way of accomplishing the same task is to nest
IF-THEN-ELSE statements, as in the
following example:
IF demo_row.sex = 'm' THEN
pretty_sex := 'man';
ELSE
IF demo_row.sex = 'f' THEN
pretty_sex := 'woman';
END IF;
END IF;
However, this method requires writing a matching END IF
for each IF, so it is much more cumbersome than
using ELSIF when there are many alternatives.
CASECASEsearch-expressionWHENexpression[,expression[ ... ]] THENstatements[ WHENexpression[,expression[ ... ]] THENstatements... ] [ ELSEstatements] END CASE;
The simple form of CASE provides conditional execution
based on equality of operands. The search-expression
is evaluated (once) and successively compared to each
expression in the WHEN clauses.
If a match is found, then the corresponding
statements are executed, and then control
passes to the next statement after END CASE. (Subsequent
WHEN expressions are not evaluated.) If no match is
found, the ELSE statements are
executed; but if ELSE is not present, then a
CASE_NOT_FOUND exception is raised.
Here is a simple example:
CASE x
WHEN 1, 2 THEN
msg := 'one or two';
ELSE
msg := 'other value than one or two';
END CASE;
CASE
CASE
WHEN boolean-expression THEN
statements
[ WHEN boolean-expression THEN
statements
... ]
[ ELSE
statements ]
END CASE;
The searched form of CASE provides conditional execution
based on truth of Boolean expressions. Each WHEN clause's
boolean-expression is evaluated in turn,
until one is found that yields true. Then the
corresponding statements are executed, and
then control passes to the next statement after END CASE.
(Subsequent WHEN expressions are not evaluated.)
If no true result is found, the ELSE
statements are executed;
but if ELSE is not present, then a
CASE_NOT_FOUND exception is raised.
Here is an example:
CASE
WHEN x BETWEEN 0 AND 10 THEN
msg := 'value is between zero and ten';
WHEN x BETWEEN 11 AND 20 THEN
msg := 'value is between eleven and twenty';
END CASE;
This form of CASE is entirely equivalent to
IF-THEN-ELSIF, except for the rule that reaching
an omitted ELSE clause results in an error rather
than doing nothing.
With the LOOP, EXIT,
CONTINUE, WHILE, FOR,
and FOREACH statements, you can arrange for your
PL/pgSQL function to repeat a series of commands.
LOOP[ <<label>> ] LOOPstatementsEND LOOP [label];
LOOP defines an unconditional loop that is repeated
indefinitely until terminated by an EXIT or
RETURN statement. The optional
label can be used by EXIT
and CONTINUE statements within nested loops to
specify which loop those statements refer to.
EXITEXIT [label] [ WHENboolean-expression];
If no label is given, the innermost
loop is terminated and the statement following END
LOOP is executed next. If label
is given, it must be the label of the current or some outer
level of nested loop or block. Then the named loop or block is
terminated and control continues with the statement after the
loop's/block's corresponding END.
If WHEN is specified, the loop exit occurs only if
boolean-expression is true. Otherwise, control passes
to the statement after EXIT.
EXIT can be used with all types of loops; it is
not limited to use with unconditional loops.
When used with a
BEGIN block, EXIT passes
control to the next statement after the end of the block.
Note that a label must be used for this purpose; an unlabeled
EXIT is never considered to match a
BEGIN block. (This is a change from
pre-8.4 releases of PostgreSQL, which
would allow an unlabeled EXIT to match
a BEGIN block.)
Examples:
LOOP
-- some computations
IF count > 0 THEN
EXIT; -- exit loop
END IF;
END LOOP;
LOOP
-- some computations
EXIT WHEN count > 0; -- same result as previous example
END LOOP;
<<ablock>>
BEGIN
-- some computations
IF stocks > 100000 THEN
EXIT ablock; -- causes exit from the BEGIN block
END IF;
-- computations here will be skipped when stocks > 100000
END;
CONTINUECONTINUE [label] [ WHENboolean-expression];
If no label is given, the next iteration of
the innermost loop is begun. That is, all statements remaining
in the loop body are skipped, and control returns
to the loop control expression (if any) to determine whether
another loop iteration is needed.
If label is present, it
specifies the label of the loop whose execution will be
continued.
If WHEN is specified, the next iteration of the
loop is begun only if boolean-expression is
true. Otherwise, control passes to the statement after
CONTINUE.
CONTINUE can be used with all types of loops; it
is not limited to use with unconditional loops.
