You can use C, C++, and Java to implement data cartridge methods. Methods are procedures and functions that define the operations permitted on data defined using the data cartridge. The focus is on issues related to developing and debugging external procedures.
A shared library is an operating system file, such as a Windows DLL or a Solaris shared object, which stores the coded implementation of external procedures. You can access the shared library from Oracle by using an alias library, which is a schema object that represents the library within PL/SQL. For security reasons, you need DBA privileges to create an alias library.
See Also:
Oracle Database PL/SQL Language Reference for more information on using dedicated external procedure agents
Oracle Database Security Guide for more information on Directory Object support for libraries
To create the alias library, you must decide on the operating system location for the library, log in as a DBA or as a user with the CREATE LIBRARY privilege, and then enter the statement in Example 5-1. This creates the alias library schema object in the database. After the alias library is created, you can refer to the shared library by the name DS_Lib from PL/SQL. Example 5-1 specifies an absolute path for the library.
If you have copies of the library on multiple systems, to support distributed execution of external procedures by designated or dedicated agents, use an environment variable to specify the location of the libraries more generally, as in Example 5-2. This statement uses the environment variable ${DS_LIB_HOME} to specify a common point of reference or root directory from which the library can be found on all systems. The string following the AGENT keyword specifies the agent (actually, a database link) that is used to run any external procedure declared to be in library DS_Lib.
Oracle Database 12c Release 1 (12.1) introduces two extensions to the CREATE LIBRARY syntax: an additional optional CREDENTIAL option and a DIRECTORY object option. The credential option specifies the credentials of the operating system user that the extproc agent impersonates when running an external subprogram that specifies the library. The directory object option specifies the directory where the shared library can be found.
Example 5-3 specifies a directory object option instead of a full path string; it also specifies an optional credential argument. When an external procedure call through the extproc process loads the PL/SQL library, extproc can authenticate and 'impersonate' on behalf of the defined smith_credential credential.
Note that if the directory or the credential does not exist when calling CREATE LIBRARY statement, the library is created with errors.
Example 5-1 Creating an Alias Library
CREATE OR REPLACE LIBRARY DS_Lib AS
'/data_cartridge_dir/libdatastream.so';
Example 5-2 Specifying the Location of the Library Using an Environment Variable
CREATE OR REPLACE LIBRARY DS_Lib AS
'${DS_LIB_HOME}/libdatastream.so' AGENT 'agent_link';
PL/SQL is a powerful language for database programming, but some methods are too complex to code optimally in PL/SQL. For example, a routine to perform numeric integration probably runs faster if it is implemented in C rather than PL/SQL.
To support such special-purpose processing, PL/SQL provides an interface for calling routines written in other languages. This makes the strengths and capabilities of 3GLs, like C, available through calls from a database server. Such a 3GL routine is called an external procedure; it is stored in a shared library, registered with PL/SQL, and called from PL/SQL at run time.
External procedures are an important tool for data cartridge developers. They can be used not only to write fast, efficient, computation-intensive routines for cartridge types, but also to integrate existing code with the database as data cartridges. Existing shared libraries from other languages, such as a Windows NT DLL with C routines to perform format conversions for audio files, can be called directly from a method in a type implemented by an audio cartridge. Similarly, you can use external procedures to process signals, drive devices, analyze data streams, render graphics, or process numeric data.
See Also:
PL/SQL User's Guide and Reference for details on external procedures and their use
To call an external procedure, you must not only instruct PL/SQL regarding the alias library where the external procedure is defined, but also how to call this procedure and what arguments to pass to it.
The DataStream type was defined in Example 3-1, and Example 3-2 defined methods o f DataStream by calling functions from the DS_Package package, which is specified in Example 4-9. Example 5-4 defines the body of this package.
Note that in the PACKAGE BODY declaration clause, the package functions are tied to external procedures in a shared library. The EXTERNAL clause in the function declaration registers information about the external procedure, such as its name (found after the NAME keyword), its location (which must be an alias library, following the LIBRARY keyword), the language in which the external procedure is written (following the LANGUAGE keyword), and so on.
