DBMS_UTILITY v11

The DBMS_UTILITY package provides support for the following various utility programs:

Function/ProcedureFunction or ProcedureReturn TypeDescription
ANALYZE_DATABASE(method [, estimate_rows [, estimate_percent [, method_opt ]]])Proceduren/aAnalyze database tables.
ANALYZE_PART_OBJECT(schema, object_name [, object_type [, command_type [, command_opt [, sample_clause ]]]])Proceduren/aAnalyze a partitioned table.
ANALYZE_SCHEMA(schema, method [, estimate_rows [, estimate_percent [, method_opt ]]])Proceduren/aAnalyze schema tables.
CANONICALIZE(name, canon_name OUT, canon_len)Proceduren/aCanonicalizes a string – e.g., strips off white space.
COMMA_TO_TABLE(list, tablen OUT, tab OUT)Proceduren/aConvert a comma-delimited list of names to a table of names.
DB_VERSION(version OUT, compatibility OUT)Proceduren/aGet the database version.
EXEC_DDL_STATEMENT (parse_string)Proceduren/aExecute a DDL statement.
FORMAT_CALL_STACKFunctionTEXTFormats the current call stack.
GET_CPU_TIMEFunctionNUMBERGet the current CPU time.
GET_DEPENDENCY(type, schema, name)Proceduren/aGet objects that are dependent upon the given object..
GET_HASH_VALUE(name, base, hash_size)FunctionNUMBERCompute a hash value.
GET_PARAMETER_VALUE(parnam, intval OUT, strval OUT)ProcedureBINARY_INTEGERGet database initialization parameter settings.
GET_TIMEFunctionNUMBERGet the current time.
NAME_TOKENIZE(name, a OUT, b OUT, c OUT, dblink OUT, nextpos OUT)Proceduren/aParse the given name into its component parts.
TABLE_TO_COMMA(tab, tablen OUT, list OUT)Proceduren/aConvert a table of names to a comma-delimited list.

Advanced Server's implementation of DBMS_UTILITY is a partial implementation when compared to Oracle's version. Only those functions and procedures listed in the table above are supported.

The following table lists the public variables available in the DBMS_UTILITY package.

Public VariablesData TypeValueDescription
inv_error_on_restrictionsPLS_INTEGER1Used by the INVALIDATE procedure.
lname_arrayTABLEFor lists of long names.
uncl_arrayTABLEFor lists of users and names.

LNAME_ARRAY

The LNAME_ARRAY is for storing lists of long names including fully-qualified names.

TYPE lname_array IS TABLE OF VARCHAR2(4000) INDEX BY BINARY_INTEGER;

UNCL_ARRAY

The UNCL_ARRAY is for storing lists of users and names.

TYPE uncl_array IS TABLE OF VARCHAR2(227) INDEX BY BINARY_INTEGER;

ANALYZE_DATABASE, ANALYZE SCHEMA and ANALYZE PART_OBJECT

The ANALYZE_DATABASE(), ANALYZE_SCHEMA() and ANALYZE_PART_OBJECT() procedures provide the capability to gather statistics on tables in the database. When you execute the ANALYZE statement, Postgres samples the data in a table and records distribution statistics in the pg_statistics system table.

ANALYZE_DATABASE, ANALYZE_SCHEMA, and ANALYZE_PART_OBJECT differ primarily in the number of tables that are processed:

  • ANALYZE_DATABASE analyzes all tables in all schemas within the current database.
  • ANALYZE_SCHEMA analyzes all tables in a given schema (within the current database).
  • ANALYZE_PART_OBJECT analyzes a single table.

The syntax for the ANALYZE commands are:

ANALYZE_DATABASE(<method> VARCHAR2 [, <estimate_rows> NUMBER
  [, <estimate_percent> NUMBER [, <method_opt> VARCHAR2 ]]])

ANALYZE_SCHEMA(<schema> VARCHAR2, <method> VARCHAR2
  [, <estimate_rows> NUMBER [, <estimate_percent> NUMBER
  [, <method_opt> VARCHAR2 ]]])

ANALYZE_PART_OBJECT(<schema> VARCHAR2, <object_name> VARCHAR2
  [, <object_type> CHAR [, <command_type> CHAR
  [, <command_opt> VARCHAR2 [, <sample_clause> ]]]])

Parameters - ANALYZE_DATABASE and ANALYZE_SCHEMA

method

method determines whether the ANALYZE procedure populates the pg_statistics table or removes entries from the pg_statistics table. If you specify a method of DELETE, the ANALYZE procedure removes the relevant rows from pg_statistics. If you specify a method of COMPUTE or ESTIMATE, the ANALYZE procedure analyzes a table (or multiple tables) and records the distribution information in pg_statistics. There is no difference between COMPUTE and ESTIMATE; both methods execute the Postgres ANALYZE statement. All other parameters are validated and then ignored.

estimate_rows

Number of rows upon which to base estimated statistics. One of estimate_rows or estimate_percent must be specified if method is ESTIMATE.

