SPI_execute — execute a command
int SPI_execute(const char *command, boolread_only, longcount)
SPI_execute executes the specified SQL command
for count rows. If read_only
is true, the command must be read-only, and execution overhead
is somewhat reduced.
This function can only be called from a connected C function.
If count is zero then the command is executed
for all rows that it applies to. If count
is greater than zero, then no more than count rows
will be retrieved; execution stops when the count is reached, much like
adding a LIMIT clause to the query. For example,
SPI_execute("SELECT * FROM foo", true, 5);
will retrieve at most 5 rows from the table. Note that such a limit is only effective when the command actually returns rows. For example,
SPI_execute("INSERT INTO foo SELECT * FROM bar", false, 5);
inserts all rows from bar, ignoring the
count parameter. However, with
SPI_execute("INSERT INTO foo SELECT * FROM bar RETURNING *", false, 5);
at most 5 rows would be inserted, since execution would stop after the
fifth RETURNING result row is retrieved.
You can pass multiple commands in one string;
SPI_execute returns the
result for the command executed last. The count
limit applies to each command separately (even though only the last
result will actually be returned). The limit is not applied to any
hidden commands generated by rules.
When read_only is false,
SPI_execute increments the command
counter and computes a new snapshot before executing each
command in the string. The snapshot does not actually change if the
current transaction isolation level is SERIALIZABLE or REPEATABLE READ, but in
READ COMMITTED mode the snapshot update allows each command to
see the results of newly committed transactions from other sessions.
This is essential for consistent behavior when the commands are modifying
the database.
When read_only is true,
SPI_execute does not update either the snapshot
or the command counter, and it allows only plain SELECT
commands to appear in the command string. The commands are executed
using the snapshot previously established for the surrounding query.
This execution mode is somewhat faster than the read/write mode due
to eliminating per-command overhead. It also allows genuinely
stable functions to be built: since successive executions
will all use the same snapshot, there will be no change in the results.
It is generally unwise to mix read-only and read-write commands within a single function using SPI; that could result in very confusing behavior, since the read-only queries would not see the results of any database updates done by the read-write queries.
The actual number of rows for which the (last) command was executed
is returned in the global variable SPI_processed.
If the return value of the function is SPI_OK_SELECT,
SPI_OK_INSERT_RETURNING,
SPI_OK_DELETE_RETURNING, or
SPI_OK_UPDATE_RETURNING,
then you can use the
global pointer SPITupleTable *SPI_tuptable to
access the result rows. Some utility commands (such as
EXPLAIN) also return row sets, and SPI_tuptable
will contain the result in these cases too. Some utility commands
(COPY, CREATE TABLE AS) don't return a row set, so
SPI_tuptable is NULL, but they still return the number of
rows processed in SPI_processed.
The structure SPITupleTable is defined
thus:
typedef struct
{
MemoryContext tuptabcxt; /* memory context of result table */
uint64 alloced; /* number of alloced vals */
uint64 free; /* number of free vals */
TupleDesc tupdesc; /* row descriptor */
HeapTuple *vals; /* rows */
} SPITupleTable;
vals is an array of pointers to rows. (The number
of valid entries is given by SPI_processed.)
tupdesc is a row descriptor which you can pass to
SPI functions dealing with rows. tuptabcxt,
alloced, and free are internal
fields not intended for use by SPI callers.
SPI_finish frees all
SPITupleTables allocated during the current
C function. You can free a particular result table earlier, if you
are done with it, by calling SPI_freetuptable.
const char * commandstring containing command to execute
bool read_onlytrue for read-only execution
long count
maximum number of rows to return,
or 0 for no limit
If the execution of the command was successful then one of the following (nonnegative) values will be returned:
SPI_OK_SELECT
if a SELECT (but not SELECT
INTO) was executed
SPI_OK_SELINTO
if a SELECT INTO was executed
SPI_OK_INSERT
if an INSERT was executed
SPI_OK_DELETE
if a DELETE was executed
SPI_OK_UPDATE
if an UPDATE was executed
SPI_OK_INSERT_RETURNING
if an INSERT RETURNING was executed
SPI_OK_DELETE_RETURNING
if a DELETE RETURNING was executed
SPI_OK_UPDATE_RETURNING
if an UPDATE RETURNING was executed
SPI_OK_UTILITY
if a utility command (e.g., CREATE TABLE)
was executed
SPI_OK_REWRITTEN
if the command was rewritten into another kind of command (e.g.,
UPDATE became an INSERT) by a rule.
On error, one of the following negative values is returned:
SPI_ERROR_ARGUMENT
if command is NULL or
count is less than 0
SPI_ERROR_COPY
if COPY TO stdout or COPY FROM stdin
was attempted
SPI_ERROR_TRANSACTION
if a transaction manipulation command was attempted
(BEGIN,
COMMIT,
ROLLBACK,
SAVEPOINT,
PREPARE TRANSACTION,
COMMIT PREPARED,
ROLLBACK PREPARED,
or any variant thereof)
SPI_ERROR_OPUNKNOWNif the command type is unknown (shouldn't happen)
SPI_ERROR_UNCONNECTEDif called from an unconnected C function
All SPI query-execution functions set both
SPI_processed and
SPI_tuptable (just the pointer, not the contents
of the structure). Save these two global variables into local
C function variables if you need to access the result table of
SPI_execute or another query-execution function
across later calls.