libpq.sgml 46.5 KB
Newer Older
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
<Chapter>
<Title><FileName>libpq</FileName></Title>

<Para>
     <FileName>libpq</FileName> is the application programming interface to <ProductName>Postgres</ProductName>.  
     <FileName>libpq</FileName> is a set of library routines which  allows
     client programs to pass queries to the <ProductName>Postgres</ProductName> backend
     server and to receive the results of these queries.
     This version  of  the  documentation  describes  the  <Acronym>C</Acronym>
     interface  library.   Three short programs are included
     at the end of this section to show how  to  write  programs that use <FileName>libpq</FileName>.
     There are several examples of <FileName>libpq</FileName> applications in the
     following directories:

<ProgramListing>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
16 17 18
    ../src/test/regress
    ../src/test/examples
    ../src/bin/psql
19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84
</ProgramListing>

<Para>
     Frontend programs which  use  <FileName>libpq</FileName>  must  include  the
     header  file  <FileName>libpq-fe.h</FileName>  and  must link with the <FileName>libpq</FileName>
     library.
</Para>

<Sect1>
<Title>Control and Initialization</Title>

<Para>
     The following environment variables can be used to  set
     up  default  environment  values  to  avoid hard-coding
     database names into an application program:

<ItemizedList>
<ListItem>
<Para>
<Acronym>PGHOST</Acronym> sets the default server name.
</Para>
</ListItem>
<ListItem>
<Para>
<Acronym>PGOPTIONS</Acronym> sets additional runtime  options  for  the <ProductName>Postgres</ProductName> backend.
</Para>
</ListItem>
<ListItem>
<Para>
<Acronym>PGPORT</Acronym>  sets the default port for communicating with the <ProductName>Postgres</ProductName> backend.
</Para>
</ListItem>
<ListItem>
<Para>
<Acronym>PGTTY</Acronym> sets the file or tty on which  debugging  messages from the backend server are displayed.
</Para>
</ListItem>
<ListItem>
<Para>
<Acronym>PGDATABASE</Acronym>  sets the default <ProductName>Postgres</ProductName> database name.
</Para>
</ListItem>
<ListItem>
<Para>
<Acronym>PGREALM</Acronym> sets the Kerberos realm to  use  with  <ProductName>Postgres</ProductName>,
  if  it is different from the local realm.  If
<Acronym>PGREALM</Acronym> is set, <ProductName>Postgres</ProductName> applications  will  attempt
        authentication  with  servers for this realm and use
        separate ticket files to avoid conflicts with  local
        ticket  files.   This  environment  variable is only
        used if Kerberos authentication is enabled.
</Para>
</ListItem>
</ItemizedList>
</Para>
</Sect1>

<Sect1>
<Title>Database Connection Functions</Title>

<Para>
     The following routines deal with making a connection to
     a backend from a <Acronym>C</Acronym> program.
<ItemizedList>
<ListItem>
<Para>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
85
<Function>PQsetdbLogin</Function> 
86 87
          Makes a new connection to a backend.
<ProgramListing>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
88 89 90 91 92 93 94
PGconn *PQsetdbLogin(const char *pghost,
                const char *pgport,
                const char *pgoptions,
                const char *pgtty,
                const char *dbName,
                const char *login,
                const char *pwd);
95 96 97 98
</ProgramListing>
          If  any  argument  is NULL, then the corresponding
          environment variable is checked. If the  environment  variable  is  also  not  set, then hardwired
          defaults are used.
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
99
          PQsetdbLogin always returns  a  valid  PGconn  pointer.
100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111
          The  PQstatus (see below) command should be called
          to ensure that  a  connection  was  properly  made
          before queries are sent via the connection.  <FileName>libpq</FileName>
          programmers should  be  careful  to  maintain  the
          PGconn  abstraction.   Use  the accessor functions
          below to get at the  contents  of  PGconn.   Avoid
          directly  referencing  the  fields  of  the PGconn
          structure as they are subject  to  change  in  the
          future.
</Para>
</ListItem>

T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130
<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQsetdb</Function> 
          Makes a new connection to a backend.
<ProgramListing>
PGconn *PQsetdb(char *pghost,
                char *pgport,
                char *pgoptions,
                char *pgtty,
                char *dbName);
</ProgramListing>
          This is a macro that calls PQsetdbLogin() with null pointers
          for the login and pwd parameters.
</Para>
</ListItem>

<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQconndefaults</Function>  
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
131
         Returns the default connection options.
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156
<ProgramListing>
PQconninfoOption *PQconndefaults(void)

struct PQconninfoOption
	{
		char   *keyword;   /* The keyword of the option	*/
		char   *environ;   /* Fallback environment variable name */
		char   *compiled;  /* Fallback compiled in default value */
		char   *val;	   /* Options value */
		char   *label;	   /* Label for field in connect dialog	*/
		char   *dispchar;  /* Character to display for this field
				      in a connect dialog. Values are:
				      ""	Display entered value as is
				      "*"	Password field - hide value
				      "D"	Debug options - don't
				      create a field by default */
		int	dispsize;  /* Field size in characters for dialog */
	};

</ProgramListing>
	Returns the address of the connection options structure.  This may
	be used to determine all possible options and their current values.
</Para>
</ListItem>

157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246
<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQdb</Function>  
         Returns the database name of the connection.
<ProgramListing>
char *PQdb(PGconn *conn)
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>

<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQhost</Function>
         Returns the host name of the connection.
<ProgramListing>
char *PQhost(PGconn *conn)
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>

<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQoptions</Function>
       Returns the pgoptions used in  the  connection.
<ProgramListing>
char *PQoptions(PGconn *conn)
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>

<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQport</Function>
         Returns the pgport of the connection.
<ProgramListing>
char *PQport(PGconn *conn)
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>

<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQtty</Function>
         Returns the pgtty of the connection.
<ProgramListing>
char *PQtty(PGconn *conn)
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>

<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQstatus</Function>
         Returns the status of the connection. 
         The status can be CONNECTION_OK or CONNECTION_BAD.
<ProgramListing>
ConnStatusType *PQstatus(PGconn *conn)
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>

