table of contents
SPI_CURSOR_OPEN(3) | PostgreSQL 16.5 Documentation | SPI_CURSOR_OPEN(3) |
NAME¶
SPI_cursor_open - set up a cursor using a statement created with SPI_prepare
SYNOPSIS¶
Portal SPI_cursor_open(const char * name, SPIPlanPtr plan,
Datum * values, const char * nulls,
bool read_only)
DESCRIPTION¶
SPI_cursor_open sets up a cursor (internally, a portal) that will execute a statement prepared by SPI_prepare. The parameters have the same meanings as the corresponding parameters to SPI_execute_plan.
Using a cursor instead of executing the statement directly has two benefits. First, the result rows can be retrieved a few at a time, avoiding memory overrun for queries that return many rows. Second, a portal can outlive the current C function (it can, in fact, live to the end of the current transaction). Returning the portal name to the C function's caller provides a way of returning a row set as result.
The passed-in parameter data will be copied into the cursor's portal, so it can be freed while the cursor still exists.
ARGUMENTS¶
const char * name
SPIPlanPtr plan
Datum * values
const char * nulls
If nulls is NULL then SPI_cursor_open assumes that no parameters are null. Otherwise, each entry of the nulls array should be ' ' if the corresponding parameter value is non-null, or 'n' if the corresponding parameter value is null. (In the latter case, the actual value in the corresponding values entry doesn't matter.) Note that nulls is not a text string, just an array: it does not need a '\0' terminator.
bool read_only
RETURN VALUE¶
Pointer to portal containing the cursor. Note there is no error return convention; any error will be reported via elog.
2024 | PostgreSQL 16.5 |