Examples:
LOOP
-- some computations
EXIT WHEN count > 100;
CONTINUE WHEN count < 50;
-- some computations for count IN [50 .. 100]
END LOOP;
WHILE[ <<label>> ] WHILEboolean-expressionLOOPstatementsEND LOOP [label];
The WHILE statement repeats a
sequence of statements so long as the
boolean-expression
evaluates to true. The expression is checked just before
each entry to the loop body.
For example:
WHILE amount_owed > 0 AND gift_certificate_balance > 0 LOOP
-- some computations here
END LOOP;
WHILE NOT done LOOP
-- some computations here
END LOOP;
FOR (Integer Variant)[ <<label>> ] FORnameIN [ REVERSE ]expression..expression[ BYexpression] LOOPstatementsEND LOOP [label];
This form of FOR creates a loop that iterates over a range
of integer values. The variable
name is automatically defined as type
integer and exists only inside the loop (any existing
definition of the variable name is ignored within the loop).
The two expressions giving
the lower and upper bound of the range are evaluated once when entering
the loop. If the BY clause isn't specified the iteration
step is 1, otherwise it's the value specified in the BY
clause, which again is evaluated once on loop entry.
If REVERSE is specified then the step value is
subtracted, rather than added, after each iteration.
Some examples of integer FOR loops:
FOR i IN 1..10 LOOP
-- i will take on the values 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10 within the loop
END LOOP;
FOR i IN REVERSE 10..1 LOOP
-- i will take on the values 10,9,8,7,6,5,4,3,2,1 within the loop
END LOOP;
FOR i IN REVERSE 10..1 BY 2 LOOP
-- i will take on the values 10,8,6,4,2 within the loop
END LOOP;
If the lower bound is greater than the upper bound (or less than,
in the REVERSE case), the loop body is not
executed at all. No error is raised.
If a label is attached to the
FOR loop then the integer loop variable can be
referenced with a qualified name, using that
label.
Using a different type of FOR loop, you can iterate through
the results of a query and manipulate that data
accordingly. The syntax is:
[ <<label>> ] FORtargetINqueryLOOPstatementsEND LOOP [label];
The target is a record variable, row variable,
or comma-separated list of scalar variables.
The target is successively assigned each row
resulting from the query and the loop body is
executed for each row. Here is an example:
CREATE FUNCTION refresh_mviews() RETURNS integer AS $$
DECLARE
mviews RECORD;
BEGIN
RAISE NOTICE 'Refreshing all materialized views...';
FOR mviews IN
SELECT n.nspname AS mv_schema,
c.relname AS mv_name,
pg_catalog.pg_get_userbyid(c.relowner) AS owner
FROM pg_catalog.pg_class c
LEFT JOIN pg_catalog.pg_namespace n ON (n.oid = c.relnamespace)
WHERE c.relkind = 'm'
ORDER BY 1
LOOP
-- Now "mviews" has one record with information about the materialized view
RAISE NOTICE 'Refreshing materialized view %.% (owner: %)...',
quote_ident(mviews.mv_schema),
quote_ident(mviews.mv_name),
quote_ident(mviews.owner);
EXECUTE format('REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW %I.%I', mviews.mv_schema, mviews.mv_name);
END LOOP;
RAISE NOTICE 'Done refreshing materialized views.';
RETURN 1;
END;
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
If the loop is terminated by an EXIT statement, the last
assigned row value is still accessible after the loop.
The query used in this type of FOR
statement can be any SQL command that returns rows to the caller:
SELECT is the most common case,
but you can also use INSERT, UPDATE, or
DELETE with a RETURNING clause. Some utility
commands such as EXPLAIN will work too.
PL/pgSQL variables are substituted into the query text, and the query plan is cached for possible re-use, as discussed in detail in Section 43.11.1 and Section 43.11.2.
The FOR-IN-EXECUTE statement is another way to iterate over
rows:
[ <<label>> ] FORtargetIN EXECUTEtext_expression[ USINGexpression[, ... ] ] LOOPstatementsEND LOOP [label];
This is like the previous form, except that the source query
is specified as a string expression, which is evaluated and replanned
on each entry to the FOR loop. This allows the programmer to
choose the speed of a preplanned query or the flexibility of a dynamic
query, just as with a plain EXECUTE statement.
As with EXECUTE, parameter values can be inserted
into the dynamic command via USING.
Another way to specify the query whose results should be iterated through is to declare it as a cursor. This is described in Section 43.7.4.
The FOREACH loop is much like a FOR loop,
but instead of iterating through the rows returned by a SQL query,
it iterates through the elements of an array value.
(In general, FOREACH is meant for looping through
components of a composite-valued expression; variants for looping
through composites besides arrays may be added in future.)