<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQerrorMessage</Function>
         Returns the error  message  associated with the connection
<ProgramListing>
char *PQerrorMessage(PGconn* conn);
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>

<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQfinish</Function>
          Close  the  connection to the backend.  Also frees
          memory used by the PGconn structure.   The  PGconn
          pointer should not be used after PQfinish has been
          called.
<ProgramListing>
void PQfinish(PGconn *conn)
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>

<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQreset</Function>
          Reset the communication  port  with  the  backend.
          This function will close the IPC socket connection
          to the backend and attempt to  reestablish  a  new
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
247
          connection to the same postmaster.
248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289
<ProgramListing>
void PQreset(PGconn *conn)
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>

<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQtrace</Function>
          Enables  tracing  of  messages  passed between the
          frontend and the backend.  The messages are echoed
          to the debug_port file stream.
<ProgramListing>
void PQtrace(PGconn *conn,
             FILE* debug_port);
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>

<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQuntrace</Function>
          Disables  tracing  of  messages passed between the
          frontend and the backend.
<ProgramListing>
void PQuntrace(PGconn *conn);
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>
</ItemizedList>
</Para>
</Sect1>

<Sect1>
<Title>Query Execution Functions</Title>

<Para>
<ItemizedList>
<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQexec</Function>
          Submit a query to <ProductName>Postgres</ProductName>.   Returns  a  PGresult
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
290 291 292
          pointer or possibly a NULL pointer.  If a NULL is returned, it
	  should be treated like a PGRES_FATAL_ERROR result: use
	  PQerrorMessage to get more information about the error.
293 294
<ProgramListing>
PGresult *PQexec(PGconn *conn,
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
295
                 const char *query);
296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313
</ProgramListing>
          The  <Function>PGresult</Function>  structure  encapsulates  the  query
          result returned by the backend.  <Function>libpq</Function> programmers
          should   be   careful  to  maintain  the  PGresult
          abstraction. Use the accessor functions  described
          below to retrieve the results of the query.  Avoid
          directly referencing the fields  of  the  PGresult
          structure  as  they  are  subject to change in the
          future.
</Para>
</ListItem>

<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQresultStatus</Function>
          Returns the result status of the query.  PQresultStatus can return one of the following values:
<ProgramListing>
PGRES_EMPTY_QUERY,
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
314
PGRES_COMMAND_OK,  /* the query was a command returning no data */
315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394
PGRES_TUPLES_OK,  /* the query successfully returned tuples */
PGRES_COPY_OUT,
PGRES_COPY_IN,
PGRES_BAD_RESPONSE, /* an unexpected response was received */
PGRES_NONFATAL_ERROR,
PGRES_FATAL_ERROR
</ProgramListing>
          If  the result status is PGRES_TUPLES_OK, then the
          following routines can be  used  to  retrieve  the
          tuples returned by the query.
</Para>
</ListItem>

<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQntuples</Function> returns the number of tuples (instances)
          in the query result.
<ProgramListing>
int PQntuples(PGresult *res);
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>

<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQnfields</Function>
          Returns   the   number    of    fields
          (attributes) in the query result.
<ProgramListing>
int PQnfields(PGresult *res);
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>

<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQfname</Function>
            Returns the field (attribute) name associated with the given field  index.   Field  indices
          start at 0.
<ProgramListing>
char *PQfname(PGresult *res,
              int field_index);
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>

<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQfnumber</Function>
            Returns  the  field  (attribute)  index
          associated with the given field name.
<ProgramListing>
int PQfnumber(PGresult *res,
              char* field_name);
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>

<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQftype</Function>
            Returns the field type associated with the
          given  field  index.  The  integer  returned is an
          internal coding of the type.  Field indices  start
          at 0.
<ProgramListing>
Oid PQftype(PGresult *res,
            int field_num);
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>

<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQfsize</Function>
            Returns  the  size  in bytes of the field
          associated with the given field index. If the size
          returned  is  -1,  the  field is a variable length
          field.  Field indices start at 0.
<ProgramListing>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408
short PQfsize(PGresult *res,
              int field_index);
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>

<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQfmod</Function>
          Returns  the type-specific modification data of the field
          associated with the given field index.
          Field indices start at 0.
<ProgramListing>
short PQfmod(PGresult *res,
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
409
             int field_index);
410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>

<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQgetvalue</Function>
            Returns the  field  (attribute)  value.
          For most queries, the value returned by PQgetvalue
          is a null-terminated ASCII  string  representation
          of the attribute value.  If the query was a result
          of a <Acronym>BINARY</Acronym> cursor, then  the  value  returned  by
          PQgetvalue  is  the  binary  representation of the
          type in the internal format of the backend server.
          It  is the programmer's responsibility to cast and
          convert the data to the correct C type.  The value
          returned  by  PQgetvalue points to storage that is
          part of the PGresult structure.  One must  explicitly 
          copy the value into other storage if it is to
          be used past the lifetime of the  PGresult  structure itself.
<ProgramListing>
char* PQgetvalue(PGresult *res,
                 int tup_num,
                 int field_num);
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>

T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 449 450 451
<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQgetisnull</Function>
           Tests a field for a NULL entry.
<ProgramListing>
int PQgetisnull(PGresult *res,
                int tup_num,
                int field_num);
</ProgramListing>
            This function returns  1 if the field contains a NULL, 0 if
            it contains a known value..
</Para>
</ListItem>

452 453 454 455 456 457 458 459 460 461
<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQgetlength</Function>
            Returns   the   length  of  a  field
          (attribute) in bytes.  If the field  is  a  struct
          varlena, the length returned here does not include
          the size field of the varlena, i.e., it is 4 bytes
          less.
<ProgramListing>
int PQgetlength(PGresult *res,
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
462 463
                int tup_num,
                int field_num);
464 465 466 467 468 469 470 471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>

<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQcmdStatus</Function>
          Returns  the  command  status  associated with the
          last query command.
<ProgramListing>
char *PQcmdStatus(PGresult *res);
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>

T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
479 480 481 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 490 491
<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQcmdTuples</Function>
	  Returns the number of rows affected by the last command.
<ProgramListing>
const char *PQcmdTuples(PGresult *res);
</ProgramListing>
          If the last command was INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE, this returns
          a string containing the number of rows affected.  If the last
          command was anything else, it returns the empty string.
</Para>
</ListItem>

