Oracle® Database SecureFiles and Large Objects Developer's Guide 11g Release 2 (11.2) Part Number E18294-01 |
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This chapter contains these topics:
In PL/SQL, semantic changes have been made.
Note:
The following discussions, concerningCLOB
s and VARCHAR2
s, also apply to BLOB
s and RAW
s, unless otherwise noted. In the text, BLOB
and RAW
are not explicitly mentioned.PL/SQL semantics support is described in the following sections:
Implicit conversions from CLOB
to VARCHAR2
and from VARCHAR2
to CLOB
data types are allowed in PL/SQL. These conversions enable you to perform the following operations in your application:
CLOB
columns can be selected into VARCHAR2
PL/SQL variables
VARCHAR2
columns can be selected into CLOB
variables
Assignment and parameter passing between CLOB
s and VARCHAR2
s
Accessing a CLOB as a VARCHAR2 in PL/SQL
The following example illustrates the way CLOB
data is accessed when the CLOB
s are treated as VARCHAR2
s:
declare myStoryBuf VARCHAR2(4001); BEGIN SELECT ad_sourcetext INTO myStoryBuf FROM print_media WHERE ad_id = 12001; -- Display Story by printing myStoryBuf directly END; /
Assigning a CLOB to a VARCHAR2 in PL/SQL
declare myLOB CLOB; BEGIN SELECT 'ABCDE' INTO myLOB FROM print_media WHERE ad_id = 11001; -- myLOB is a temporary LOB. -- Use myLOB as a lob locator DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('Is temp? '||DBMS_LOB.ISTEMPORARY(myLOB)); END; /
In SQL and PL/SQL, the following explicit conversion functions convert other data types to and from CLOB
, NCLOB
, and BLOB
as part of the LONG-to-LOB migration:
TO_CLOB()
: Converting from VARCHAR2
, NVARCHAR2
, or NCLOB
to a CLOB
TO_NCLOB()
: Converting from VARCHAR2
, NVARCHAR2
, or CLOB
to an NCLOB
TO_BLOB()
: Converting from RAW
to a BLOB
TO_CHAR()
converts a CLOB
to a CHAR
type. When you use this function to convert a character LOB into the database character set, if the LOB value to be converted is larger than the target type, then the database returns an error. Implicit conversions also raise an error if the LOB data does not fit.
TO_NCHAR()
converts an NCLOB
to an NCHAR type. When you use this function to convert a character LOB into the national character set, if the LOB value to be converted is larger than the target type, then the database returns an error. Implicit conversions also raise an error if the LOB data does not fit.
CAST
does not directly support any of the LOB data types. When you use CAST
to convert a CLOB
value into a character data type, an NCLOB
value into a national character data type, or a BLOB
value into a RAW
data type, the database implicitly converts the LOB value to character or raw data and then explicitly casts the resulting value into the target data type. If the resulting value is larger than the target type, then the database returns an error.
Other explicit conversion functions are not supported, such as, TO_NUMBER()
, see Table 16-1, "SQL VARCHAR2 Functions and Operators on LOBs". Conversion function details are explained in Chapter 18, "Migrating Columns from LONGs to LOBs".
CLOB
and VARCHAR2
are still two distinct types. But depending on the usage, a CLOB can be passed to SQL and PL/SQL VARCHAR2
built-in functions, used exactly like a VARCHAR2
. Or the variable can be passed into DBMS_LOB
APIs, acting like a LOB locator. Please see the following combined example,"CLOB Variables in PL/SQL".
PL/SQL VARCHAR2
functions and operators can take CLOB
s as arguments or operands.
When the size of a VARCHAR2
variable is not large enough to contain the result from a function that returns a CLOB
, or a SELECT
on a CLOB
column, an error is raised and no operation is performed. This is consistent with VARCHAR2
semantics.
1 declare 2 myStory CLOB; 3 revisedStory CLOB; 4 myGist VARCHAR2(100); 5 revisedGist VARCHAR2(100); 6 BEGIN 7 -- select a CLOB column into a CLOB variable 8 SELECT Story INTO myStory FROM print_media WHERE product_id=10; 9 -- perform VARCHAR2 operations on a CLOB variable 10 revisedStory := UPPER(SUBSTR(myStory, 100, 1)); 11 -- revisedStory is a temporary LOB 12 -- Concat a VARCHAR2 at the end of a CLOB 13 revisedStory := revisedStory || myGist; 14 -- The following statement raises an error because myStory is 15 -- longer than 100 bytes 16 myGist := myStory; 17 END;
Please note that in line 10 of "CLOB Variables in PL/SQL", a temporary CLOB
is implicitly created and is pointed to by the revisedStory
CLOB
locator. In the current interface the line can be expanded as:
buffer VARCHAR2(32000) DBMS_LOB.CREATETEMPORARY(revisedStory); buffer := UPPER(DBMS_LOB.SUBSTR(myStory,100,1)); DBMS_LOB.WRITE(revisedStory,length(buffer),1, buffer);
In line 13, myGist
is appended to the end of the temporary LOB, which has the same effect of:
DBMS_LOB.WRITEAPPEND(revisedStory, myGist, length(myGist));
In some occasions, implicitly created temporary LOBs in PL/SQL statements can change the representation of LOB locators previously defined. Consider the next example.
