The CREATE
PACKAGE
statement creates or replaces the specification for a stored package, which is an encapsulated collection of related procedures, functions, and other program objects stored as a unit in the database. The package specification declares these objects. The package body, specified subsequently, defines these objects.
To create or replace a package in your schema, you must have the CREATE
PROCEDURE
system privilege. To create or replace a package in another user's schema, you must have the CREATE
ANY
PROCEDURE
system privilege.
To embed a CREATE
PACKAGE
statement inside an the database precompiler program, you must terminate the statement with the keyword END-EXEC
followed by the embedded SQL statement terminator for the specific language.
See:
Re-creates the package if it exists, and recompiles it.
Users who were granted privileges on the package before it was redefined can still access the package without being regranted the privileges.
If any function-based indexes depend on the package, then the database marks the indexes DISABLED
.
[ EDITIONABLE | NONEDITIONABLE ]
Specifies whether the package is an editioned or noneditioned object if editioning is enabled for the schema object type PACKAGE
in schema
. Default: EDITIONABLE
. For information about editioned and noneditioned objects, see Oracle Database Development Guide.
Name of the schema containing the package. Default: your schema.
A package stored in the database. For naming conventions, see "Identifiers".
Specifies the AUTHID
property of the functions and procedures in the package, and of the explicit cursors declared in the package specification. For information about the AUTHID
property, see "Invoker's Rights and Definer's Rights (AUTHID Property)".
Has the same behavior for a package as it does for a function. See the CREATE
FUNCTION
"accessible_by_clause".
Defines every type in the package and declares every cursor and subprogram in the package. Every declaration must have a corresponding definition in the package body. The headings of corresponding declarations and definitions must match word for word, except for white space.
Restriction on item_list_1 PRAGMA
AUTONOMOUS_TRANSACTION
cannot appear here.
Creating a Package: Example This statement creates the specification of the emp_mgmt
package.
CREATE OR REPLACE PACKAGE emp_mgmt AS FUNCTION hire (last_name VARCHAR2, job_id VARCHAR2, manager_id NUMBER, salary NUMBER, commission_pct NUMBER, department_id NUMBER) RETURN NUMBER; FUNCTION create_dept(department_id NUMBER, location_id NUMBER) RETURN NUMBER; PROCEDURE remove_emp(employee_id NUMBER); PROCEDURE remove_dept(department_id NUMBER); PROCEDURE increase_sal(employee_id NUMBER, salary_incr NUMBER); PROCEDURE increase_comm(employee_id NUMBER, comm_incr NUMBER); no_comm EXCEPTION; no_sal EXCEPTION; END emp_mgmt; /
The specification for the emp_mgmt
package declares these public program objects:
The functions hire
and create_dept
The procedures remove_emp
, remove_dept
, increase_sal
, and increase_comm
The exceptions no_comm
and no_sal
All of these objects are available to users who have access to the package. After creating the package, you can develop applications that invoke any of these public procedures or functions or raise any of the public exceptions of the package.
Before you can invoke this package's procedures and functions, you must define these procedures and functions in the package body. For an example of a CREATE
PACKAGE
BODY
statement that creates the body of the emp_mgmt
package, see "CREATE PACKAGE BODY Statement".