492 493 494 495 496 497 498 499 500 501 502 503
<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQoidStatus</Function>
          Returns a string with the object id of  the  tuple
          inserted  if  the last query is an INSERT command.
          Otherwise, returns an empty string.
<ProgramListing>
char* PQoidStatus(PGresult *res);
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>

T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
504 505 506 507 508 509 510 511 512 513 514 515 516 517 518 519 520 521 522 523 524 525 526 527 528 529 530 531 532
<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQprint</Function>
          Prints out all the  tuples  and,  optionally,  the
          attribute  names  to  the specified output stream.
<ProgramListing>
void PQprint(FILE* fout,      /* output stream */
             PGresult* res,
             PQprintOpt* po);

struct _PQprintOpt
	{
		pqbool	header;	     /* print output field headings and row count */
		pqbool	align;	     /* fill align the fields */
		pqbool	standard;    /* old brain dead format */
		pqbool	html3;	     /* output html tables */
		pqbool	expanded;    /* expand tables */
		pqbool	pager;	     /* use pager for output if needed */
		char	*fieldSep;   /* field separator */
		char	*tableOpt;   /* insert to HTML &lt;table ...&gt; */
		char	*caption;    /* HTML &lt;caption&gt; */
		char	**fieldName; /* null terminated array of replacement field names */
	};
</ProgramListing>
	This funtion is intended to replace PQprintTuples(), which is
	now obsolete.
</Para>
</ListItem>

533 534 535 536 537 538
<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQprintTuples</Function>
          Prints out all the  tuples  and,  optionally,  the
          attribute  names  to  the specified output stream.
<ProgramListing>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
539 540 541 542 543 544 545 546 547 548 549 550 551 552 553 554
void PQprintTuples(PGresult* res,
                   FILE* fout,      /* output stream */
                   int printAttName,/* print attribute names or not*/
                   int terseOutput, /* delimiter bars or not?*/
                   int width);      /* width of column, variable width if 0*/
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>

<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQdisplayTuples</Function>
          Prints out all the  tuples  and,  optionally,  the
          attribute  names  to  the specified output stream.
<ProgramListing>
void PQdisplayTuples(
555
                     PGresult* res,
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
556 557 558 559 560
                     FILE* fout,           /* output stream */
                     int fillAlign,        /* space fill to align columns */
                     const char *fieldSep, /* field separator */
	                 int printHeader,      /* display headers? */
		             int quiet);           /* suppress print of row count at end */
561
</ProgramListing>
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
562 563
          PQdisplayTuples() was intended to supersede PQprintTuples(), and
          is in turn superseded by PQprint().
564 565 566 567 568 569 570 571 572 573 574 575 576 577 578 579 580 581
</Para>
</ListItem>
<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQclear</Function>
          Frees  the  storage  associated with the PGresult.
          Every query result should be properly  freed  when
          it  is  no  longer  used.  Failure to do this will
          result in memory leaks in  the  frontend  application.
<ProgramListing>
void PQclear(PQresult *res);
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>
</ItemizedList>
</Para>
</Sect1>

B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
582 583 584 585 586 587 588 589 590 591 592 593 594 595 596 597 598 599 600 601 602 603 604 605 606 607 608 609 610 611 612 613 614 615 616 617 618 619 620 621 622 623 624 625 626 627 628 629 630 631 632 633 634 635 636 637 638 639 640 641 642 643 644 645 646 647 648 649 650 651 652 653 654 655 656 657 658 659 660 661 662 663 664 665 666 667 668 669 670 671 672 673 674 675 676 677 678 679 680 681 682 683 684 685 686 687 688 689 690 691 692 693 694 695 696 697 698 699 700 701 702 703 704 705 706 707 708 709 710 711 712 713 714 715 716 717 718 719 720 721 722 723 724 725 726 727 728 729 730 731 732 733 734 735 736 737 738 739 740 741 742 743 744 745 746 747 748 749 750 751 752 753 754 755 756 757 758 759 760 761 762 763 764 765 766 767 768 769 770 771 772 773 774 775 776 777 778 779 780 781 782
<Sect1>
<Title>Asynchronous Query Processing</Title>

<Para>
The PQexec function is adequate for submitting queries in simple synchronous
applications.  It has a couple of major deficiencies however:

<Para>
<ItemizedList>
<ListItem>
<Para>
PQexec waits for the query to be completed.  The application may have other
work to do (such as maintaining a user interface), in which case it won't
want to block waiting for the response.
</Para>
</ListItem>
<ListItem>
<Para>
Since control is buried inside PQexec, there is no way for the frontend
to decide it would like to try to cancel the ongoing query.
</Para>
</ListItem>
<ListItem>
<Para>
PQexec can return only one PGresult structure.  If the submitted query
string contains multiple SQL commands, all but the last PGresult are
discarded by PQexec.
</Para>
</ListItem>
</ItemizedList>
</Para>

<Para>
Applications that do not like these limitations can instead use the
underlying functions that PQexec is built from: PQsendQuery and
PQgetResult.

<Para>
<ItemizedList>
<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQsendQuery</Function>
          Submit a query to <ProductName>Postgres</ProductName> without
	  waiting for the result(s).  TRUE is returned if the query was
	  successfully dispatched, FALSE if not (in which case, use
	  PQerrorMessage to get more information about the failure).
<ProgramListing>
int PQsendQuery(PGconn *conn,
                const char *query);
</ProgramListing>
	  After successfully calling PQsendQuery, call PQgetResult one or more
	  times to obtain the query results.  PQsendQuery may not be called
	  again (on the same connection) until PQgetResult has returned NULL,
	  indicating that the query is done.
</Para>
</ListItem>

<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQgetResult</Function>
          Wait for the next result from a prior PQsendQuery,
	  and return it.  NULL is returned when the query is complete
	  and there will be no more results.
<ProgramListing>
PGresult *PQgetResult(PGconn *conn);
</ProgramListing>
	  PQgetResult must be called repeatedly until it returns NULL,
	  indicating that the query is done.  (If called when no query is
	  active, PQgetResult will just return NULL at once.)
	  Each non-null result from PQgetResult should be processed using
	  the same PGresult accessor functions previously described.
	  Don't forget to free each result object with PQclear when done with it.
	  Note that PQgetResult will block only if a query is active and the
	  necessary response data has not yet been read by PQconsumeInput.
</Para>
</ListItem>