The FOREACH statement to loop over an array is:
[ <<label>> ] FOREACHtarget[ SLICEnumber] IN ARRAYexpressionLOOPstatementsEND LOOP [label];
Without SLICE, or if SLICE 0 is specified,
the loop iterates through individual elements of the array produced
by evaluating the expression.
The target variable is assigned each
element value in sequence, and the loop body is executed for each element.
Here is an example of looping through the elements of an integer
array:
CREATE FUNCTION sum(int[]) RETURNS int8 AS $$
DECLARE
s int8 := 0;
x int;
BEGIN
FOREACH x IN ARRAY $1
LOOP
s := s + x;
END LOOP;
RETURN s;
END;
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
The elements are visited in storage order, regardless of the number of
array dimensions. Although the target is
usually just a single variable, it can be a list of variables when
looping through an array of composite values (records). In that case,
for each array element, the variables are assigned from successive
columns of the composite value.
With a positive SLICE value, FOREACH
iterates through slices of the array rather than single elements.
The SLICE value must be an integer constant not larger
than the number of dimensions of the array. The
target variable must be an array,
and it receives successive slices of the array value, where each slice
is of the number of dimensions specified by SLICE.
Here is an example of iterating through one-dimensional slices:
CREATE FUNCTION scan_rows(int[]) RETURNS void AS $$
DECLARE
x int[];
BEGIN
FOREACH x SLICE 1 IN ARRAY $1
LOOP
RAISE NOTICE 'row = %', x;
END LOOP;
END;
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
SELECT scan_rows(ARRAY[[1,2,3],[4,5,6],[7,8,9],[10,11,12]]);
NOTICE: row = {1,2,3}
NOTICE: row = {4,5,6}
NOTICE: row = {7,8,9}
NOTICE: row = {10,11,12}
By default, any error occurring in a PL/pgSQL
function aborts execution of the function, and indeed of the
surrounding transaction as well. You can trap errors and recover
from them by using a BEGIN block with an
EXCEPTION clause. The syntax is an extension of the
normal syntax for a BEGIN block:
[ <<label>> ] [ DECLAREdeclarations] BEGINstatementsEXCEPTION WHENcondition[ ORcondition... ] THENhandler_statements[ WHENcondition[ ORcondition... ] THENhandler_statements... ] END;
If no error occurs, this form of block simply executes all the
statements, and then control passes
to the next statement after END. But if an error
occurs within the statements, further
processing of the statements is
abandoned, and control passes to the EXCEPTION list.
The list is searched for the first condition
matching the error that occurred. If a match is found, the
corresponding handler_statements are
executed, and then control passes to the next statement after
END. If no match is found, the error propagates out
as though the EXCEPTION clause were not there at all:
the error can be caught by an enclosing block with
EXCEPTION, or if there is none it aborts processing
of the function.
The condition names can be any of
those shown in Appendix A. A category
name matches any error within its category. The special
condition name OTHERS matches every error type except
QUERY_CANCELED and ASSERT_FAILURE.
(It is possible, but often unwise, to trap those two error types
by name.) Condition names are
not case-sensitive. Also, an error condition can be specified
by SQLSTATE code; for example these are equivalent:
WHEN division_by_zero THEN ... WHEN SQLSTATE '22012' THEN ...
If a new error occurs within the selected
handler_statements, it cannot be caught
by this EXCEPTION clause, but is propagated out.
A surrounding EXCEPTION clause could catch it.
When an error is caught by an EXCEPTION clause,
the local variables of the PL/pgSQL function
remain as they were when the error occurred, but all changes
to persistent database state within the block are rolled back.
As an example, consider this fragment:
INSERT INTO mytab(firstname, lastname) VALUES('Tom', 'Jones');
BEGIN
UPDATE mytab SET firstname = 'Joe' WHERE lastname = 'Jones';
x := x + 1;
y := x / 0;
EXCEPTION
WHEN division_by_zero THEN
RAISE NOTICE 'caught division_by_zero';
RETURN x;
END;
When control reaches the assignment to y, it will
fail with a division_by_zero error. This will be caught by
the EXCEPTION clause. The value returned in the
RETURN statement will be the incremented value of
x, but the effects of the UPDATE command will
have been rolled back. The INSERT command preceding the
block is not rolled back, however, so the end result is that the database
contains Tom Jones not Joe Jones.
A block containing an EXCEPTION clause is significantly
more expensive to enter and exit than a block without one. Therefore,
don't use EXCEPTION without need.
