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8 Using PL/SQL Subprograms

This chapter shows you how to turn sets of statements into reusable subprograms. Subprograms are like building blocks for modular, maintainable applications.

This chapter contains these topics:

What Are Subprograms?

Subprograms are named PL/SQL blocks that can be called with a set of parameters. PL/SQL has two types of subprograms, procedures and functions. Generally, you use a procedure to perform an action and a function to compute a value.

Similar to anonymous blocks, subprograms have:

  • A declarative part, with declarations of types, cursors, constants, variables, exceptions, and nested subprograms. These items are local and cease to exist when the subprogram ends.

  • An executable part, with statements that assign values, control execution, and manipulate Oracle data.

  • An optional exception-handling part, which deals with runtime error conditions.

Example 8-1 shows a string-manipulation procedure double that accepts both input and output parameters, and handles potential errors.

Example 8-1 Simple PL/SQL Procedure

DECLARE
  in_string  VARCHAR2(100) := 'This is my test string.';
  out_string VARCHAR2(200);
  PROCEDURE double ( original IN VARCHAR2, new_string OUT VARCHAR2 ) AS
    BEGIN
      new_string := original || ' + ' || original;
      EXCEPTION
      WHEN VALUE_ERROR THEN
        DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('Output buffer not long enough.');
    END;
BEGIN
  double(in_string, out_string);
  DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE(in_string || ' - ' || out_string);
END;
/

Example 8-2 shows a numeric function square that declares a local variable to hold temporary results, and returns a value when finished.

Example 8-2 Simple PL/SQL Function

DECLARE
  FUNCTION square(original NUMBER)
    RETURN NUMBER AS original_squared NUMBER;
    BEGIN
      original_squared := original * original;
      RETURN original_squared;
    END;
BEGIN
  DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE(square(100));
END;
/


Note:


Advantages of PL/SQL Subprograms

Subprograms let you extend the PL/SQL language. Procedures act like new statements. Functions act like new expressions and operators.

Subprograms let you break a program down into manageable, well-defined modules. You can use top-down design and the stepwise refinement approach to problem solving.

Subprograms promote reusability. Once tested, a subprogram can be reused in any number of applications. You can call PL/SQL subprograms from many different environments, so that you do not have to reinvent the wheel each time you use a new language or API to access the database.

Subprograms promote maintainability. You can change the internals of a subprogram without changing other subprograms that call it. Subprograms play a big part in other maintainability features, such as packages and object types.

Dummy subprograms (stubs) let you defer the definition of procedures and functions until after testing the main program. You can design applications from the top down, thinking abstractly, without worrying about implementation details.

When you use PL/SQL subprograms to define an API, you can make your code even more reusable and maintainable by grouping the subprograms into a PL/SQL package. For more information about packages, see Chapter 9, "Using PL/SQL Packages".

Understanding PL/SQL Procedures

A procedure is a subprogram that performs a specific action. You specify the name of the procedure, its parameters, its local variables, and the BEGIN-END block that contains its code and handles any exceptions. For information on the syntax of the PROCEDURE declaration, see "Procedure Declaration".

For each parameter, you specify:

  • Its name.

  • Its parameter mode (IN, OUT, or IN OUT). If you omit the mode, the default is IN. The optional NOCOPY keyword speeds up processing of large OUT or IN OUT parameters.

  • Its datatype. You specify only the type, not any length or precision constraints.

  • Optionally, its default value.

You can specify whether the procedure executes using the schema and permissions of the user who defined it, or the user who calls it. For more information, see "Using Invoker's Rights Versus Definer's Rights (AUTHID Clause)".

You can specify whether it should be part of the current transaction, or execute in its own transaction where it can COMMIT or ROLLBACK without ending the transaction of the caller. For more information, see "Doing Independent Units of Work with Autonomous Transactions".

A procedure has two parts: the specification (spec for short) and the body. The procedure spec begins with the keyword PROCEDURE and ends with the procedure name or a parameter list, followed by the reserved word IS (or AS). Parameter declarations are optional. Procedures that take no parameters are written without parentheses.

The procedure body begins with the reserved word IS (or AS) and ends with the keyword END followed by an optional procedure name. The procedure body has three parts: a declarative part, an executable part, and an optional exception-handling part.

The declarative part contains local declarations. The keyword DECLARE is used for anonymous PL/SQL blocks, but not procedures. The executable part contains statements, which are placed between the keywords BEGIN and EXCEPTION (or END). At least one statement must appear in the executable part of a procedure. You can use the NULL statement to define a placeholder procedure or specify that the procedure does nothing. The exception-handling part contains exception handlers, which are placed between the keywords EXCEPTION and END.

A procedure is called as a PL/SQL statement. For example, you might call the procedure raise_salary as follows:

raise_salary(emp_id, amount);

Understanding PL/SQL Functions

A function is a subprogram that computes a value. Functions and procedures are structured alike, except that functions have a RETURN clause. Functions have a number of optional keywords, used to declare a special class of functions known as table functions. They are typically used for transforming large amounts of data in data warehousing applications. For information on the syntax of the FUNCTION declaration, see "Function Declaration".

The AUTHID clause determines whether a stored function executes with the privileges of its owner (the default) or current user and whether its unqualified references to schema objects are resolved in the schema of the owner or current user. You can override the default behavior by specifying CURRENT_USER.