</ItemizedList>
</Para>

<Para>
Using PQsendQuery and PQgetResult solves one of PQexec's problems:
if a query string contains multiple SQL commands, the results of those
commands can be obtained individually.  (This allows a simple form of
overlapped processing, by the way: the frontend can be handling the
results of one query while the backend is still working on later
queries in the same query string.)  However, calling PQgetResult will
still cause the frontend to block until the backend completes the
next SQL command.  This can be avoided by proper use of three more
functions:

<Para>
<ItemizedList>
<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQconsumeInput</Function>
	  If input is available from the backend, consume it.
<ProgramListing>
void PQconsumeInput(PGconn *conn);
</ProgramListing>
	  No direct return value is available from PQconsumeInput, but
	  after calling it, the application may check PQisBusy and/or
	  PQnotifies to see if their state has changed.
	  PQconsumeInput may be called even if the application is not
	  prepared to deal with a result or notification just yet.
	  It will read available data and save it in a buffer, thereby
	  causing a select(2) read-ready indication to go away.  The
	  application can thus use PQconsumeInput to clear the select
	  condition immediately, and then examine the results at leisure.
</Para>
</ListItem>

<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQisBusy</Function>
	  Returns TRUE if a query is busy, that is, PQgetResult would block
	  waiting for input.  A FALSE return indicates that PQgetResult can
	  be called with assurance of not blocking.
<ProgramListing>
int PQisBusy(PGconn *conn);
</ProgramListing>
	  PQisBusy will not itself attempt to read data from the backend;
	  therefore PQconsumeInput must be invoked first, or the busy
	  state will never end.
</Para>
</ListItem>

<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQsocket</Function>
	  Obtain the file descriptor number for the backend connection socket.
	  A valid descriptor will be >= 0; a result of -1 indicates that
	  no backend connection is currently open.
<ProgramListing>
int PQsocket(PGconn *conn);
</ProgramListing>
	  PQsocket should be used to obtain the backend socket descriptor
	  in preparation for executing select(2).  This allows an application
	  to wait for either backend responses or other conditions.
	  If the result of select(2) indicates that data can be read from
	  the backend socket, then PQconsumeInput should be called to read the
	  data; after which, PQisBusy, PQgetResult, and/or PQnotifies can be
	  used to process the response.
</Para>
</ListItem>

</ItemizedList>
</Para>

<Para>
A typical frontend using these functions will have a main loop that uses
select(2) to wait for all the conditions that it must respond to.  One of
the conditions will be input available from the backend, which in select's
terms is readable data on the file descriptor identified by PQsocket.
When the main loop detects input ready, it should call PQconsumeInput
to read the input.  It can then call PQisBusy, followed by PQgetResult
if PQisBusy returns FALSE.  It can also call PQnotifies to detect NOTIFY
messages (see "Asynchronous Notification", below).  An example is given
in the sample programs section.

<Para>
A frontend that uses PQsendQuery/PQgetResult can also attempt to cancel
a query that is still being processed by the backend.

<Para>
<ItemizedList>
<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQrequestCancel</Function>
	  Request that <ProductName>Postgres</ProductName> abandon
	  processing of the current query.
<ProgramListing>
int PQrequestCancel(PGconn *conn);
</ProgramListing>
	  The return value is TRUE if the cancel request was successfully
	  dispatched, FALSE if not.  (If not, PQerrorMessage tells why not.)
	  Successful dispatch is no guarantee that the request will have any
	  effect, however.  Regardless of the return value of PQrequestCancel,
	  the application must continue with the normal result-reading
	  sequence using PQgetResult.  If the cancellation
	  is effective, the current query will terminate early and return
	  an error result.  If the cancellation fails (say because the
	  backend was already done processing the query), then there will
	  be no visible result at all.
</Para>
</ListItem>
</ItemizedList>
</Para>

<Para>
Note that if the current query is part of a transaction, cancellation
will abort the whole transaction.

<Para>
The current implementation of cancel requests uses "out of band" messages.
This feature is supported only on TCP/IP connections.  If the backend
communication is being done through a Unix socket, PQrequestCancel will
always fail.

</Sect1>

783 784 785 786 787 788 789 790 791 792 793 794 795 796 797 798 799 800 801 802 803 804 805 806 807 808 809 810 811 812 813 814 815
<Sect1>
<Title>Fast Path</Title>

<Para>
<ItemizedList>
<ListItem>
<Para>
<ProductName>Postgres</ProductName>  provides  a fast path interface to send function
 calls to the backend.  This  is  a  trapdoor  into
     system  internals and can be a potential security hole.
     Most users will not need this feature.
<ProgramListing>
PGresult* PQfn(PGconn* conn,
               int fnid,
               int *result_buf,
               int *result_len,
               int result_is_int,
               PQArgBlock *args,
               int nargs);
</ProgramListing>
     The fnid argument is the object identifier of the function to be executed.  result_buf is the buffer in which
     to load the return value.  The caller must  have  allocated  sufficient space to store the return value.  The
     result length will be returned in the  storage  pointed
     to  by  result_len.   If the result is to be an integer
     value, than result_is_int should be set to 1; otherwise
     it  should  be  set  to  0.  args and nargs specify the
     arguments to the function.
<ProgramListing>
typedef struct {
             int len;
             int isint;
             union {
                 int *ptr;
T
Thomas G. Lockhart 已提交
816
                 int integer;
817 818 819 820 821 822 823 824 825 826 827 828 829 830 831 832 833
             } u;
         } PQArgBlock;
</ProgramListing>
     PQfn always returns a valid PGresult*.  The  resultStatus  should be checked before the result is used.   The
     caller is responsible for  freeing  the  PGresult  with
     PQclear when it is not longer needed.
</Para>
</ListItem>
</ItemizedList>
</Para>

</Sect1>

<Sect1>
<Title>Asynchronous Notification</Title>

<Para>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
834 835 836 837 838 839 840 841 842 843 844 845 846 847
<ProductName>Postgres</ProductName> supports asynchronous notification via the
LISTEN and NOTIFY commands.  A backend registers its interest in a particular
notification condition with the LISTEN command.  All backends listening on a
particular condition will be notified asynchronously when a NOTIFY of that
condition name is executed by any backend.  No additional information is
passed from the notifier to the listener.  Thus, typically, any actual data
that needs to be communicated is transferred through a database relation.
Commonly the condition name is the same as the associated relation, but it is
not necessary for there to be any associated relation.

