Use the Oracle Visual Workbench for developing applications that access WebSphere MQ through the gateway. The Oracle Visual Workbench defines an interface for accessing WebSphere MQ and automatically generates the PL/SQL code (the MIP) for Oracle applications to interface with the gateway. Refer to the Oracle Procedural Gateway Visual Workbench for WebSphere MQ Installation and User's Guide for Microsoft Windows (32-Bit) for more information about Oracle Visual Workbench. This appendix includes the following sections:
Messages sent to a WebSphere MQ queue or retrieved from a WebSphere MQ queue are transferred as untyped data by the MIP procedures. When data profiles are defined in the MIP, the MIP converts message data from Oracle data types to target data types that the receiving application understands. The message data is packed into a buffer of the RAW
data type before being sent to the WebSphere MQ queue. The same conversion process applies when receiving a message. The MIP unpacks the message from the buffer and converts it to specified Oracle data types.
The MIP uses the functions of the UTL_RAW
package to perform the message data conversions. The UTL_RAW
package is a PL/SQL package that contains procedures for converting and packing message data which is sent back and forth through the WebSphere MQ queues using the RAW
data type and PL/SQL data types.
When necessary, you can enhance the message data conversions in the generated MIP with the UTL_RAW
functions. When no data profiles are defined in the MIP, you can create your own data conversion procedures with UTL_RAW
functions, calling these functions before sending a message and immediately after receiving a message.
The UTL_RAW
package is not included with the gateway. It is shipped with each Oracle database. Refer to your Oracle DBA for information about installing the UTL_RAW
package.
The UTL_RAW
functions are called with the following syntax:
UTL_RAW.function(arg1, arg2, ...)
The function name, arguments, their Oracle data types, and the return value data type are provided with each function description in this appendix. For ease of description, the functions are described with PL/SQL syntax that shows the resulting function value placed in a variable as follows:
result := UTL_RAW.function(arg1, arg2, ...);
However, the function can also be used as a component in a PL/SQL expression. For example, the function takes two characters strings, Hello and world!, converts them to raw message data with UTL_RAW
.CAST_TO_RAW
, concatenates them with UTL_RAW
.CONCAT
, and uses the gateway to send them to a WebSphere MQ queue. The same message is retrieved from the queue, converted to a character data type with UTL_RAW.CAST_TO_VARCHAR2
, and then printed.
PGM_UTL.TO_RAW
converts values of the PGM.MQOD
, PGM.MQMD
, PGM.MQPMO
and PGM.MQGMO
object to into raw values.
result := PGM_UTL.TO_RAW(input);
where:
result is a variable that holds the output value of the function. It is of the RAW data type.
input is the input value of the PGM
.MQOD
, PGM
.MQMD
, PGM
.MQPMO
or PGM
.MQGMO
data type objects that is converted to raw data.
UTL_RAW.BIT_AND
performs a bitwise logical AND
operation on two raw values. If the values have different lengths, then the AND
operation is terminated after the last byte of the shorter of the two values. The unprocessed portion of the longer value is appended to the partial result to produce the final result. The length of the resulting value equals the longer of the two input values.
result := UTL_RAW.BIT_AND(input1, input2);
where:
result is the variable that holds the output value of the function. It is data type RAW. The value is null if input1
or input2
is null.
input1 is an input value of data type RAW
to BIT_AND
with input2
.
input2 is an input value of data type RAW
to BIT_AND
with input1
.
UTL_RAW
.BIT_COMPLEMENT
performs a bitwise logical COMPLEMENT
operation of a raw value. The length of the resulting value equals the length of the input value.
result := UTL_RAW.BIT_COMPLEMENT(input);
where:
result
is the variable that holds the output value of the function. It is of RAW
data type. The value is null if input
is null.
input
is an input value of the RAW
data type on which to perform the COMPLEMENT
operation.
UTL_RAW.BIT_OR
performs a bitwise logical OR
operation of two raw values. If the values have different lengths, then the OR
operation is terminated after the last byte of the shorter of the two values. The unprocessed portion of the longer value is appended to the partial result to produce the final result. The length of the resulting value equals the length of the longer of the two input values.
result := UTL_RAW.BIT_OR(input1, input2);
where:
result
is the variable that holds the output value of the function. It is of the data type RAW
. The value is null if input1
or input2
is null.
input1
is an input value of the RAW
data type to BIT_OR
with input2
.
input2
is an input value of the RAW
data type to BIT_OR
with input1
.
UTL_RAW
.BIT_XOR
performs a bitwise logical EXCLUSIVE
OR
operation of two raw values. If the values have different lengths, then the EXCLUSIVE
OR
operation is terminated after the last byte of the shorter of the two values. The unprocessed portion of the longer value is appended to the partial result to produce the final result. The length of the resulting value equals the longer of the two input values.
result := UTL_RAW.BIT_XOR(input1, input2);
where:
result
is the variable that holds the output value of the function. It is data type RAW
. The value is null if input1
or input2
is null.
input1
is an input value of the RAW
data type to EXCLUSIVE
OR
with input2
.
input2
is an input value of the RAW
data type to EXCLUSIVE
OR
with input1
.