The final part of the EXTERNAL clause in the example is the WITH CONTEXT specification. Here, a context pointer is passed to the external procedure. The context pointer is opaque to the external procedure, but is available so that the external procedure can call back to the Oracle server, to potentially access more data in the same transaction context.
Although the example describes external procedure calls from object type methods, a data cartridge can use external procedures from a variety of other places in PL/SQL. External procedure calls can appear in:
Anonymous blocks
Standalone and packaged subprograms
Methods of an object type
Database triggers
SQL statements (calls to packaged functions only)
See Also:
Description of the parameters that can accompany an EXTERNAL clause in PL/SQL User's Guide and Reference.
Information about external procedures and formatting the call specification when passing an object type to a C routine in Oracle Database Advanced Application Developer's Guide
The WITH CONTEXT clause in "Using the WITH CONTEXT Clause".
Example 5-4 Defining the Body of a Package
CREATE OR REPLACE PACKAGE BODY DS_Package AS
FUNCTION DS_Findmin(data CLOB) RETURN PLS_INTEGER IS EXTERNAL
NAME "c_findmin" LIBRARY DS_Lib LANGUAGE C WITH CONTEXT;
FUNCTION DS_Findmax(data CLOB) RETURN PLS_INTEGER IS EXTERNAL
NAME "c_findmax" LIBRARY DS_Lib LANGUAGE C WITH CONTEXT;
END;
To call an external procedure, PL/SQL must know the DLL or shared library in which the procedure resides. PL/SQL looks up the alias library in the EXTERNAL clause of the subprogram that registered the external procedure. The data dictionary is used to determine the actual path to the operating system shared library or DLL.
PL/SQL alerts a Listener process, which in turn starts a session-specific agent. Unless some other particular agent has been designated either in the CREATE LIBRARY statement for the procedure's specified library or in the agent argument of the CREATE PROCEDURE statement, the default agent extproc is launched. The Listener hands over the connection to the agent. PL/SQL passes the agent the name of the DLL, the name of the external procedure, and any parameters passed in by the caller. The rest of this account assumes that the agent launched is the default agent extproc.
After receiving the name of the DLL and the external procedure, extproc loads the DLL and runs the external procedure. Also, extproc handles service calls, such as raising an exception, and callbacks to the Oracle server. Finally, extproc passes to PL/SQL any values returned by the external procedure. Figure 5-1 shows the flow of control.
After the external procedure completes, extproc remains active throughout your Oracle session. Thus, you incur the cost of spawning extproc only one time, no matter how many calls you make. Still, you should call an external procedure only when the computational benefits outweigh the cost. When you log off, extproc is killed.
Note that the Listener must start extproc on the system that runs the Oracle server. Starting extproc on a different system is not supported.
See Also:
Oracle Database PL/SQL Language Reference for more information on using dedicated external procedure agents to run an external procedure
Oracle Database Administrator's Guide for information about administering extproc and external procedure call
The configuration files listener.ora and tnsnames.ora must have appropriate entries, so that the Listener can dispatch the external procedures.
The Listener configuration file listener.ora must have a SID_DESC entry for the external procedure, as demonstrated in Example 5-5.
Example 5-5 assumes the following:
The Oracle instance is called o10.
The system or node on which the Oracle server runs is named unix123.
The installation directory for the Oracle server is /rdbms/u01.
The port number for Oracle TCP/IP communication is the default Listener port 1521.
The tnsnames.ora file is the network substrate configuration file, and it must also be updated to refer to the external procedure, as demonstrated in Example 5-6.
Example 5-6 assumes that IPC mechanisms are used to communicate with the external procedure. You can also use, for example, TCP/IP for communication, in which case the PROTOCOL parameter must be set to tcp.