<Para>
<FileName>libpq</FileName> applications submit LISTEN commands as ordinary
SQL queries.  Subsequently, arrival of NOTIFY messages can be detected by
calling PQnotifies().
848 849 850 851 852

<Para>
<ItemizedList>
<ListItem>
<Para>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
853 854 855 856 857 858 859
<Function>PQnotifies</Function>
          Returns  the next notification from a list of unhandled
          notification messages received from the backend.  Returns NULL if
          there are no pending notifications.  PQnotifies behaves like the
	  popping of a stack.  Once a notification is returned from
	  PQnotifies, it is considered handled and will be removed from the
	  list of notifications.
860
<ProgramListing>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
861
PGnotify* PQnotifies(PGconn *conn);
862
</ProgramListing>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
863 864 865 866
	  After processing a PGnotify object returned by PQnotifies,
	  be sure to free it with free() to avoid a memory leak.
	  The  second  sample program gives an example of the use
	  of asynchronous notification.
867 868 869 870 871
</Para>
</ListItem>
</ItemizedList>
</Para>

B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
872 873 874 875 876 877 878 879 880 881 882 883 884 885 886 887
<Para>
PQnotifies() does not actually read backend data; it just returns messages
previously absorbed by another <FileName>libpq</FileName> function.  In prior
releases of <FileName>libpq</FileName>, the only way to ensure timely receipt
of NOTIFY messages was to constantly submit queries, even empty ones, and then
check PQnotifies() after each PQexec().  While this still works, it is
deprecated as a waste of processing power.  A better way to check for NOTIFY
messages when you have no useful queries to make is to call PQconsumeInput(),
then check PQnotifies().  You can use select(2) to wait for backend data to
arrive, thereby using no CPU power unless there is something to do.  Note that
this will work OK whether you use PQsendQuery/PQgetResult or plain old PQexec
for queries.  You should, however, remember to check PQnotifies() after each
PQgetResult or PQexec to see if any notifications came in during the
processing of the query.
</Para>

888 889 890 891 892 893 894 895 896 897 898 899
</Sect1>

<Sect1>
<Title>Functions Associated with the COPY Command</Title>

<Para>
     The copy command in <ProductName>Postgres</ProductName> has options to  read  from
     or  write  to  the  network  connection  used by <FileName>libpq</FileName>.
     Therefore, functions are necessary to access this  network  connection directly so applications may take full
     advantage of this capability.
</Para>

B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
900 901 902 903 904
<Para>
     These functions should be executed only after obtaining a PGRES_COPY_OUT
     or PGRES_COPY_IN result object from PQexec or PQgetResult.
</Para>

905 906 907 908 909 910 911 912 913 914 915 916 917 918
<Para>
<ItemizedList>
<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQgetline</Function>
          Reads  a  newline-terminated  line  of  characters
          (transmitted  by the backend server) into a buffer
          string of size length.  Like fgets(3),  this  routine copies up to length-1 characters into string.
          It is like gets(3), however, in that  it  converts
          the terminating newline into a null character.
          PQgetline returns EOF at EOF, 0 if the entire line
          has been read, and 1 if the buffer is full but the
          terminating newline has not yet been read.
          Notice that the application must check to see if a
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
919
          new line consists of  the  two characters  "\.",
920 921 922 923 924 925 926 927 928 929 930 931 932 933 934 935 936 937 938 939 940 941
          which  indicates  that the backend server has finished sending the results  of  the  copy  command.
          Therefore,  if  the  application  ever  expects to
          receive lines that are more than length-1  characters  long,  the application must be sure to check
          the return value of PQgetline very carefully.
          The code in
<FileName>
../src/bin/psql/psql.c
</FileName>
          contains routines that correctly handle  the  copy
          protocol.
<ProgramListing>
int PQgetline(PGconn *conn,
              char *string,
              int length)
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>
<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQputline</Function>
          Sends  a  null-terminated  string  to  the backend
          server.
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
942 943
          The application must explicitly  send  the  two
          characters  "\." on a final line  to indicate to the backend that it
944 945 946 947 948 949 950 951 952 953 954 955 956 957 958 959 960 961 962 963 964 965 966 967 968 969
          has finished sending its data.
<ProgramListing>
void PQputline(PGconn *conn,
               char *string);
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>

<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQendcopy</Function>
          Syncs with the backend.  This function waits until
          the  backend  has  finished  the  copy.  It should
          either be issued when the  last  string  has  been
          sent  to  the  backend using PQputline or when the
          last string has been  received  from  the  backend
          using PGgetline.  It must be issued or the backend
          may get "out of sync"  with  the  frontend.   Upon
          return from this function, the backend is ready to
          receive the next query.
          The return value is 0  on  successful  completion,
          nonzero otherwise.
<ProgramListing>
int PQendcopy(PGconn *conn);
</ProgramListing>
<ProgramListing>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
970
PQexec(conn, "create table foo (a int4, b char16, d float8)");
971 972 973 974
PQexec(conn, "copy foo from stdin");
PQputline(conn, "3&lt;TAB&gt;hello world&lt;TAB&gt;4.5\n");
PQputline(conn,"4&lt;TAB&gt;goodbye world&lt;TAB&gt;7.11\n");
...
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
975
PQputline(conn,"\\.\n");
976 977 978 979 980 981
PQendcopy(conn);
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>
</ItemizedList>
</Para>
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
982 983 984 985 986 987 988 989 990 991 992 993 994 995 996 997 998

