23 Pipelined and Parallel Table Functions

These routines must be implemented to define pipelined and parallel table functions in C.

See Also:

Using Pipelined and Parallel Table Functions for an overall explanation of pipelined and parallel table functions

23.1 Routines for Pipelined and Parallel Table Functions in C

The following C methods, summarized in support parallel and pipelined table functions.

Table 23-1 Summary of Pipelined and Parallel Table Functions for C

Function Description

ODCITableClose()

Performs cleanup operations after scanning a table function.

ODCITableDescribe()

Returns describe information for a table function whose return type is ANYDATASET.

ODCITableFetch()

returns the next batch of rows from a table function.

ODCITablePrepare()

Prepares the scan context and other query information at compile time.

ODCITableStart()

initializes the scan of a table function.

23.1.1 ODCITableClose()

ODCITableClose performs cleanup operations after scanning a table function.

Syntax

MEMBER FUNCTION ODCITableClose(
   self IN <imptype>) 
RETURN NUMBER;
Parameter In/Out Description
self
IN

The scan context set up by previous scan routine invocation

Returns

ODCIConst.Success on success, ODCIConst.Error otherwise.

Usage Notes

  • Oracle invokes ODCITableClose after the last fetch call. The scan context is passed in as a parameter. ODCITableClose then performs any necessary cleanup operations, such as freeing memory.

  • If ODCITablePrepare is implemented, this routine is only called one time, at the end of query execution, rather than each time the table function exits.

23.1.2 ODCITableDescribe()

ODCITableDescribe returns describe information for a table function whose return type is ANYDATASET.

Syntax

STATIC FUNCTION ODCITableDescribe(
   rtype OUT ANYTYPE, 
   <args>) 
RETURN NUMBER;
Parameter In/Out Description
rtype
OUT

The AnyType value that describes the returned rows from the table function

args
IN

The set of zero or more user specified arguments for the table function.

Returns

ODCIConst.Success on success, ODCIConst.Error otherwise.

Usage Notes

  • If the optional routine ODCITableDescribe is implemented, Oracle invokes it at query compilation time to retrieve the specific type information.

  • This interface is applicable only for table functions whose return type is ANYDATASET. The format of elements within the returned collection is conveyed to Oracle by returning an instance of ANYTYPE. The ANYTYPE instance specifies the actual structure of the returned rows of the specific query.

  • ANYTYPE provides a data type to model the metadata of a row: the names and data types of all the columns (fields) comprising the row. It also provides a set of PL/SQL and C interfaces for users to construct and access the metadata information. ANYDATASET, like ANYTYPE, contains a description of a given type, but ANYDATASET also contains a set of data instances of that type

  • The following example shows a query on a table function that uses the ANYDATASET type:

    SELECT * FROM 
    TABLE(CAST(AnyBooks('http://.../books.xml') AS ANYDATASET));
    

    At query compilation time, Oracle invokes the ODCITableDescribe routine. The routine typically uses the user arguments to figure out the nature of the return rows. In this example, ODCITableDescribe consults the DTD of the XML documents at the specified location to determine the appropriate ANYTYPE value to return. Each ANYTYPE instance is constructed by invoking the constructor APIs with this field name and data type information.

  • Any arguments of the table function that are not constants are passed to ODCITableDescribe as NULLs because their values are not known at compile time.

See Also:

Transient and Generic Types for a discussion of ANYTYPE, ANYDATA, and ANYDATASET

23.1.3 ODCITableFetch()

ODCITableFetch returns the next batch of rows from a table function.

Syntax

MEMBER FUNCTION ODCITableFetch(
   self IN OUT <imptype>, 
   nrows IN NUMBER, 
   rws OUT <coll-type>) 
RETURN NUMBER;
Parameter In/Out Description
self
IN OUT

The in-bound is the scan context set up by previous scan routine invocation; the outbound is the scan context to be passed to later scan routine invocations.

nrows
IN

The number of rows the system expects in the current fetch cycle. The method can ignore this value and return a different number of rows. If fewer rows are returned, the method is called again; if more rows are returned, they are processed in the next cycle.

rws
OUT

The next batch of rows from the table function. This is returned as an instance of the same collection type as the return type of the table function.

Returns

ODCIConst.Success on success, ODCIConst.Error otherwise.

Usage Notes

  • ODCITableFetch is invoked one or more times by Oracle to retrieve all the rows in the collection returned by the table function. The scan context is passed in as a parameter. Typically ODCITableFetch uses the input scan context and computes the next set of rows to be returned to Oracle. In addition, it may update the scan context accordingly.

  • Returning more rows in each invocation of fetch() reduces the number of fetch calls that must be made and thus improves performance.

  • Oracle calls ODCITableFetch repeatedly until all rows in the table function's collection have been returned. When all rows have been returned, ODCITableFetch should return a null collection.

23.1.4 ODCITablePrepare()

Prepares the scan context and other query information at compile time.

Syntax

STATIC FUNCTION ODCITablePrepare(
   sctx OUT <imptype>, 
   tf_info SYS.ODCITabFuncInfo,
   args);
Parameter In/Out Description
sctx
OUT

The scan context returned by this routine. This value is passed in as a parameter to the later scan routines. The scan context is an instance of the object type containing the implementation of the ODCITable routines.

tf_info

Contains the projection information and the return type's table descriptor object (TDO):

  • Attrs (SYS.ODCINumberList): lists the positions of the referenced attributes of the table function's output collection type

  • RefType (SYS.AnyType): for AnyDataSet table functions, this is the actual return type expected to be returned in the AnyDataSet collection.

args
IN

The arguments that are passed to the table function. This method is invoked at compile time; thus, only literal arguments have values. Column and expression arguments are passed as null values.

Usage Notes

  • This method prepares the scan context based on the information known at compile time. This scan context is passed to ODCITableStart when it is called at the beginning of query execution.

  • If this optional method is implemented, ODCITableClose is only called one time, at the end of query execution. Each time the table function is restarted, ODCITableStart is called and passed the scan context. This allows the table function to maintain context between restarts, and to perform cleanup operations only one time at the end of query execution.

23.1.5 ODCITableStart()

ODCITableStart initializes the scan of a table function.

Syntax

STATIC FUNCTION ODCITableStart(
   sctx IN OUT <imptype>, 
   <args>) 
RETURN NUMBER;
Parameter In/Out Description
self
IN OUT

The scan context returned by this routine. This value is passed in as a parameter to the later scan routines. The scan context is an instance of the object type containing the implementation of the ODCITable routines. If ODCITablePrepare is implemented, the scan context it creates is passed in to ODCITableStart.

args
IN

Set of zero or more arguments specified by the user for the table function

rws
OUT

The next batch of rows from the table function. This is returned as an instance of the same collection type as the return type of the table function.

Returns

ODCIConst.Success on success, ODCIConst.Error otherwise.

Usage Notes

  • If ODCITablePrepare is not implemented, this is the first routine that is invoked to begin retrieving rows from a table function. This routine typically performs the setup needed for the scan. The scan context is created (as an object instance sctx) and returned to Oracle. The arguments to the table function, specified by the user in the SELECT statement, are passed in as parameters to this routine. If ODCITablePrepare is implemented, it creates the scan context at compile time, and that scan context is passed in to this routine.

  • Any REF CURSOR arguments of the table function must be declared as SYS_REFCURSOR type in the declaration of the ODCITableStart method.