All calls to functions that are written in a language other than
the current "version 1" interface for compiled
languages (this includes functions in user-defined procedural languages,
functions written in SQL, and functions using the version 0 compiled
language interface), go through a call handler
function for the specific language. It is the responsibility of
the call handler to execute the function in a meaningful way, such
as by interpreting the supplied source text. This section
describes how a language call handler can be written. This is not
a common task, in fact, it has only been done a handful of times
in the history of PostgreSQL, but the
topic naturally belongs in this chapter, and the material might
give some insight into the extensible nature of the
PostgreSQL system.
The call handler for a procedural language is a
"normal" function, which must be written in a
compiled language such as C and registered with
PostgreSQL as taking no arguments and
returning the language_handler type.
This special pseudo-type identifies the handler as a call handler
and prevents it from being called directly in queries.
Note: In PostgreSQL 7.1 and later, call
handlers must adhere to the "version 1" function
manager interface, not the old-style interface.
The call handler is called in the same way as any other function:
It receives a pointer to a
FunctionCallInfoData struct containing
argument values and information about the called function, and it
is expected to return a Datum result (and possibly
set the isnull field of the
FunctionCallInfoData structure, if it wishes
to return an SQL NULL result). The difference between a call
handler and an ordinary callee function is that the
flinfo->fn_oid field of the
FunctionCallInfoData structure will contain
the OID of the actual function to be called, not of the call
handler itself. The call handler must use this field to determine
which function to execute. Also, the passed argument list has
been set up according to the declaration of the target function,
not of the call handler.
It's up to the call handler to fetch the
pg_proc entry and to analyze the argument
and return types of the called procedure. The AS clause from the
CREATE FUNCTION of the procedure will be found
in the prosrc attribute of the
pg_proc table entry. This may be the source
text in the procedural language itself (like for PL/Tcl), a
path name to a file, or anything else that tells the call handler
what to do in detail.
Often, the same function is called many times per SQL statement.
A call handler can avoid repeated lookups of information about the
called function by using the
flinfo->fn_extra field. This will
initially be NULL, but can be set by the call handler to point at
information about the PL function. On subsequent calls, if
flinfo->fn_extra is already non-NULL
then it can be used and the information lookup step skipped. The
call handler must be careful that
flinfo->fn_extra is made to point at
memory that will live at least until the end of the current query,
since an FmgrInfo data structure could be
kept that long. One way to do this is to allocate the extra data
in the memory context specified by
flinfo->fn_mcxt; such data will
normally have the same lifespan as the
FmgrInfo itself. But the handler could
also choose to use a longer-lived context so that it can cache
function definition information across queries.
When a PL function is invoked as a trigger, no explicit arguments
are passed, but the
FunctionCallInfoData's
context field points at a
TriggerData node, rather than being NULL
as it is in a plain function call. A language handler should
provide mechanisms for PL functions to get at the trigger
information.
This is a template for a PL handler written in C:
#include "postgres.h"
#include "executor/spi.h"
#include "commands/trigger.h"
#include "utils/elog.h"
#include "fmgr.h"
#include "access/heapam.h"
#include "utils/syscache.h"
#include "catalog/pg_proc.h"
#include "catalog/pg_type.h"
PG_FUNCTION_INFO_V1(plsample_call_handler);
Datum
plsample_call_handler(PG_FUNCTION_ARGS)
{
Datum retval;
if (CALLED_AS_TRIGGER(fcinfo))
{
/*
* Called as a trigger procedure
*/
TriggerData *trigdata = (TriggerData *) fcinfo->context;
retval = ...
}
else {
/*
* Called as a function
*/
retval = ...
}
return retval;
}
Only a few thousand lines of code have to be added instead of the
dots to complete the call handler. See Section 9.5
for information on how to compile it into a loadable module.
The following commands then register the sample procedural
language:
CREATE FUNCTION plsample_call_handler () RETURNS language_handler
AS '/usr/local/pgsql/lib/plsample'
LANGUAGE C;
CREATE LANGUAGE plsample
HANDLER plsample_call_handler;