<Para>
When using PQgetResult, the application should respond to
a PGRES_COPY_OUT result by executing PQgetline repeatedly,
followed by PQendcopy after the terminator line is seen.
It should then return to the PQgetResult loop until PQgetResult
returns NULL.  Similarly a PGRES_COPY_IN result is processed
by a series of PQputline calls followed by PQendcopy, then
return to the PQgetResult loop.  This arrangement will ensure that
a copy in or copy out command embedded in a series of SQL commands
will be executed correctly.
Older applications are likely to submit a copy in or copy out
via PQexec and assume that the transaction is done after PQendcopy.
This will work correctly only if the copy in/out is the only
SQL command in the query string.
</Para>

999 1000 1001 1002 1003 1004 1005 1006 1007 1008 1009 1010 1011 1012 1013 1014 1015 1016 1017 1018 1019 1020 1021 1022 1023 1024 1025 1026 1027 1028 1029 1030 1031 1032 1033 1034 1035 1036 1037 1038 1039 1040 1041 1042 1043 1044 1045 1046 1047 1048 1049 1050 1051 1052 1053 1054 1055 1056 1057 1058 1059 1060 1061 1062 1063 1064 1065 1066 1067 1068 1069 1070 1071 1072 1073 1074 1075 1076 1077 1078 1079 1080 1081 1082 1083
</Sect1>

<Sect1>
<Title><FileName>libpq</FileName> Tracing Functions</Title>

<Para>
<ItemizedList>
<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQtrace</Function>
          Enable  tracing of the frontend/backend communication to a debugging file stream.
<ProgramListing>
void PQtrace(PGconn *conn
             FILE *debug_port)
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>

<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>PQuntrace</Function>
          Disable tracing started by PQtrace
<ProgramListing>
void PQuntrace(PGconn *conn)
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>
</ItemizedList>
</Para>

</Sect1>

<Sect1>
<Title>User Authentication Functions</Title>

<Para>
     If the user has generated the  appropriate  authentication  credentials
  (e.g.,  obtaining <Acronym>Kerberos</Acronym> tickets),
     the frontend/backend authentication process is  handled
     by  <Function>PQexec</Function>  without any further intervention.
  The following routines may be called by <FileName>libpq</FileName> programs to tailor the behavior of the authentication process.
</Para>

<Para>
<ItemizedList>
<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>fe_getauthname</Function>
          Returns a pointer to static space containing whatever name the user has authenticated.  Use of this
          routine  in  place  of calls to getenv(3) or getpwuid(3) by applications is highly recommended,  as
          it  is  entirely  possible  that the authenticated
          user name is not the same as  value  of  the  <Acronym>USER</Acronym>
          environment   variable  or  the  user's  entry  in
          <FileName>/etc/passwd</FileName>.
<ProgramListing>
char *fe_getauthname(char* errorMessage)
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</ListItem>

<ListItem>
<Para>
<Function>fe_setauthsvc</Function>
          Specifies that  <FileName>libpq</FileName>  should  use  authentication
          service  name rather than its compiled-in default.
          This value is typically taken from a  command-line
          switch.
<ProgramListing>
void fe_setauthsvc(char *name,
                   char* errorMessage)
</ProgramListing>
          Any   error   messages   from  the  authentication
          attempts are returned in  the  errorMessage  argument.
</Para>
</ListItem>
</ItemizedList>
</Para>

</Sect1>

<Sect1>
<Title>BUGS</Title>

<Para>
     The  query  buffer is 8192 bytes long, and queries over
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
1084
     that length will be rejected.
1085 1086 1087 1088 1089 1090 1091 1092 1093 1094 1095 1096 1097 1098 1099 1100 1101 1102 1103 1104 1105 1106 1107 1108 1109 1110 1111 1112 1113 1114 1115 1116 1117 1118 1119 1120 1121 1122 1123 1124 1125 1126 1127 1128 1129 1130 1131 1132 1133 1134 1135 1136 1137 1138
</Para>
</Sect1>

<Sect1>
<Title>Sample Programs</Title>

<Sect2>
<Title>Sample Program 1</Title>

<Para>
<ProgramListing>
         /*
          * testlibpq.c
          *   Test the C version of LIBPQ, the <ProductName>Postgres</ProductName> frontend library.
          *
          *
          */
         #include &lt;stdio.h&gt;
         #include "libpq-fe.h"

         void
         exit_nicely(PGconn* conn)
         {
           PQfinish(conn);
           exit(1);
         }

         main()
         {
           char *pghost, *pgport, *pgoptions, *pgtty;
           char* dbName;
           int nFields;
           int i,j;

         /*  FILE *debug; */

           PGconn* conn;
           PGresult* res;

           /* begin, by setting the parameters for a backend connection
              if the parameters are null, then the system will try to use
              reasonable defaults by looking up environment variables
              or, failing that, using hardwired constants */
           pghost = NULL;  /* host name of the backend server */
           pgport = NULL;  /* port of the backend server */
           pgoptions = NULL; /* special options to start up the backend server */
           pgtty = NULL;     /* debugging tty for the backend server */
           dbName = "template1";

           /* make a connection to the database */
           conn = PQsetdb(pghost, pgport, pgoptions, pgtty, dbName);

           /* check to see that the backend connection was successfully made */
           if (PQstatus(conn) == CONNECTION_BAD) {
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
1139
             fprintf(stderr,"Connection to database '&percnt;s' failed.\n", dbName);
1140 1141 1142 1143 1144 1145 1146 1147 1148 1149 1150
             fprintf(stderr,"&percnt;s",PQerrorMessage(conn));
             exit_nicely(conn);
           }

         /*  debug = fopen("/tmp/trace.out","w");  */
         /*   PQtrace(conn, debug);  */

           /* start a transaction block */

           res = PQexec(conn,"BEGIN");
           if (PQresultStatus(res) != PGRES_COMMAND_OK) {
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
1151
             fprintf(stderr,"BEGIN command failed\n");
1152 1153 1154 1155 1156 1157 1158 1159 1160 1161
             PQclear(res);
             exit_nicely(conn);
           }
           /* should PQclear PGresult whenever it is no longer needed to avoid
              memory leaks */
           PQclear(res);