See Also:
Oracle Database Administrator's Guide for more information about configuring the listener.ora and tnsnames.ora files
Example 5-5 Setting the SID_DESC Entry in the Listener Configuration FIle
# Listener configuration file
# This file is generated by stkconf.tsc
CONNECT_TIMEOUT_LISTENER = 0
LISTENER = (ADDRESS_LIST=
(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=ipc)(KEY=o10))
(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=tcp)(HOST=unix123)(PORT=1521))
)
SID_LIST_LISTENER = (SID_LIST=
SID_DESC=(SID_NAME=o10)(ORACLE_HOME=/rdbms/u01/app/oracle/product/11.2.0.1.0)
SID_DESC=(SID_NAME=extproc)
(ORACLE_HOME=/rdbms/u01/app/oracle/product/11.2.0.1.0)
(PROGRAM=extproc))
Example 5-6 Updating the Network Substrate Configuration to Refer to External Procedures
o10 = (DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=tcp)(HOST=unix123)(PORT=1521)) (CONNECT_DATA=(SID=o10))) extproc_connection_data = (DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=ipc)(KEY=o10)) CONNECT_DATA=(SID=extproc)))
Passing parameters to an external procedure is complicated by several circumstances:
The set of PL/SQL data types does not correspond one-to-one with the set of C data types.
PL/SQL parameters can be null, whereas C parameters cannot. Unlike C, PL/SQL includes the RDBMS concept of nullity.
The external procedure might need the current length or maximum length of CHAR, LONG RAW, RAW, and VARCHAR2 parameters.
The external procedure might need character set information about CHAR, VARCHAR2, and CLOB parameters.
PL/SQL might need the current length, maximum length, or null status of values returned by the external procedure.
Consider how to best specify a parameter list that deals with these circumstances. An example of parameter passing is shown in Example 5-7, where the package function DS_Findmin(data CLOB) calls the C routine c_findmin and the CLOB argument is passed to the C routine as an OCILobLocator().
You do not pass parameters to an external procedure directly. Instead, you pass them to the PL/SQL subprogram that registered the external procedure. So, you must specify PL/SQL data types for the parameters. Table 5-1 maps each PL/SQL data type to a default external data type. The external data types map to C data type.
In some cases, you can use the PARAMETERS clause to override the default data type mappings. For example, you can re-map the PL/SQL data type BOOLEAN from external data type INT to external data type CHAR.
To avoid errors when declaring C prototype parameters, refer to Table 5-2, which shows the C data type to specify for a given external data type and PL/SQL parameter mode. For example, if the external data type of an OUT parameter is CHAR, specify the data type char* in your C prototype.
Table 5-1 Parameter Datatype Mappings
| PL/SQL Type | Supported External Types | Default External Type |
|---|---|---|
BINARY_INTEGER, BOOLEAN, PLS_INTEGER |
CHAR, UNSIGNED CHAR, SHORT, UNSIGNED SHORT, INT, UNSIGNED INT, LONG, UNSIGNED LONG, SB1, UB1, SB2, UB2, SB4, UB4, SIZE_T |
INT |
NATURAL, NATURALN, POSITIVE, POSITIVEN, SIGNTYPE |
CHAR, UNSIGNED CHAR, SHORT, UNSIGNED SHORT, INT, UNSIGNED INT, LONG, UNSIGNED LONG, SB1, UB1, SB2 ,UB2, SB4, UB4, SIZE_T |
UNSIGNED INT |
FLOAT, REAL |
FLOAT |
FLOAT |
DOUBLE PRECISION |
DOUBLE |
DOUBLE |
CHAR, CHARACTER, LONG, ROWID, VARCHAR, VARCHAR2 |
STRING |
STRING |
LONG RAW, RAW |
RAW |
RAW |
BFILE, BLOB, CLOB |
OCILOBLOCATOR |
OCILOBLOCATOR |
Table 5-2 External Data Type Mappings
| External Data Type | IN, RETURN | IN by Reference, RETURN by Reference | IN OUT, OUT |
|---|---|---|---|
CHAR |
char |
char * |
char * |
UNSIGNED CHAR |
unsigned char |
unsigned char * |
unsigned char * |
SHORT |
short |
short * |
short * |
UNSIGNED SHORT |
unsigned short |
unsigned short * |
