Use the RAISE statement to report messages and
raise errors.
RAISE [level] 'format' [,expression[, ... ]] [ USINGoption=expression[, ... ] ]; RAISE [level]condition_name[ USINGoption=expression[, ... ] ]; RAISE [level] SQLSTATE 'sqlstate' [ USINGoption=expression[, ... ] ]; RAISE [level] USINGoption=expression[, ... ]; RAISE ;
The level option specifies
the error severity. Allowed levels are DEBUG,
LOG, INFO,
NOTICE, WARNING,
and EXCEPTION, with EXCEPTION
being the default.
EXCEPTION raises an error (which normally aborts the
current transaction); the other levels only generate messages of different
priority levels.
Whether messages of a particular priority are reported to the client,
written to the server log, or both is controlled by the
log_min_messages and
client_min_messages configuration
variables. See Chapter 20 for more
information.
After level if any,
you can write a format
(which must be a simple string literal, not an expression). The
format string specifies the error message text to be reported.
The format string can be followed
by optional argument expressions to be inserted into the message.
Inside the format string, % is replaced by the
string representation of the next optional argument's value. Write
%% to emit a literal %.
The number of arguments must match the number of %
placeholders in the format string, or an error is raised during
the compilation of the function.
In this example, the value of v_job_id will replace the
% in the string:
RAISE NOTICE 'Calling cs_create_job(%)', v_job_id;
You can attach additional information to the error report by writing
USING followed by option = expression items. Each
expression can be any
string-valued expression. The allowed option key words are:
MESSAGESets the error message text. This option can't be used in the
form of RAISE that includes a format string
before USING.
DETAILSupplies an error detail message.
HINTSupplies a hint message.
ERRCODESpecifies the error code (SQLSTATE) to report, either by condition name, as shown in Appendix A, or directly as a five-character SQLSTATE code.
COLUMNCONSTRAINTDATATYPETABLESCHEMASupplies the name of a related object.
This example will abort the transaction with the given error message and hint:
RAISE EXCEPTION 'Nonexistent ID --> %', user_id
USING HINT = 'Please check your user ID';
These two examples show equivalent ways of setting the SQLSTATE:
RAISE 'Duplicate user ID: %', user_id USING ERRCODE = 'unique_violation'; RAISE 'Duplicate user ID: %', user_id USING ERRCODE = '23505';
There is a second RAISE syntax in which the main argument
is the condition name or SQLSTATE to be reported, for example:
RAISE division_by_zero; RAISE SQLSTATE '22012';
In this syntax, USING can be used to supply a custom
error message, detail, or hint. Another way to do the earlier
example is
RAISE unique_violation USING MESSAGE = 'Duplicate user ID: ' || user_id;
Still another variant is to write RAISE USING or RAISE
and put
everything else into the level USINGUSING list.
The last variant of RAISE has no parameters at all.
This form can only be used inside a BEGIN block's
EXCEPTION clause;
it causes the error currently being handled to be re-thrown.
Before PostgreSQL 9.1, RAISE without
parameters was interpreted as re-throwing the error from the block
containing the active exception handler. Thus an EXCEPTION
clause nested within that handler could not catch it, even if the
RAISE was within the nested EXCEPTION clause's
block. This was deemed surprising as well as being incompatible with
Oracle's PL/SQL.
If no condition name nor SQLSTATE is specified in a
RAISE EXCEPTION command, the default is to use
ERRCODE_RAISE_EXCEPTION (P0001).
If no message text is specified, the default is to use the condition
name or SQLSTATE as message text.
When specifying an error code by SQLSTATE code, you are not
limited to the predefined error codes, but can select any
error code consisting of five digits and/or upper-case ASCII
letters, other than 00000. It is recommended that
you avoid throwing error codes that end in three zeroes, because
these are category codes and can only be trapped by trapping
the whole category.
The ASSERT statement is a convenient shorthand for
inserting debugging checks into PL/pgSQL
functions.
ASSERTcondition[ ,message];
The condition is a Boolean
expression that is expected to always evaluate to true; if it does,
the ASSERT statement does nothing further. If the
result is false or null, then an ASSERT_FAILURE exception
is raised. (If an error occurs while evaluating
the condition, it is
reported as a normal error.)
If the optional message is
provided, it is an expression whose result (if not null) replaces the
default error message text “assertion failed”, should
the condition fail.
The message expression is
not evaluated in the normal case where the assertion succeeds.
Testing of assertions can be enabled or disabled via the configuration
parameter plpgsql.check_asserts, which takes a Boolean
value; the default is on. If this parameter
is off then ASSERT statements do nothing.
Note that ASSERT is meant for detecting program
bugs, not for reporting ordinary error conditions. Use
the RAISE statement, described above, for that.