This argument is ignored, but is included for compatibility.

estimate_percent

Percentage of rows upon which to base estimated statistics. One of estimate_rows or estimate_percent must be specified if method is ESTIMATE.

This argument is ignored, but is included for compatibility.

method_opt

Object types to be analyzed. Any combination of the following:

[ FOR TABLE ]

[ FOR ALL [ INDEXED ] COLUMNS ] [ SIZE n ]

[ FOR ALL INDEXES ]

This argument is ignored, but is included for compatibility.

Parameters - ANALYZE_PART_OBJECT

schema

Name of the schema whose objects are to be analyzed.

object_name

Name of the partitioned object to be analyzed.

object_type

Type of object to be analyzed. Valid values are: T – table, I – index.

This argument is ignored, but is included for compatibility.

command_type

Type of analyze functionality to perform. Valid values are: E - gather estimated statistics based upon on a specified number of rows or a percentage of rows in the sample_clause clause; C - compute exact statistics; or V – validate the structure and integrity of the partitions.

This argument is ignored, but is included for compatibility.

command_opt

For command_type C or E, can be any combination of:

[ FOR TABLE ]

[ FOR ALL COLUMNS ]

[ FOR ALL LOCAL INDEXES ]

For command_type V, can be CASCADE if object_type is T.

This argument is ignored, but is included for compatibility.

sample_clause

If command_type is E, contains the following clause to specify the number of rows or percentage or rows on which to base the estimate.

SAMPLE n { ROWS | PERCENT }

This argument is ignored, but is included for compatibility.

CANONICALIZE

The CANONICALIZE procedure performs the following operations on an input string:

  • If the string is not double-quoted, verifies that it uses the characters of a legal identifier. If not, an exception is thrown. If the string is double-quoted, all characters are allowed.
  • If the string is not double-quoted and does not contain periods, uppercases all alphabetic characters and eliminates leading and trailing spaces.
  • If the string is double-quoted and does not contain periods, strips off the double quotes.
  • If the string contains periods and no portion of the string is double-quoted, uppercases each portion of the string and encloses each portion in double quotes.
  • If the string contains periods and portions of the string are double-quoted, returns the double-quoted portions unchanged including the double quotes and returns the non-double-quoted portions uppercased and enclosed in double quotes.
CANONICALIZE(<name> VARCHAR2, <canon_name> OUT VARCHAR2,
  <canon_len> BINARY_INTEGER)

Parameters

name

String to be canonicalized.

canon_name

The canonicalized string.

canon_len

Number of bytes in name to canonicalize starting from the first character.

Examples

The following procedure applies the CANONICALIZE procedure on its input parameter and displays the results.

CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE canonicalize (
    p_name      VARCHAR2,
    p_length    BINARY_INTEGER DEFAULT 30
)
IS
    v_canon     VARCHAR2(100);
BEGIN
    DBMS_UTILITY.CANONICALIZE(p_name,v_canon,p_length);
    DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('Canonicalized name ==>' || v_canon || '<==');
    DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('Length: ' || LENGTH(v_canon));
EXCEPTION
    WHEN OTHERS THEN
        DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('SQLERRM: ' || SQLERRM);
        DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('SQLCODE: ' || SQLCODE);
END;

EXEC canonicalize('Identifier')
Canonicalized name ==>IDENTIFIER<==
Length: 10

EXEC canonicalize('"Identifier"')
Canonicalized name ==>Identifier<==
Length: 10

EXEC canonicalize('"_+142%"')
Canonicalized name ==>_+142%<==
Length: 6

EXEC canonicalize('abc.def.ghi')
Canonicalized name ==>"ABC"."DEF"."GHI"<==
Length: 17

EXEC canonicalize('"abc.def.ghi"')
Canonicalized name ==>abc.def.ghi<==
Length: 11

EXEC canonicalize('"abc".def."ghi"')
Canonicalized name ==>"abc"."DEF"."ghi"<==
Length: 17

EXEC canonicalize('"abc.def".ghi')
Canonicalized name ==>"abc.def"."GHI"<==
Length: 15

COMMA_TO_TABLE

The COMMA_TO_TABLE procedure converts a comma-delimited list of names into a table of names. Each entry in the list becomes a table entry. The names must be formatted as valid identifiers.