Change in Locator-Data Linkage
1 declare 2 myStory CLOB; 3 amt number:=100; 4 buffer VARCHAR2(100):='some data'; 5 BEGIN 6 -- select a CLOB column into a CLOB variable 7 SELECT Story INTO myStory FROM print_media WHERE product_id=10; 8 DBMS_LOB.WRITE(myStory, amt, 1, buf); 9 -- write to the persistent LOB in the table 10 11 myStory:= UPPER(SUBSTR(myStory, 100, 1)); 12 -- perform VARCHAR2 operations on a CLOB variable, temporary LOB created. 13 -- Changes are not reflected in the database table from this point on. 14 15 update print_media set Story = myStory WHERE product_id = 10; 16 -- an update is necessary to synchronize the data in the table. 17 END;
After line 7, myStory
represents a persistent LOB in print_media
.
The DBMS_LOB.WRITE
call in line 8 directly writes the data to the table.
No UPDATE
statement is necessary. Subsequently in line 11, a temporary LOB is created and assigned to myStory
because myStory
is now used like a local VARCHAR2
variable. The LOB locator myStory
now points to the newly-created temporary LOB.
Therefore, modifications to myStory
are no longer reflected in the database. To propagate the changes to the database table, an UPDATE
statement becomes necessary now. Note again that for the previous persistent LOB, the UPDATE
is not required.
Temporary LOBs created in a program block as a result of a SELECT
or an assignment are freed automatically at the end of the PL/SQL block or function or procedure. You must also free the temporary LOBs that were created with DBMS_LOB.CREATETEMPORARY
to reclaim system resources and temporary tablespace. Do this by calling DBMS_LOB.FREETEMPORARY
on the CLOB
variable.
Note:
If the SQL statement returns a LOB or a LOB is anOUT
parameter for a PL/SQL function or procedure, you must test if it is a temporary LOB, and if it is, then free it after you are done with it.Freeing Temporary LOBs Automatically and Manually
declare Story1 CLOB; Story2 CLOB; StoryCombined CLOB; StoryLower CLOB; BEGIN SELECT Story INTO Story1 FROM print_media WHERE product_ID = 1; SELECT Story INTO Story2 FROM print_media WHERE product_ID = 2; StoryCombined := Story1 || Story2; -- StoryCombined is a temporary LOB -- Free the StoryCombined manually to free up space taken DBMS_LOB.FREETEMPORARY(StoryCombined); StoryLower := LOWER(Story1) || LOWER(Story2); END; -- At the end of block, StoryLower is freed.
Like VARCHAR2
s, when a CLOB
is compared with another CLOB
or compared with a VARCHAR2
, a set of rules determines the comparison. The rules are usually called a "collating sequence". In Oracle, CHAR
s and VARCHAR2
s have slightly different sequences due to the blank padding of CHAR
s.
As a rule, CLOB
s follow the same collating sequence as VARCHAR2
s. That is, when a CLOB
is compared, the result is consistent with if the CLOB
data content is retrieved into a VARCHAR2
buffer and the VARCHAR2
is compared. The rule applies to all cases including comparisons between CLOB
and CLOB
, CLOB
and VARCHAR2
, and CLOB
and CHAR
.
Note:
When aCLOB
is compared with a CHAR
string, it is always the character data of the CLOB
being compared with the string. Likewise, when two CLOB
s are compared, the data content of the two CLOB
s are compared, not their LOB locators.It makes no sense to compare CLOB
s with non-character data, or with BLOB
s. An error is returned in these cases.
Built-in and user-defined PL/SQL functions that are executed on the remote site and operate on remote LOBs and BFILE
s are allowed, as long as the final value returned by nested functions is not a LOB. Examples are:
SELECT product_id FROM print_media@dbs2 WHERE foo@dbs2(ad_sourcetext, 'aa') > 0; -- foo is a user-define function returning a NUMBER DELETE FROM print_media@dbs2 WHERE DBMS_LOB.GETLENGTH@dbs2(ad_graphic) = 0;
The restrictions that apply to SQL functions apply here also.
A function in one dblink
cannot operate on LOB data in another dblink. For example, the following statement is not supported:
SELECT a.product_id FROM print_media@dbs1 a, print_media@dbs2 b WHERE CONTAINS@dbs1(b.ad_sourcetext, 'aa') > 0;
One query block cannot contain tables and functions at different dblink
s. For example, the following statement is not supported:
SELECT a.product_id FROM print_media@dbs2 a, print_media@dbs3 b WHERE CONTAINS@dbs2(a.ad_sourcetext, 'aa') > 0 AND foo@dbs3(b.ad_sourcetext) > 0; -- foo is a user-defined function in dbs3
There is no support for performing remote LOB operations (that is, DBMS_LOB
) from within PL/SQL, other than issuing SQL statements from PL/SQL.