UTL_RAW
.CAST_TO_RAW
converts a value of data type VARCHAR2
into a raw value with the same number of bytes. The input value is treated as if it were composed of single 8-bit bytes, not characters. Multibyte character boundaries are ignored. The data is not modified in any way, it is only changed to data type RAW
.
result := UTL_RAW.CAST_TO_RAW(input);
where:
result
is the variable that holds the output value of the function. It is data type RAW
. The value is null if input
is null.
input
is the input value of the VARCHAR2
data type to convert to raw data.
UTL_RAW
.CAST_TO_VARCHAR2
converts a raw value into a value of data type VARCHAR2
with the same number of data bytes. The result is treated as if it were composed of single 8-bit bytes, not characters. Multibyte character boundaries are ignored. The data is not modified in any way, it is only changed to data type VARCHAR2
.
result := UTL_RAW.CAST_TO_VARCHAR2(input);
where:
result
is the variable that holds the output value of the function. It is data type VARCHAR2
. The value is null if input
is null.
input
is the input value of the RAW
data type to convert to data type VARCHAR2
.
UTL_RAW
.COMPARE
compares one raw value to another raw value. If they are identical, then UTL_RAW
.COMPARE
returns 0. If they are not identical, then COMPARE
returns the position of the first byte that does not match. If the input values have different lengths, then the shorter input value is padded on the right by a value that you specify.
result := UTL_RAW.COMPARE(input1, input2[, pad]);
where:
result
is the variable that holds the output value of the function. It is of data type NUMBER
. A value of 0 is returned if the values of input1
and input2
are null or identical or the position, numbered from 1, of the first mismatched byte.
input1
is the first input value of the RAW
data type to compare.
input2
is the second input value of the RAW
data type to compare.
padis
a single byte value used to pad the shorter input value. The default is X'00'.
UTL_RAW
.CONCAT
concatenates a set of up to 12 raw values into a single raw value. The values are appended together, left to right, in the order that they appear in the parameter list. Null input values are skipped, and the concatenation continues with the next non-null value.
If the sum of the lengths of the input values exceeds 32 767 bytes, then a VALUE_ERROR
exception is raised.
result := UTL_RAW.CONCAT(input1, ... input12);
where:
result
is the variable that holds the output value of the function. It is data type RAW
.
input1
...
input12
are the input values of RAW
data type to concatenate.
UTL_RAW
.CONVERT
converts a raw value to a different character set A
VALUE_ERROR
exception is raised for any of the following conditions:
The input value is null or 0 in length
One or both of the specified character sets is missing, null, or 0 in length
The character set names are invalid or unsupported by the Oracle database
result := UTL_RAW.CONVERT(input, new_charset, old_charset);
where:
result
is the variable that holds the output value of the function. It is of the RAW
data type.
input
is the input value of the RAW
data type to convert.
new_charset
is the Globalization Support character set to convert input
to.
old_charset
is the Globalization Support character set that input is currently using.
UTL_RAW
.COPIES
returns one or more copies of a value. The values are concatenated together. A
VALUE_ERROR
exception is raised for any of the following conditions:
The input value is null or has a length of 0
A negative number of copies is specified
The length of the result exceeds 32 767 bytes
result := UTL_RAW.COPIES(input, number);
where:
result
is the variable that holds the output value of the function. It is of the RAW
data type.
input
is a value of the RAW
data type to copy.
number
is the number of times to copy input. It must be a positive value.
UTL_RAW
.LENGTH
returns the length, in bytes, of a raw value.
result := UTL_RAW.LENGTH(input);
where:
result
is the output value of the function. It is of the NUMBER
data type.
input
is the input value of the RAW data type to evaluate.
UTL_RAW
.OVERLAY
replaces a portion of a raw value with a new string of raw data. If the new data is shorter than the length of the overlay area, then the new data is padded to make it long enough. If the new data is longer than the overlay area, then the extra bytes are ignored. If you specify an overlay area that exceeds the length of the input value, then the input value is extended according to the length specified. If you specify a starting position for the overlay area that exceeds the length of the input value, then the input value is padded to the position specified, and then the input value is further extended with the new data.
A
VALUE_ERROR
exception is raised for any of the following conditions:
The new data used to overlay the input value is null or has a length of 0
The portion of the input value to overlay is not defined
The length of the portion to overlay exceeds 32 767 bytes
The number of bytes to overlay is defined as less than 0
The position within the input value to begin the overlay operation is defined as less than 1
result := UTL_RAW.OVERLAY(new_bytes, input, position, length, pad);
where:
result
is the variable that holds the output value of the function. It is of the RAW
data type.
new_bytes
is the new value, a byte string of the RAW
data type, to overlay input with. Bytes are selected from new_bytes
beginning with the leftmost byte.
input
is the input value of data type RAW
to overlay.
position
is the position within input, numbered from 1, at which to begin overlaying. This value must be greater than 0. The default is 1.
length
is the number of bytes to overlay. This must be greater than, or equal to, 0. The default is the length of new_bytes
.
pad
is a single byte value used to pad when length exceeds the overlay length or when position exceeds the length of input
. The default is X'00'.