COMMA_TO_TABLE(<list> VARCHAR2, <tablen> OUT BINARY_INTEGER,
  <tab> OUT { LNAME_ARRAY | UNCL_ARRAY })

Parameters

list

Comma-delimited list of names.

tablen

Number of entries in tab.

tab

Table containing the individual names in list.

LNAME_ARRAY

A DBMS_UTILITY LNAME_ARRAY (as described in the LNAME_ARRAY section).

UNCL_ARRAY

A DBMS_UTILITY UNCL_ARRAY (as described in the UNCL_ARRAY section).

Examples

The following procedure uses the COMMA_TO_TABLE procedure to convert a list of names to a table. The table entries are then displayed.

CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE comma_to_table (
    p_list      VARCHAR2
)
IS
    r_lname     DBMS_UTILITY.LNAME_ARRAY;
    v_length    BINARY_INTEGER;
BEGIN
    DBMS_UTILITY.COMMA_TO_TABLE(p_list,v_length,r_lname);
    FOR i IN 1..v_length LOOP
        DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE(r_lname(i));
    END LOOP;
END;

EXEC comma_to_table('edb.dept, edb.emp, edb.jobhist')

edb.dept
edb.emp
edb.jobhist

DB_VERSION

The DB_VERSION procedure returns the version number of the database.

DB_VERSION(<version> OUT VARCHAR2, <compatibility> OUT VARCHAR2)

Parameters

version

Database version number.

compatibility

Compatibility setting of the database. (To be implementation-defined as to its meaning.)

Examples

The following anonymous block displays the database version information.

DECLARE
    v_version       VARCHAR2(150);
    v_compat        VARCHAR2(150);
BEGIN
    DBMS_UTILITY.DB_VERSION(v_version,v_compat);
    DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('Version: '       || v_version);
    DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('Compatibility: ' || v_compat);
END;

Version: EnterpriseDB 11.0.0 on i686-pc-linux-gnu, compiled by GCC gcc
(GCC) 4.1.2 20080704 (Red Hat 4.1.2-48), 32-bit
Compatibility: EnterpriseDB 11.0.0 on i686-pc-linux-gnu, compiled by GCC
gcc (GCC) 4.1.220080704 (Red Hat 4.1.2-48), 32-bit

EXEC_DDL_STATEMENT

The EXEC_DDL_STATEMENT provides the capability to execute a DDL command.

EXEC_DDL_STATEMENT(<parse_string> VARCHAR2)

Parameters

parse_string

The DDL command to be executed.

Examples

The following anonymous block creates the job table.

BEGIN
    DBMS_UTILITY.EXEC_DDL_STATEMENT(
        'CREATE TABLE job (' ||
          'jobno NUMBER(3),' ||
          'jname VARCHAR2(9))'
    );
END;

If the parse_string does not include a valid DDL statement, Advanced Server returns the following error:

edb=#  exec dbms_utility.exec_ddl_statement('select rownum from dual');
ERROR:  EDB-20001: 'parse_string' must be a valid DDL statement

In this case, Advanced Server's behavior differs from Oracle's; Oracle accepts the invalid parse_string without complaint.

FORMAT_CALL_STACK

The FORMAT_CALL_STACK function returns the formatted contents of the current call stack.

DBMS_UTILITY.FORMAT_CALL_STACK
return VARCHAR2

This function can be used in a stored procedure, function or package to return the current call stack in a readable format. This function is useful for debugging purposes.

GET_CPU_TIME

The GET_CPU_TIME function returns the CPU time in hundredths of a second from some arbitrary point in time.

<cputime> NUMBER GET_CPU_TIME

Parameters

cputime

Number of hundredths of a second of CPU time.

Examples

The following SELECT command retrieves the current CPU time, which is 603 hundredths of a second or .0603 seconds.