Example 43.2. Exceptions with UPDATE/INSERT
This example uses exception handling to perform either
UPDATE or INSERT, as appropriate. It is
recommended that applications use INSERT with
ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE rather than actually using
this pattern. This example serves primarily to illustrate use of
PL/pgSQL control flow structures:
CREATE TABLE db (a INT PRIMARY KEY, b TEXT);
CREATE FUNCTION merge_db(key INT, data TEXT) RETURNS VOID AS
$$
BEGIN
LOOP
-- first try to update the key
UPDATE db SET b = data WHERE a = key;
IF found THEN
RETURN;
END IF;
-- not there, so try to insert the key
-- if someone else inserts the same key concurrently,
-- we could get a unique-key failure
BEGIN
INSERT INTO db(a,b) VALUES (key, data);
RETURN;
EXCEPTION WHEN unique_violation THEN
-- Do nothing, and loop to try the UPDATE again.
END;
END LOOP;
END;
$$
LANGUAGE plpgsql;
SELECT merge_db(1, 'david');
SELECT merge_db(1, 'dennis');
This coding assumes the unique_violation error is caused by
the INSERT, and not by, say, an INSERT in a
trigger function on the table. It might also misbehave if there is
more than one unique index on the table, since it will retry the
operation regardless of which index caused the error.
More safety could be had by using the
features discussed next to check that the trapped error was the one
expected.
Exception handlers frequently need to identify the specific error that
occurred. There are two ways to get information about the current
exception in PL/pgSQL: special variables and the
GET STACKED DIAGNOSTICS command.
Within an exception handler, the special variable
SQLSTATE contains the error code that corresponds to
the exception that was raised (refer to Table A.1
for a list of possible error codes). The special variable
SQLERRM contains the error message associated with the
exception. These variables are undefined outside exception handlers.
Within an exception handler, one may also retrieve
information about the current exception by using the
GET STACKED DIAGNOSTICS command, which has the form:
GET STACKED DIAGNOSTICSvariable{ = | := }item[ , ... ];
Each item is a key word identifying a status
value to be assigned to the specified variable
(which should be of the right data type to receive it). The currently
available status items are shown
in Table 43.2.
Table 43.2. Error Diagnostics Items
| Name | Type | Description |
|---|---|---|
RETURNED_SQLSTATE | text | the SQLSTATE error code of the exception |
COLUMN_NAME | text | the name of the column related to exception |
CONSTRAINT_NAME | text | the name of the constraint related to exception |
PG_DATATYPE_NAME | text | the name of the data type related to exception |
MESSAGE_TEXT | text | the text of the exception's primary message |
TABLE_NAME | text | the name of the table related to exception |
SCHEMA_NAME | text | the name of the schema related to exception |
PG_EXCEPTION_DETAIL | text | the text of the exception's detail message, if any |
PG_EXCEPTION_HINT | text | the text of the exception's hint message, if any |
PG_EXCEPTION_CONTEXT | text | line(s) of text describing the call stack at the time of the exception (see Section 43.6.9) |
If the exception did not set a value for an item, an empty string will be returned.
Here is an example:
DECLARE
text_var1 text;
text_var2 text;
text_var3 text;
BEGIN
-- some processing which might cause an exception
...
EXCEPTION WHEN OTHERS THEN
GET STACKED DIAGNOSTICS text_var1 = MESSAGE_TEXT,
text_var2 = PG_EXCEPTION_DETAIL,
text_var3 = PG_EXCEPTION_HINT;
END;
The GET DIAGNOSTICS command, previously described
in Section 43.5.5, retrieves information
about current execution state (whereas the GET STACKED
DIAGNOSTICS command discussed above reports information about
the execution state as of a previous error). Its PG_CONTEXT
status item is useful for identifying the current execution
location. PG_CONTEXT returns a text string with line(s)
of text describing the call stack. The first line refers to the current
function and currently executing GET DIAGNOSTICS
command. The second and any subsequent lines refer to calling functions
further up the call stack. For example:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION outer_func() RETURNS integer AS $$
BEGIN
RETURN inner_func();
END;
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION inner_func() RETURNS integer AS $$
DECLARE
stack text;
BEGIN
GET DIAGNOSTICS stack = PG_CONTEXT;
RAISE NOTICE E'--- Call Stack ---\n%', stack;
RETURN 1;
END;
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
SELECT outer_func();
NOTICE: --- Call Stack ---
PL/pgSQL function inner_func() line 5 at GET DIAGNOSTICS
PL/pgSQL function outer_func() line 3 at RETURN
CONTEXT: PL/pgSQL function outer_func() line 3 at RETURN
outer_func
------------
1
(1 row)
GET STACKED DIAGNOSTICS ... PG_EXCEPTION_CONTEXT
returns the same sort of stack trace, but describing the location
at which an error was detected, rather than the current location.