9.28. 事件觸發函式

PostgreSQLprovides these helper functions to retrieve information from event triggers.

For more information about event triggers, seeChapter 39.

9.28.1. Capturing Changes at Command End

pg_event_trigger_ddl_commandsreturns a list ofDDLcommands executed by each user action, when invoked in a function attached to addl_command_endevent trigger. If called in any other context, an error is raised.pg_event_trigger_ddl_commandsreturns one row for each base command executed; some commands that are a single SQL sentence may return more than one row. This function returns the following columns:

Name

Type

Description

classid

Oid

OID of catalog the object belongs in

objid

Oid

OID of the object in the catalog

objsubid

integer

Object sub-id (e.g. attribute number for columns)

command_tag

text

command tag

object_type

text

Type of the object

schema_name

text

Name of the schema the object belongs in, if any; otherwiseNULL. No quoting is applied.

object_identity

text

Text rendering of the object identity, schema-qualified. Each and every identifier present in the identity is quoted if necessary.

in_extension

bool

whether the command is part of an extension script

command

pg_ddl_command

A complete representation of the command, in internal format. This cannot be output directly, but it can be passed to other functions to obtain different pieces of information about the command.

9.28.2. Processing Objects Dropped by a DDL Command

pg_event_trigger_dropped_objectsreturns a list of all objects dropped by the command in whosesql_dropevent it is called. If called in any other context,pg_event_trigger_dropped_objectsraises an error.pg_event_trigger_dropped_objectsreturns the following columns:

Name

Type

Description

classid

Oid

OID of catalog the object belonged in

objid

Oid

OID the object had within the catalog

objsubid

int32

Object sub-id (e.g. attribute number for columns)

original

bool

Flag used to identify the root object(s) of the deletion

normal

bool

Flag indicating that there's a normal dependency relationship in the dependency graph leading to this object

is_temporary

bool

Flag indicating that the object was a temporary object.

object_type

text

Type of the object

schema_name

text

Name of the schema the object belonged in, if any; otherwiseNULL. No quoting is applied.

object_name

text

Name of the object, if the combination of schema and name can be used as a unique identifier for the object; otherwiseNULL. No quoting is applied, and name is never schema-qualified.

object_identity

text

Text rendering of the object identity, schema-qualified. Each and every identifier present in the identity is quoted if necessary.

address_names

text[]

An array that, together withobject_typeandaddress_args, can be used by thepg_get_object_address()to recreate the object address in a remote server containing an identically named object of the same kind.

address_args

text[]

Complement foraddress_namesabove.

Thepg_event_trigger_dropped_objectsfunction can be used in an event trigger like this:

CREATE FUNCTION test_event_trigger_for_drops()
        RETURNS event_trigger LANGUAGE plpgsql AS $$
DECLARE
    obj record;
BEGIN
    FOR obj IN SELECT * FROM pg_event_trigger_dropped_objects()
    LOOP
        RAISE NOTICE '% dropped object: % %.% %',
                     tg_tag,
                     obj.object_type,
                     obj.schema_name,
                     obj.object_name,
                     obj.object_identity;
    END LOOP;
END
$$;
CREATE EVENT TRIGGER test_event_trigger_for_drops
   ON sql_drop
   EXECUTE PROCEDURE test_event_trigger_for_drops();

9.28.3. Handling a Table Rewrite Event

The functions shown inTable 9.90provide information about a table for which atable_rewriteevent has just been called. If called in any other context, an error is raised.

Table 9.90. Table Rewrite information

Name

Return Type

Description

pg_event_trigger_table_rewrite_oid()

Oid

The OID of the table about to be rewritten.

pg_event_trigger_table_rewrite_reason()

int

The reason code(s) explaining the reason for rewriting. The exact meaning of the codes is release dependent.

Thepg_event_trigger_table_rewrite_oidfunction can be used in an event trigger like this:

CREATE FUNCTION test_event_trigger_table_rewrite_oid()
 RETURNS event_trigger
 LANGUAGE plpgsql AS
$$
BEGIN
  RAISE NOTICE 'rewriting table % for reason %',
                pg_event_trigger_table_rewrite_oid()::regclass,
                pg_event_trigger_table_rewrite_reason();
END;
$$;

CREATE EVENT TRIGGER test_table_rewrite_oid
                  ON table_rewrite
   EXECUTE PROCEDURE test_event_trigger_table_rewrite_oid();

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