CREATE PROCEDURE
CREATE PROCEDURE — define a new procedure
Synopsis
CREATE [ OR REPLACE ] PROCEDURE
name ( [ [ argmode ] [ argname ] argtype [ { DEFAULT | = } default_expr ] [, ...] ] )
{ LANGUAGE lang_name
| TRANSFORM { FOR TYPE type_name } [, ... ]
| [ EXTERNAL ] SECURITY INVOKER | [ EXTERNAL ] SECURITY DEFINER
| SET configuration_parameter { TO value | = value | FROM CURRENT }
| AS 'definition'
| AS 'obj_file', 'link_symbol'
| sql_body
} ...
Description
CREATE PROCEDURE defines a new procedure. CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE will
either create a new procedure, or replace an existing definition. To be able to
define a procedure, the user must have the USAGE privilege on the language.
If a schema name is included, then the procedure is created in the specified schema. Otherwise it is created in the current schema. The name of the new procedure must not match any existing procedure or function with the same input argument types in the same schema. However, procedures and functions of different argument types can share a name (this is called overloading).
To replace the current definition of an existing procedure, use CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE. It is not possible to change the name or argument types of a procedure
this way (if you tried, you would actually be creating a new, distinct procedure).
When CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE is used to replace an existing procedure, the
ownership and permissions of the procedure do not change. All other procedure
properties are assigned the values specified or implied in the command. You must
own the procedure to replace it (this includes being a member of the owning role).
The user that creates the procedure becomes the owner of the procedure.
To be able to create a procedure, you must have USAGE privilege on the argument types.
Refer to Section User-Defined Procedures for further information on writing procedures.
Parameters
name
The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the procedure to create.
argmode
The mode of an argument: IN, OUT, INOUT, or VARIADIC. If omitted, the default is IN.
argname
The name of an argument.
argtype
The data type(s) of the procedure's arguments (optionally schema-qualified), if
any. The argument types can be base, composite, or domain types, or can reference
the type of a table column.
Depending on the implementation language it might also be allowed to specify
“pseudo-types” such as cstring. Pseudo-types indicate that the actual argument
type is either incompletely specified, or outside the set of ordinary SQL data
types.
The type of a column is referenced by writing table_name.column_name%TYPE.
Using this feature can sometimes help make a procedure independent of changes to
the definition of a table.
default_expr
An expression to be used as default value if the parameter is not specified. The expression has to be coercible to the argument type of the parameter. All input parameters following a parameter with a default value must have default values as well.
lang_name
The name of the language that the procedure is implemented in. It can be sql, c, internal, or the name of a user-defined procedural language, e.g., plpgsql. The default is sql if sql_body is specified. Enclosing the name in single quotes is deprecated and requires matching case.
TRANSFORM { FOR TYPE type_name } [, ... ] }
Lists which transforms a call to the procedure should apply. Transforms convert between SQL types and language-specific data types; see CREATE TRANSFORM. Procedural language implementations usually have hardcoded knowledge of the built-in types, so those don't need to be listed here. If a procedural language implementation does not know how to handle a type and no transform is supplied, it will fall back to a default behavior for converting data types, but this depends on the implementation.
[EXTERNAL] SECURITY INVOKER
[EXTERNAL] SECURITY DEFINER
SECURITY INVOKER indicates that the procedure is to be executed with the
privileges of the user that calls it. That is the default. SECURITY DEFINER
specifies that the procedure is to be executed with the privileges of the user
that owns it.
The key word EXTERNAL is allowed for SQL conformance, but it is optional
since, unlike in SQL, this feature applies to all procedures not only external
ones.
A SECURITY DEFINER procedure cannot execute transaction control statements
(for example, COMMIT and ROLLBACK, depending on the language).
configuration_parameter
value
The SET clause causes the specified configuration parameter to be set to the
specified value when the procedure is entered, and then restored to its prior
value when the procedure exits. SET FROM CURRENT saves the value of the
parameter that is current when CREATE PROCEDURE is executed as the value to be
applied when the procedure is entered.
If a SET clause is attached to a procedure, then the effects of a SET LOCAL
command executed inside the procedure for the same variable are restricted to
the procedure: the configuration parameter's prior value is still restored at
procedure exit. However, an ordinary SET command (without LOCAL) overrides
the SET clause, much as it would do for a previous SET LOCAL command: the
effects of such a command will persist after procedure exit, unless the current
transaction is rolled back.
If a SET clause is attached to a procedure, then that procedure cannot execute
transaction control statements (for example, COMMIT and ROLLBACK, depending
on the language).
See SET and Chapter Server Configuration for more information about
allowed parameter names and values.
definition
A string constant defining the procedure; the meaning depends on the language.
It can be an internal procedure name, the path to an object file, an SQL command,
or text in a procedural language.
It is often helpful to use dollar quoting (see Section Dollar-Quoted String Constants)
to write the procedure definition string, rather than the normal single quote
syntax. Without dollar quoting, any single quotes or backslashes in the procedure
definition must be escaped by doubling them.
obj_file, link_symbol
This form of the AS clause is used for dynamically loadable C/RUST language
procedures when the procedure name in the C/RUST language source code is not the
same as the name of the SQL procedure. The string obj_file is the name of
the shared library file containing the compiled C/RUST procedure, and is
interpreted as for the LOAD command. The string link_symbol is the
procedure's link symbol, that is, the name of the procedure in the C/RUST language
source code. If the link symbol is omitted, it is assumed to be the same as the
name of the SQL procedure being defined.
When repeated CREATE PROCEDURE calls refer to the same object file, the file
is only loaded once per session. To unload and reload the file (perhaps during
development), start a new session.
sql_body
The body of a LANGUAGE SQL procedure. This should be a block
BEGIN ATOMIC
statement;
statement;
...
statement;
END
This is similar to writing the text of the procedure body as a string constant
(see definition above), but there are some differences: This form only
works for LANGUAGE SQL, the string constant form works for all languages.
This form is parsed at procedure definition time, the string constant form is
parsed at execution time; therefore this form cannot support polymorphic argument
types and other constructs that are not resolvable at procedure definition time.
This form tracks dependencies between the procedure and objects used in the
procedure body, so DROP ... CASCADE will work correctly, whereas the form using
string literals may leave dangling procedures. Finally, this form is more
compatible with the SQL standard and other SQL implementations.
Notes
See CREATE FUNCTION for more details on function creation that also apply to procedures.
Use CALL to execute a procedure.
Examples
CREATE PROCEDURE insert_data(a integer, b integer)
LANGUAGE SQL
AS $$
INSERT INTO tbl VALUES (a);
INSERT INTO tbl VALUES (b);
$$;
or
CREATE PROCEDURE insert_data(a integer, b integer)
LANGUAGE SQL
BEGIN ATOMIC
INSERT INTO tbl VALUES (a);
INSERT INTO tbl VALUES (b);
END;
and call like this:
CALL insert_data(1, 2);
Compatibility
A CREATE PROCEDURE command is defined in the SQL standard. The QHB
implementation can be used in a compatible way but has many extensions. For
details see also CREATE FUNCTION.