SELECT DBMS_UTILITY.GET_CPU_TIME FROM DUAL;

get_cpu_time
--------------
        603

GET_DEPENDENCY

The GET_DEPENDENCY procedure provides the capability to list the objects that are dependent upon the specified object. GET_DEPENDENCY does not show dependencies for functions or procedures.

GET_DEPENDENCY(<type> VARCHAR2, <schema> VARCHAR2,
  <name> VARCHAR2)

Parameters

type

The object type of name. Valid values are INDEX, PACKAGE, PACKAGE BODY, SEQUENCE, TABLE, TRIGGER, TYPE and VIEW.

schema

Name of the schema in which name exists.

name

Name of the object for which dependencies are to be obtained.

Examples

The following anonymous block finds dependencies on the EMP table.

BEGIN
    DBMS_UTILITY.GET_DEPENDENCY('TABLE','public','EMP');
END;

DEPENDENCIES ON public.EMP
------------------------------------------------------------------
*TABLE public.EMP()
*   CONSTRAINT c public.emp()
*   CONSTRAINT f public.emp()
*   CONSTRAINT p public.emp()
*   TYPE public.emp()
*   CONSTRAINT c public.emp()
*   CONSTRAINT f public.jobhist()
*   VIEW .empname_view()

GET_HASH_VALUE

The GET_HASH_VALUE function provides the capability to compute a hash value for a given string.

<hash> NUMBER GET_HASH_VALUE(<name> VARCHAR2, <base> NUMBER,
   <hash_size> NUMBER)

Parameters

name

The string for which a hash value is to be computed.

base

Starting value at which hash values are to be generated.

hash_size

The number of hash values for the desired hash table.

hash

The generated hash value.

Examples

The following anonymous block creates a table of hash values using the ename column of the emp table and then displays the key along with the hash value. The hash values start at 100 with a maximum of 1024 distinct values.

DECLARE
    v_hash          NUMBER;
    TYPE hash_tab IS TABLE OF NUMBER INDEX BY VARCHAR2(10);
    r_hash          HASH_TAB;
    CURSOR emp_cur IS SELECT ename FROM emp;
BEGIN
    FOR r_emp IN emp_cur LOOP
        r_hash(r_emp.ename) :=
            DBMS_UTILITY.GET_HASH_VALUE(r_emp.ename,100,1024);
    END LOOP;
    FOR r_emp IN emp_cur LOOP
        DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE(RPAD(r_emp.ename,10) || ' ' ||
            r_hash(r_emp.ename));
    END LOOP;
END;

SMITH      377
ALLEN      740
WARD       718
JONES      131
MARTIN     176
BLAKE      568
CLARK      621
SCOTT      1097
KING       235
TURNER     850
ADAMS      156
JAMES      942
FORD       775
MILLER     148

GET_PARAMETER_VALUE

The GET_PARAMETER_VALUE procedure provides the capability to retrieve database initialization parameter settings.

<status> BINARY_INTEGER GET_PARAMETER_VALUE(<parnam> VARCHAR2,
   <intval> OUT INTEGER, <strval> OUT VARCHAR2)

Parameters

parnam

Name of the parameter whose value is to be returned. The parameters are listed in the pg_settings system view.

intval

Value of an integer parameter or the length of strval.

strval

Value of a string parameter.

status

Returns 0 if the parameter value is INTEGER or BOOLEAN. Returns 1 if the parameter value is a string.

Examples

The following anonymous block shows the values of two initialization parameters.

DECLARE
    v_intval        INTEGER;
    v_strval        VARCHAR2(80);
BEGIN
    DBMS_UTILITY.GET_PARAMETER_VALUE('max_fsm_pages', v_intval, v_strval);
    DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('max_fsm_pages' || ': ' || v_intval);
    DBMS_UTILITY.GET_PARAMETER_VALUE('client_encoding', v_intval, v_strval);
    DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('client_encoding' || ': ' || v_strval);
END;

max_fsm_pages: 72625
client_encoding: SQL_ASCII

GET_TIME

The GET_TIME function provides the capability to return the current time in hundredths of a second.

<time> NUMBER GET_TIME

Parameters

time

Number of hundredths of a second from the time in which the program is started.

Examples

The following example shows calls to the GET_TIME function.

SELECT DBMS_UTILITY.GET_TIME FROM DUAL;

 get_time
----------
  1555860

SELECT DBMS_UTILITY.GET_TIME FROM DUAL;

 get_time
----------
  1556037

NAME_TOKENIZE

The NAME_TOKENIZE procedure parses a name into its component parts. Names without double quotes are uppercased. The double quotes are stripped from names with double quotes.