           /* fetch instances from the pg_database, the system catalog of databases*/
           res = PQexec(conn,"DECLARE myportal CURSOR FOR select * from pg_database");
           if (PQresultStatus(res) != PGRES_COMMAND_OK) {
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
1162
             fprintf(stderr,"DECLARE CURSOR command failed\n");
1163 1164 1165 1166 1167 1168 1169
             PQclear(res);
             exit_nicely(conn);
           }
           PQclear(res);

           res = PQexec(conn,"FETCH ALL in myportal");
           if (PQresultStatus(res) != PGRES_TUPLES_OK) {
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
1170
             fprintf(stderr,"FETCH ALL command didn't return tuples properly\n");
1171 1172 1173 1174 1175 1176 1177 1178 1179
             PQclear(res);
             exit_nicely(conn);
           }

           /* first, print out the attribute names */
           nFields = PQnfields(res);
           for (i=0; i &lt; nFields; i++) {
             printf("&percnt;-15s",PQfname(res,i));
           }
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
1180
           printf("\n");
1181 1182 1183 1184 1185 1186

           /* next, print out the instances */
           for (i=0; i &lt; PQntuples(res); i++) {
             for (j=0  ; j &lt; nFields; j++) {
               printf("&percnt;-15s", PQgetvalue(res,i,j));
             }
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
1187
             printf("\n");
1188 1189 1190 1191 1192 1193 1194 1195 1196 1197 1198 1199 1200 1201 1202 1203 1204 1205 1206 1207 1208 1209 1210 1211 1212 1213 1214 1215 1216 1217 1218 1219 1220 1221 1222 1223 1224 1225 1226 1227 1228 1229 1230 1231 1232 1233 1234 1235 1236 1237 1238 1239 1240 1241 1242 1243 1244 1245 1246 1247 1248 1249 1250 1251 1252 1253 1254 1255 1256 1257 1258 1259 1260 1261 1262 1263 1264 1265 1266 1267 1268
           }

           PQclear(res);

           /* close the portal */
           res = PQexec(conn, "CLOSE myportal");
           PQclear(res);

           /* end the transaction */
           res = PQexec(conn, "END");
           PQclear(res);

           /* close the connection to the database and cleanup */
           PQfinish(conn);

         /*   fclose(debug); */
         }
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</Sect2>

<Sect2>
<Title>Sample Program 2</Title>

<Para>
<ProgramListing>
         /*
          * testlibpq2.c
          *   Test of the asynchronous notification interface
          *
            populate a database with the following:

         CREATE TABLE TBL1 (i int4);

         CREATE TABLE TBL2 (i int4);

         CREATE RULE r1 AS ON INSERT TO TBL1 DO [INSERT INTO TBL2 values (new.i); NOTIFY TBL2];

          * Then start up this program
          * After the program has begun, do

         INSERT INTO TBL1 values (10);

          *
          *
          */
         #include &lt;stdio.h&gt;
         #include "libpq-fe.h"

         void exit_nicely(PGconn* conn)
         {
           PQfinish(conn);
           exit(1);
         }

         main()
         {
           char *pghost, *pgport, *pgoptions, *pgtty;
           char* dbName;
           int nFields;
           int i,j;

           PGconn* conn;
           PGresult* res;
           PGnotify* notify;

           /* begin, by setting the parameters for a backend connection
              if the parameters are null, then the system will try to use
              reasonable defaults by looking up environment variables
              or, failing that, using hardwired constants */
           pghost = NULL;  /* host name of the backend server */
           pgport = NULL;  /* port of the backend server */
           pgoptions = NULL; /* special options to start up the backend server */
           pgtty = NULL;     /* debugging tty for the backend server */
           dbName = getenv("USER"); /* change this to the name of your test database*/

           /* make a connection to the database */
           conn = PQsetdb(pghost, pgport, pgoptions, pgtty, dbName);

           /* check to see that the backend connection was successfully made */
           if (PQstatus(conn) == CONNECTION_BAD) {
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
1269
             fprintf(stderr,"Connection to database '&percnt;s' failed.\n", dbName);
1270 1271 1272 1273 1274 1275
             fprintf(stderr,"&percnt;s",PQerrorMessage(conn));
             exit_nicely(conn);
           }

           res = PQexec(conn, "LISTEN TBL2");
           if (PQresultStatus(res) != PGRES_COMMAND_OK) {
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
1276
             fprintf(stderr,"LISTEN command failed\n");
1277 1278 1279 1280 1281 1282 1283 1284
             PQclear(res);
             exit_nicely(conn);
           }
           /* should PQclear PGresult whenever it is no longer needed to avoid
              memory leaks */
           PQclear(res);

           while (1) {
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
1285 1286 1287 1288 1289 1290 1291 1292
	       /* wait a little bit between checks;
	        * waiting with select() would be more efficient.
	        */
	       sleep(1);
	       /* collect any asynchronous backend messages */
	       PQconsumeInput(conn);
               /* check for asynchronous notify messages */
               while ((notify = PQnotifies(conn)) != NULL) {
1293
                fprintf(stderr,
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
1294
                     "ASYNC NOTIFY of '&percnt;s' from backend pid '&percnt;d' received\n",
1295 1296 1297 1298 1299 1300 1301 1302 1303 1304 1305 1306 1307 1308 1309 1310 1311 1312 1313 1314 1315 1316 1317 1318 1319 1320 1321 1322 1323 1324 1325 1326 1327 1328 1329 1330 1331 1332 1333 1334 1335 1336 1337 1338 1339 1340 1341 1342 1343 1344 1345 1346 1347 1348 1349 1350 1351 1352 1353 1354 1355 1356 1357 1358 1359 1360 1361 1362 1363 1364 1365 1366 1367 1368 1369 1370 1371 1372 1373 1374 1375 1376 1377
                     notify-&gt;relname, notify-&gt;be_pid);
                free(notify);
               }
           }

           /* close the connection to the database and cleanup */
           PQfinish(conn);

         }
</ProgramListing>
</Para>
</Sect2>

<Sect2>
<Title>Sample Program 3</Title>

<Para>
<ProgramListing>
         /*
          * testlibpq3.c
          *   Test the C version of LIBPQ, the <ProductName>Postgres</ProductName> frontend library.
          *   tests the binary cursor interface
          *
          *
          *
          populate a database by doing the following:

         CREATE TABLE test1 (i int4, d float4, p polygon);

         INSERT INTO test1 values (1, 3.567, '(3.0, 4.0, 1.0, 2.0)'::polygon);

         INSERT INTO test1 values (2, 89.05, '(4.0, 3.0, 2.0, 1.0)'::polygon);

          the expected output is:

         tuple 0: got
          i = (4 bytes) 1,
          d = (4 bytes) 3.567000,
          p = (4 bytes) 2 points         boundbox = (hi=3.000000/4.000000, lo = 1.000000,2.000000)
         tuple 1: got
          i = (4 bytes) 2,
          d = (4 bytes) 89.050003,
          p = (4 bytes) 2 points         boundbox = (hi=4.000000/3.000000, lo = 2.000000,1.000000)

          *
          */
         #include &lt;stdio.h&gt;
         #include "libpq-fe.h"
         #include "utils/geo-decls.h" /* for the POLYGON type */

         void exit_nicely(PGconn* conn)
         {
           PQfinish(conn);
           exit(1);
         }

         main()
         {
           char *pghost, *pgport, *pgoptions, *pgtty;
           char* dbName;
           int nFields;
           int i,j;
           int i_fnum, d_fnum, p_fnum;

           PGconn* conn;
           PGresult* res;

           /* begin, by setting the parameters for a backend connection
              if the parameters are null, then the system will try to use
              reasonable defaults by looking up environment variables
              or, failing that, using hardwired constants */
           pghost = NULL;  /* host name of the backend server */
           pgport = NULL;  /* port of the backend server */
           pgoptions = NULL; /* special options to start up the backend server */
           pgtty = NULL;     /* debugging tty for the backend server */

           dbName = getenv("USER");  /* change this to the name of your test database*/

           /* make a connection to the database */
           conn = PQsetdb(pghost, pgport, pgoptions, pgtty, dbName);

           /* check to see that the backend connection was successfully made */
           if (PQstatus(conn) == CONNECTION_BAD) {
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
1378
             fprintf(stderr,"Connection to database '&percnt;s' failed.\n", dbName);
1379 1380 1381 1382 1383 1384 1385
             fprintf(stderr,"&percnt;s",PQerrorMessage(conn));
             exit_nicely(conn);
           }

           /* start a transaction block */
           res = PQexec(conn,"BEGIN");
           if (PQresultStatus(res) != PGRES_COMMAND_OK) {
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
1386
             fprintf(stderr,"BEGIN command failed\n");
1387 1388 1389 1390 1391 1392 1393 1394 1395 1396
             PQclear(res);
             exit_nicely(conn);
           }
           /* should PQclear PGresult whenever it is no longer needed to avoid
              memory leaks */
           PQclear(res);

           /* fetch instances from the pg_database, the system catalog of databases*/
           res = PQexec(conn,"DECLARE mycursor BINARY CURSOR FOR select * from test1");
           if (PQresultStatus(res) != PGRES_COMMAND_OK) {
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
1397
             fprintf(stderr,"DECLARE CURSOR command failed\n");
1398 1399 1400 1401 1402 1403 1404
             PQclear(res);
             exit_nicely(conn);
           }
           PQclear(res);

           res = PQexec(conn,"FETCH ALL in mycursor");
           if (PQresultStatus(res) != PGRES_TUPLES_OK) {
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
1405
             fprintf(stderr,"FETCH ALL command didn't return tuples properly\n");
1406 1407 1408 1409 1410 1411 1412 1413 1414
             PQclear(res);
             exit_nicely(conn);
           }

           i_fnum = PQfnumber(res,"i");
           d_fnum = PQfnumber(res,"d");
           p_fnum = PQfnumber(res,"p");

           for (i=0;i&lt;3;i++) {
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
1415
               printf("type[&percnt;d] = &percnt;d, size[&percnt;d] = &percnt;d\n",
1416 1417 1418 1419 1420 1421 1422 1423 1424 1425 1426 1427 1428 1429 1430 1431 1432
                   i, PQftype(res,i),
                   i, PQfsize(res,i));
           }
           for (i=0; i &lt; PQntuples(res); i++) {
             int *ival;
             float *dval;
             int plen;
             POLYGON* pval;
             /*/
             ival =  (int*)PQgetvalue(res,i,i_fnum);
             dval =  (float*)PQgetvalue(res,i,d_fnum);
             plen = PQgetlength(res,i,p_fnum);

             /* plen doesn't include the length field so need to increment by VARHDSZ*/
             pval = (POLYGON*) malloc(plen + VARHDRSZ);
             pval-&gt;size = plen;
             memmove((char*)&amp;pval-&gt;npts, PQgetvalue(res,i,p_fnum), plen);
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
1433 1434
             printf("tuple &percnt;d: got\n", i);
             printf(" i = (&percnt;d bytes) &percnt;d,\n",
1435
                 PQgetlength(res,i,i_fnum), *ival);
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
1436
             printf(" d = (&percnt;d bytes) &percnt;f,\n",
1437
                 PQgetlength(res,i,d_fnum), *dval);
B
Bruce Momjian 已提交
1438
             printf(" p = (&percnt;d bytes) &percnt;d points boundbox = (hi=&percnt;f/&percnt;f, lo = &percnt;f,&percnt;f)\n",
1439 1440 1441 1442 1443 1444 1445 1446 1447 1448 1449 1450 1451 1452 1453 1454 1455 1456 1457 1458 1459 1460 1461 1462 1463 1464 1465 1466
                 PQgetlength(res,i,d_fnum),
                 pval-&gt;npts,
                 pval-&gt;boundbox.xh,
                 pval-&gt;boundbox.yh,
                 pval-&gt;boundbox.xl,
                 pval-&gt;boundbox.yl);
           }

           PQclear(res);

           /* close the portal */
           res = PQexec(conn, "CLOSE mycursor");
           PQclear(res);

           /* end the transaction */
           res = PQexec(conn, "END");
           PQclear(res);

           /* close the connection to the database and cleanup */
           PQfinish(conn);

         }
</ProgramListing>
<Para>

</Sect2>
</Sect1>
</Chapter>