unsigned short * |
INT |
int |
int * |
int * |
UNSIGNED INT |
unsigned int |
unsigned int * |
unsigned int * |
LONG |
long |
long * |
long * |
UNSIGNED LONG |
unsigned long |
unsigned long * |
unsigned long * |
SIZE_T |
size_t |
size_t * |
size_t * |
SB1 |
sb1 |
sb1 * |
sb1 * |
UB1 |
ub1 |
ub1 * |
ub1 * |
SB2 |
sb2 |
sb2 * |
sb2 * |
UB2 |
ub2 |
ub2 * |
ub2 * |
SB4 |
sb4 |
sb4 * |
sb4 * |
UB4 |
ub4 |
ub4 * |
ub4 * |
FLOAT |
float |
float * |
float * |
DOUBLE |
double |
double * |
double * |
STRING |
char * |
char * |
char * |
RAW |
unsigned char * |
unsigned char * |
unsigned char * |
OCILOBLOCATOR |
OCILobLocator * |
OCILobLocator * |
OCILobLocator ** |
You can optionally use the PARAMETERS clause to pass additional information about PL/SQL formal parameters and function return values to an external procedure. You can also use this clause to reposition parameters.
When launched, an external procedure must access the database. For example, DS_Findmin does not copy the entire CLOB data over to c_findmin, because doing so would vastly increase the amount of stack that the C routine needs. Instead, the PL/SQL function just passes a LOB locator to the C routine, with the intent that the database is accessed again from C to read the actual LOB data.
When the C routine reads the data, it can use the OCI buffering and streaming interfaces associated with LOBs, so that only incremental amounts of stack are needed. Such re-access of the database from an external procedure is known as a callback.
To be able to call back to a database, you must use the WITH CONTEXT clause to give the external procedure access to the database environment, service, and error handles. When an external procedure is called using WITH CONTEXT, the corresponding C routine automatically gets an argument of type OCIExtProcContext* as its first parameter. The order of the parameters can be changed using the PARAMETERS clause. You can use this context pointer to fetch the handles using the OCIExtProcGetEnv call, and then call back to the database. This procedure is shown in Example 5-7.
See Also:
Oracle Call Interface Programmer's Guide for details about OCI callbacks
An external procedure that runs on the Oracle server can call the access function OCIExtProcGetEnv() to obtain the OCI environment and service handles. With the OCI, you can use callbacks to execute SQL statements and PL/SQL subprograms, fetch data, and manipulate LOBs. Moreover, callbacks and external procedures operate in the same user session and transaction context, so they have the same user privileges.
Example 5-7 is a version of c_findmin that is simplified to illustrate callbacks.
Example 5-7 Using Callbacks
Static OCIEnv *envhp;
Static OCISvcCtx *svchp;
Static OCIError *errhp;
Int c_findmin (OCIExtProcContext *ctx, OCILobLocator *lobl) {
sword retval;
retval = OCIExtProcGetEnv (ctx, &envhp, &svchp, &errhp);
if ((retval != OCI_SUCCESS) && (retval != OCI_SUCCESS_WITH_INFO))
exit(-1);
/* Use lobl to read the CLOB, compute the minimum, and store the value
in retval. */
return retval;
}
With callbacks, the following SQL statements and OCI routines are not supported:
Transaction control statements such as COMMIT
Data definition statements such as CREATE
Object-oriented OCI routines such as OCIRefClear
Polling-mode OCI routines such as OCIGetPieceInfo
The following OCI routines:
OCIEnvInit()
OCIInitialize()
OCIPasswordChange()
OCIServerAttach()
OCIServerDetach()
OCISessionBegin ()
OCISessionEnd ()
OCISvcCtxToLda()
OCITransCommit()
OCITransDetach()
OCITransRollback()
OCITransStart()
Also, with OCI routine OCIHandleAlloc(), the following handle types are not supported:
OCI_HTYPE_SERVER
OCI_HTYPE_SESSION
OCI_HTYPE_SVCCTX
OCI_HTYPE_TRANS
Consider several common errors that may occur when running external procedures.