NAME_TOKENIZE(<name> VARCHAR2, <a> OUT VARCHAR2,
  <b> OUT VARCHAR2, <c> OUT VARCHAR2, <dblink> OUT VARCHAR2,
  <nextpos> OUT BINARY_INTEGER)

Parameters

name

String containing a name in the following format:

a[.b[.c]][@dblink ]

a

Returns the leftmost component.

b

Returns the second component, if any.

c

Returns the third component, if any.

dblink

Returns the database link name.

nextpos

Position of the last character parsed in name.

Examples

The following stored procedure is used to display the returned parameter values of the NAME_TOKENIZE procedure for various names.

CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE name_tokenize (
    p_name          VARCHAR2
)
IS
    v_a             VARCHAR2(30);
    v_b             VARCHAR2(30);
    v_c             VARCHAR2(30);
    v_dblink        VARCHAR2(30);
    v_nextpos       BINARY_INTEGER;
BEGIN
    DBMS_UTILITY.NAME_TOKENIZE(p_name,v_a,v_b,v_c,v_dblink,v_nextpos);
    DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('name   : ' || p_name);
    DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('a      : ' || v_a);
    DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('b      : ' || v_b);
    DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('c      : ' || v_c);
    DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('dblink : ' || v_dblink);
    DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('nextpos: ' || v_nextpos);
END;

Tokenize the name, emp:

BEGIN
    name_tokenize('emp');
END;

name   : emp
a      : EMP
b      :
c      :
dblink :
nextpos: 3

Tokenize the name, edb.list_emp:

BEGIN
    name_tokenize('edb.list_emp');
END;

name   : edb.list_emp
a      : EDB
b      : LIST_EMP
c      :
dblink :
nextpos: 12

Tokenize the name, "edb"."Emp_Admin".update_emp_sal:

BEGIN
    name_tokenize('"edb"."Emp_Admin".update_emp_sal');
END;

name   : "edb"."Emp_Admin".update_emp_sal
a      : edb
b      : Emp_Admin
c      : UPDATE_EMP_SAL
dblink :
nextpos: 32

Tokenize the name edb.emp@edb_dblink:

BEGIN
    name_tokenize('edb.emp@edb_dblink');
END;

name   : edb.emp@edb_dblink
a      : EDB
b      : EMP
c      :
dblink : EDB_DBLINK
nextpos: 18

TABLE_TO_COMMA

The TABLE_TO_COMMA procedure converts table of names into a comma-delimited list of names. Each table entry becomes a list entry. The names must be formatted as valid identifiers.

TABLE_TO_COMMA(<tab> { LNAME_ARRAY | UNCL_ARRAY },
  <tablen> OUT BINARY_INTEGER, <list> OUT VARCHAR2)

Parameters

tab

Table containing names.

LNAME_ARRAY

A DBMS_UTILITY LNAME_ARRAY (as described in the LNAME ARRAY section).

UNCL_ARRAY

A DBMS_UTILITY UNCL_ARRAY (as described the UNCL_ARRAY section).

tablen

Number of entries in list.

list

Comma-delimited list of names from tab.

Examples

The following example first uses the COMMA_TO_TABLE procedure to convert a comma-delimited list to a table. The TABLE_TO_COMMA procedure then converts the table back to a comma-delimited list that is displayed.

CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE table_to_comma (
    p_list      VARCHAR2
)
IS
    r_lname     DBMS_UTILITY.LNAME_ARRAY;
    v_length    BINARY_INTEGER;
    v_listlen   BINARY_INTEGER;
    v_list      VARCHAR2(80);
BEGIN
    DBMS_UTILITY.COMMA_TO_TABLE(p_list,v_length,r_lname);
    DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('Table Entries');
    DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('-------------');
    FOR i IN 1..v_length LOOP
        DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE(r_lname(i));
    END LOOP;
    DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('-------------');
    DBMS_UTILITY.TABLE_TO_COMMA(r_lname,v_listlen,v_list);
    DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('Comma-Delimited List: ' || v_list);
END;

EXEC table_to_comma('edb.dept, edb.emp, edb.jobhist')

Table Entries
-------------
edb.dept
edb.emp
edb.jobhist
-------------
Comma-Delimited List: edb.dept, edb.emp, edb.jobhist