The DBMS_PREPROCESSOR
package provides an interface to print or retrieve the source text of a PL/SQL unit in its post-processed form.
This package contains the following topics:
Overview
Operational notes
Table types
There are three styles of subprograms:
Subprograms that take a schema name, a unit type name, and the unit name
Subprograms that take a VARCHAR2
string that contains the source text of an arbitrary PL/SQL compilation unit
Subprograms that take a VARCHAR2
associative array (index-by table) that contains the segmented source text of an arbitrary PL/SQL compilation unit
Subprograms of the first style are used to print or retrieve the post-processed source text of a stored PL/SQL unit. The user must have the privileges necessary to view the original source text of this unit. The user must also specify the schema in which the unit is defined, the type of the unit, and the name of the unit. If the schema is null, then the current user schema is used. If the status of the stored unit is VALID
and the user has the required privilege, then the post-processed source text is guaranteed to be the same as that of the unit the last time it was compiled. Subprograms of the second or third style are used to generate post-processed source text in the current user schema. The source text is passed in as a single VARCHAR2
string in the second style, or as a VARCHAR2
associative array in the third style. The source text can represent an arbitrary PL/SQL compilation unit. A typical usage is to pass the source text of an anonymous block and generate its post-processed source text in the current user schema. The third style can be useful when the source text exceeds the VARCHAR2
length limit.
For subprograms of the first style, the status of the stored PL/SQL unit is not required to be VALID
. Likewise, the source text passed in as a VARCHAR2
string or a VARCHAR2
associative array may contain compile time errors. If errors are found when generating the post-processed source, the error message text also appears at the end of the post-processed source text. In some cases, the preprocessing can be aborted because of errors. When this happens, the post-processed source text appears to be incomplete and the associated error message can help indicate that an error has occurred during preprocessing.
For subprograms of the second or third style, the source text can represent any arbitrary PL/SQL compilation unit. However, the source text of a valid PL/SQL compilation unit cannot include commonly used prefixes such as CREATE OR REPLACE
. In general, the input source should be syntactically prepared in a way as if it were obtained from the ALL_SOURCE
view. The following list gives some examples of valid initial syntax for some PL/SQL compilation units.
anonymous block (BEGIN | DECLARE) ... package PACKAGE name ... package body PACKAGE BODY name ... procedure PROCEDURE name ... function FUNCTION name ...
If the source text represents a named PL/SQL unit that is valid, that unit is not created after its post-processed source text is generated.
If the text of a wrapped PL/SQL unit is obtained from the ALL_SOURCE
view, the keyword WRAPPED
always immediately follows the name of the unit, as in this example:
PROCEDURE "some proc" WRAPPED a000000 b2 ...
If such source text is presented to a GET_POST_PROCESSED_SOURCE function or a PRINT_POST_PROCESSED_SOURCE procedure, the exception WRAPPED_INPUT
is raised.
The DBMS_PREPROCESSOR
package defines a table type.
Notes:
The PLS_INTEGER
and BINARY_INTEGER
data types are identical. This document uses BINARY_INTEGER
to indicate data types in reference information (such as for table types, record types, subprogram parameters, or subprogram return values), but may use either in discussion and examples.
The INTEGER
and NUMBER(38)
data types are also identical. This document uses INTEGER
throughout.
This table type stores lines of post-processed source text. It is used to hold PL/SQL source text both before and after it is processed. It is especially useful in cases in which the amount of text exceeds 32 KB.
TYPE source_lines_t IS TABLE OF VARCHAR2(32767) INDEX BY BINARY_INTEGER;
Table 5-1 DBMS_PREPROCESSOR package subprograms
Subprogram | Description |
---|---|
Returns the post-processed source text. |
|
Prints post-processed source text. |
This overloaded function returns the post-processed source text. The different functionality of each form of syntax is presented along with the definition.
Returns post-processed source text of a stored PL/SQL unit:
DBMS_PREPROCESSOR.GET_POST_PROCESSED_SOURCE ( object_type IN VARCHAR2, schema_name IN VARCHAR2, object_name IN VARCHAR2) RETURN dbms_preprocessor.source_lines_t;
Returns post-processed source text of a compilation unit:
DBMS_PREPROCESSOR.GET_POST_PROCESSED_SOURCE (
source IN VARCHAR2)
RETURN dbms_preprocessor.source_lines_t;
Returns post-processed source text of an associative array (index-by table) containing the source text of the compilation unit:
DBMS_PREPROCESSOR.GET_POST_PROCESSED_SOURCE ( source IN dbms_preprocessor.source_lines_t) RETURN dbms_preprocessor.source_lines_t;
Table 5-2 GET_POST_PROCESSED_SOURCE function parameters
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
|
One of |
|
Schema name (case insensitive unless a quoted identifier is used) If |
|
Name of the object (case insensitive unless a quoted identifier is used) |
|
Source text of the compilation unit |
|
Associative array containing the source text of the compilation unit The source text is a concatenation of all the non-null associative array elements in ascending index order. |
An associative array containing the lines of the post-processed source text starting from index 1
Newline characters are not removed.
Each line in the post-processed source text is mapped to a row in the associative array.
In the post-processed source, unselected text has blank lines.
Table 5-3 GET_POST_PROCESSED_SOURCE function exceptions
Exception | Description |
---|---|
|
Insufficient privileges or non-existent object |
|
Bad value for object type (neither |
|
Empty source text |
|
Missing identifier The |
|
Numeric or value error:
|
This overloaded procedure calls DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE
to let you view post-processed source text. The different functionality of each form of syntax is presented along with the definition.
Prints post-processed source text of a stored PL/SQL unit:
DBMS_PREPROCESSOR.PRINT_POST_PROCESSED_SOURCE ( object_type IN VARCHAR2, schema_name IN VARCHAR2, object_name IN VARCHAR2);
Prints post-processed source text of a compilation unit:
DBMS_PREPROCESSOR.PRINT_POST_PROCESSED_SOURCE (
source IN VARCHAR2);
Prints post-processed source text of an associative array containing the source text of the compilation unit:
DBMS_PREPROCESSOR.PRINT_POST_PROCESSED_SOURCE (
source IN dbms_preprocessor.source_lines_t);
Table 5-4 PRINT_POST_PROCESSED_SOURCE procedure parameters
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
|
One of |
|
Schema name (case insensitive unless a quoted identifier is used) If |
|
Name of the object (case insensitive unless a quoted identifier is used) |
|
Source text of the compilation unit |
|
Associative array containing the source text of the compilation unit The source text is a concatenation of all the non-null associative array elements in ascending index order. |
The associative array may contain holes. Null elements are ignored when doing the concatenation.
Table 5-5 PRINT_POST_PROCESSED_SOURCE procedure exceptions
Exception | Description |
---|---|
|
Insufficient privileges or non-existent object |
|
Bad value for object type (neither |
|
Empty source text |
|
Missing identifier The |
|
Numeric or value error:
|