UTL_RAW
.REVERSE
reverses the byte sequence of a raw value from end-to-end. For example, this function reverses X'0102F3' to X'F30201' or xyz to zyx. The length of the resulting value is the same length as the input value. A
VALUE_ERROR
exception is raised if the input value is null or has a length of 0.
result := UTL_RAW.REVERSE(input);
where:
result
is the output value of the function. It is of the RAW
data type.
input
is the input value of the RAW
data type to be reversed.
UTL_RAW
.SUBSTR
removes bytes from a raw value. If you specify a positive number as the starting point for the bytes to remove, then SUBSTR
counts from the beginning of the input value to find the first byte. If you specify a negative number, then UTL_RAW
.SUBSTR
counts backwards from the end of the input value to find the first byte.
A
VALUE_ERROR
exception is raised for any of the following conditions:
The position to begin the removal is specified as 0
The number of bytes to remove is specified as less than 0
result := UTL_RAW.SUBSTR(input, position[,length]);
where:
result
is the variable that holds the output value of the function. It is of the RAW
data type. The value is the specified byte or bytes from input
, or the value is a null value if input
is null.
input
is the input value of the RAW
data type from which to extract a portion of its bytes.
position
is the byte position from which to start extraction. This value cannot be 0. If the value of position
is negative, then SUBSTR
counts backwards from the end of input.
length
is the number of bytes to extract from input
after position
. This value must be greater than 0. When not specified, all bytes to the end of input are returned.
UTL_RAW
.TRANSLATE
changes the value of some of the bytes in a raw value according to a scheme that you specify. Bytes in the input value are compared to a matching string, and when found to match, the byte at the same position in the replacement string is copied to the result. It is omitted from the result if the offset exceeds the length of the replacement string. Bytes in the input value that do not appear in the matching string are copied to the resulting value. Only the leftmost occurrence of a byte in the matching string is used, and subsequent duplicate occurrences are ignored.
If the matching string contains more bytes than the replacement string, then the extra bytes at the end of the matching string have no corresponding bytes in the replacement string. Any bytes in the input value that match such bytes are omitted from the resulting value.
A
VALUE_ERROR
exception is raised for any of the following conditions:
The input value is null or has a length of 0
The matching string is null or has a length of 0
The replacement string is null or has a length of 0
result := UTL_RAW.TRANSLATE(input, match, replace_bytes);
where:
result
is the variable that holds the output value of the function. It is of data type RAW
.
input
is the input value of data type RAW
to change.
match
specifies the byte 0codes to search for in input
and to change to replace_bytes
. It is of data type RAW
.
replace_bytes
specifies the byte codes that replace the codes specified by match. It is of data type RAW
.
UTL_RAW
.TRANSLITERATE
replaces all occurrences of any bytes in a matching string with the corresponding bytes of a replacement string. Bytes in the input value are compared to the matching string, and if they are not found, then they are copied unaltered to the resulting value. If they are found, then they are replaced in the resulting value by the byte at the same offset in the replacement string, or with the pad byte that you specify when the offset exceeds the length of the replacement string. Only the leftmost occurrence of a byte in the matching string is used. Subsequent duplicate occurrences are ignored. The result value of UTL_RAW
.TRANSLITERATE
is always the same length as the input value.
If the replacement string is shorter than the matching string, then the pad byte is placed in the resulting value when a selected matching string byte has no corresponding byte in the replacement string. A VALUE_ERROR exception is raised when the input value is null or has a length of 0.
UTL_RAW
.TRANSLITERATE
differs from UTL_RAW
.TRANSLATE
in the following ways:
Bytes in the input value that are undefined in the replacement string are padded with a value that you specify
The resulting value is always the same length as the input value
result := UTL_RAW.TRANSLITERATE (input, replace_bytes, match, pad);
where:
Result
is the output value of the function. It is data type RAW
.
Input
is the input value of data type RAW
to change.
Replace_bytes
specifies the byte codes to which corresponding bytes of match are changed. This value can be any length that is valid for the RAW data type. The default is a null value and effectively extends with pad to the length of match as necessary.
Match
specifies the byte
codes to match in input
. The value can be any length that is valid for the RAW data type. The default is X'00' through X'FF'.
Pad
is a singe byte value that is used to extend the length of replace_bytes
when replace_bytes
is shorter than match. The default is X'00'.
UTL_RAW
.TRANSLATE
differs from the UTL_RAW
.TRANSLITERATE
function in the following ways:
The raw values used for the matching and replacement strings have no default values
Bytes in the input value that are undefined in the replacement string are omitted in the resulting value
The resulting value can be shorter than the input value
UTL_RAW
.XRANGE
returns a raw value containing all valid one-byte codes within a range that you specify. If the starting byte value is greater than the ending byte value, then the succession of resulting bytes begin with the starting byte, wrapping from X'FF' to X'00', and end at the ending byte.
When specified, the values for the starting and ending bytes must be single-byte raw values.
result := UTL_RAW.XRANGE(start, end);
where:
result
is the output value of the function. It is of data type RAW.
start
is a single byte code to start with. The default is X'00'.
end
is a single byte code to end with. The default is X'FF'.