You may have specified the wrong path or wrong name for the DLL file, or you may have tried to use a DLL on a network mounted drive (a remote drive).
Can't Find DLL ORA-06520: PL/SQL: Error loading external library ORA-06522: Unable to load DLL ORA-06512: at "<name>", line <number> ORA-06512: at "<name>", line <number> ORA-06512: at line <number>
This error might occur after you exit a debugger while debugging a shared library or DLL. Simply disconnect your client and reconnect to the database.
ORA-28576: lost RPC connection to external procedure agent ORA-06512: at "<name>", line <number> ORA-06512: at "<name>", line <number> ORA-06512: at line <number>
Usually, when an external procedure fails, its C prototype is faulty. That is, the prototype does not match the one generated internally by PL/SQL. This can happen if you specify an incompatible C data type. For example, to pass an OUT parameter of type REAL, you must specify float *. Specifying float, double *, or any other C data type, results in a mismatch.
In such cases, you might get a lost RPC connection to external procedure agent error, which means that agent extproc terminated abnormally because the external procedure caused a core dump. To avoid errors when declaring C prototype parameters, refer to Table 5-2.
To help you debug external procedures, PL/SQL provides the utility package DEBUG_EXTPROC. To install the package, run the script dbgextp.sql, which you can find in the PL/SQL demo directory.
To use the package, follow the instructions in dbgextp.sql. Your Oracle account must have EXECUTE privileges on the package and CREATE LIBRARY privileges.
Note that DEBUG_EXTPROC works only on platforms with debugger utilities that can attach to a running process.
Make sure to write thread-safe external procedures. In particular, avoid using static variables, which can be shared by routines running in separate threads.
For help in creating a dynamic link library, look in the RDBMS subdirectory /public, where a template makefile can be found.
When calling external procedures, never write to IN parameters or overflow the capacity of OUT parameters. PL/SQL does no run-time checks for these error conditions. Likewise, never read an OUT parameter or a function result. Also, always assign a value to IN OUT and OUT parameters and to function results. Otherwise, your external procedure does not return successfully.
If you include the WITH CONTEXT and PARAMETERS clauses, you must specify the parameter CONTEXT, which shows the position of the context pointer in the parameter list. If you omit the PARAMETERS clause, the context pointer is the first parameter passed to the external procedure.
If you include the PARAMETERS clause and the external procedure is a function, you must specify the parameter RETURN (not RETURN property) in the last position.
For every formal parameter, there must be a corresponding parameter in the PARAMETERS clause. Also, ensure that the data types of parameters in the PARAMETERS clause are compatible with those in the C prototype, because no implicit conversions are done.
A parameter for which you specify INDICATOR or LENGTH has the same parameter mode as the corresponding formal parameter. However, a parameter for which you specify MAXLEN, CHARSETID, or CHARSETFORM is always treated like an IN parameter, even if you also specify BY REFERENCE.
With a parameter of type CHAR, LONG RAW, RAW, or VARCHAR2, you must use the property LENGTH. Also, if that parameter is IN OUT or OUT and null, you must set the length of the corresponding C parameter to zero.
See Also:
For more information about multithreading, see the Oracle Database Heterogeneous Connectivity Administrator's Guide.
To use Java Data Cartridges, it is important that you know how to load Java class definitions, about how to call stored procedures, and about context management. Information on ODCI classes can also be found in Cartridge Services Using C_ C++ and Java of this manual.