Use the *Procedure* dialog to create a procedure; procedures are supported by EDB Postgres Advanced Server. The *Procedure* dialog allows you to implement options of the CREATE PROCEDURE command; for more information about the CREATE PROCEDURE SQL command, please see the Database Compatibility for Oracle Developer's, available at:
The *Procedure* dialog organizes the development of a procedure through the following dialog tabs: *General*, *Definition*, *Options*, *Arguments*, *Parameters*, and *Security*. The *SQL* tab displays the SQL code generated by dialog selections.
Use the fields in the *Options* tab to describe or modify the behavior of the procedure:
* Use the drop-down listbox under *Volatility* to select one of the following. *VOLATILE* is the default value.
*VOLATILE* indicates that the value can change even within a single table scan, so no optimizations can be made.
*STABLE* indicates that the procedure cannot modify the database, and that within a single table scan it will consistently return the same result for the same argument values, but that its result could change across SQL statements.
*IMMUTABLE* indicates that the procedure cannot modify the database and always returns the same result when given the same argument values.
* Use the *Strict?* switch to indicate if the procedure always returns NULL whenever any of its arguments are NULL. If *Yes*, the procedure is not executed when there are NULL arguments; instead a NULL result is assumed automatically. The default is *No*.
* Use the *Security of definer?* switch to specify that the procedure is to be executed with the privileges of the user that created it. The default is *No*.
* Use the *Estimated cost* field to specify a positive number representing the estimated execution cost for the procedure, in units of cpu_operator_cost. If the procedure returns a set, this is the cost per returned row.
* Use the *Leak proof?* switch to indicate whether the procedure has side effects — it reveals no information about its arguments other than by its return value. The default is *No*.
Use the fields in the *Arguments* tab to define an argument. Click *Add* to set parameters and values for the argument:
* Use the drop-down listbox next to *Data type* to select a data type.
* Use the drop-down listbox next to *Mode* to select a mode. Select *IN* for an input parameter; select *OUT* for an output parameter; select *INOUT* for both an input and an output parameter; or, select *VARIADIC* to specify a VARIADIC parameter.
* Write a name for the argument in the *Argument Name* field.
* Specify a default value for the argument in the *Default Value* field.
Click *Add* to define another argument; to discard an argument, click the trash icon to the left of the row and confirm deletion in the *Delete Row* popup.
Use the *Security* tab to assign privileges and define security labels.
Use the *Privileges* panel to assign execute privileges for the procedure to a role:
* Select the name of the role from the drop-down listbox in the *Grantee* field.
* Click inside the *Privileges* field. Check the boxes to the left of one or more privileges to grant the selected privilege to the specified user.
* Select the name of the role from the drop-down listbox in the *Grantor* field. The default grantor is the owner of the database.
Click *Add* to assign additional privileges; to discard a privilege, click the trash icon to the left of the row and confirm deletion in the *Delete Row* popup.
Use the *Security Labels* panel to define security labels applied to the procedure. Click *Add* to add each security label selection:
* Specify a security label provider in the *Provider* field. The named provider must be loaded and must consent to the proposed labeling operation.
* Specify a a security label in the *Security Label* field. The meaning of a given label is at the discretion of the label provider. PostgreSQL places no restrictions on whether or how a label provider must interpret security labels; it merely provides a mechanism for storing them.
Click *Add* to assign additional security labels; to discard a security label, click the trash icon to the left of the row and confirm deletion in the *Delete Row* popup.
The example demonstrates creating a procedure that returns a list of employees from a table named *emp*. The procedure is a SECURITY DEFINER, and will execute with the privileges of the role that defined the procedure.