The PARALLEL_ENABLE option declares that a stored function can be used safely in the slave sessions of parallel DML evaluations. The state of a main (logon) session is never shared with slave sessions. Each slave session has its own state, which is initialized when the session begins. The function result should not depend on the state of session (static) variables. Otherwise, results might vary across sessions.

The DETERMINISTIC option helps the optimizer avoid redundant function calls. If a stored function was called previously with the same arguments, the optimizer can elect to use the previous result. For more information and possible limitations of the DETERMINISTIC option, see CREATE FUNCTION in Oracle Database SQL Reference.

The pragma AUTONOMOUS_TRANSACTION instructs the PL/SQL compiler to mark a function as autonomous (independent). Autonomous transactions let you suspend the main transaction, do SQL operations, commit or roll back those operations, then resume the main transaction.

You cannot constrain (with NOT NULL for example) the datatype of a parameter or a function return value. However, you can use a workaround to size-constrain them indirectly. See "Understanding PL/SQL Procedures".

Like a procedure, a function has two parts: the spec and the body. The function spec begins with the keyword FUNCTION and ends with the RETURN clause, which specifies the datatype of the return value. Parameter declarations are optional. Functions that take no parameters are written without parentheses.

The function body begins with the keyword IS (or AS) and ends with the keyword END followed by an optional function name. The function body has three parts: a declarative part, an executable part, and an optional exception-handling part.

The declarative part contains local declarations, which are placed between the keywords IS and BEGIN. The keyword DECLARE is not used. The executable part contains statements, which are placed between the keywords BEGIN and EXCEPTION (or END). One or more RETURN statements must appear in the executable part of a function. The exception-handling part contains exception handlers, which are placed between the keywords EXCEPTION and END.

A function is called as part of an expression. For example:

IF sal_ok(new_sal, new_title) THEN ...

Using the RETURN Statement

The RETURN statement immediately ends the execution of a subprogram and returns control to the caller. Execution continues with the statement following the subprogram call. (Do not confuse the RETURN statement with the RETURN clause in a function spec, which specifies the datatype of the return value.)

A subprogram can contain several RETURN statements. The subprogram does not have to conclude with a RETURN statement. Executing any RETURN statement completes the subprogram immediately.

In procedures, a RETURN statement does not return a value and so cannot contain an expression. The statement returns control to the caller before the end of the procedure.

In functions, a RETURN statement must contain an expression, which is evaluated when the RETURN statement is executed. The resulting value is assigned to the function identifier, which acts like a variable of the type specified in the RETURN clause. See the use of the RETURN statement in Example 8-2.

The expression in a function RETURN statement can be arbitrarily complex:

CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION half_of_square(original NUMBER)
  RETURN NUMBER IS
BEGIN
   RETURN (original * original)/2 + (original * 4);
END half_of_square;
/

In a function, there must be at least one execution path that leads to a RETURN statement. Otherwise, you get a function returned without value error at run time.

Declaring Nested PL/SQL Subprograms

You can declare subprograms in any PL/SQL block, subprogram, or package. The subprograms must go at the end of the declarative section, after all other items.

You must declare a subprogram before calling it. This requirement can make it difficult to declare several nested subprograms that call each other.

You can declare interrelated nested subprograms using a forward declaration: a subprogram spec terminated by a semicolon, with no body.

Although the formal parameter list appears in the forward declaration, it must also appear in the subprogram body. You can place the subprogram body anywhere after the forward declaration, but they must appear in the same program unit.

Example 8-3 Forward Declaration for a Nested Subprogram

DECLARE
   PROCEDURE proc1(number1 NUMBER);  -- forward declaration
   PROCEDURE proc2(number2 NUMBER) IS
      BEGIN
        proc1(number2);  -- calls proc1
      END; 
   PROCEDURE proc1(number1 NUMBER) IS 
     BEGIN
      proc2 (number1);  -- calls proc2
     END;
BEGIN
  NULL;
END;
/

Passing Parameters to PL/SQL Subprograms

This section explains how to pass information in and out of PL/SQL subprograms using parameters:

Actual Versus Formal Subprogram Parameters

Subprograms pass information using parameters:

  • The variables declared in a subprogram specification and referenced in the subprogram body are formal parameters.

  • The variables or expressions passed from the calling subprogram are actual parameters.

A good programming practice is to use different names for actual and formal parameters.

When you call a procedure, the actual parameters are evaluated and the results are assigned to the corresponding formal parameters. If necessary, before assigning the value of an actual parameter to a formal parameter, PL/SQL converts the datatype of the value. For example, if you pass a number when the procedure expects a string, PL/SQL converts the parameter so that the procedure receives a string.

The actual parameter and its corresponding formal parameter must have compatible datatypes. For instance, PL/SQL cannot convert between the DATE and NUMBER datatypes, or convert a string to a number if the string contains extra characters such as dollar signs.

The procedure in Example 8-4 declares two formal parameters named emp_id and amount and the procedure call specifies actual parameters emp_num and bonus.

Example 8-4 Formal Parameters and Actual Parameters

DECLARE
  emp_num NUMBER(6) := 120;
  bonus   NUMBER(6) := 100;
  merit   NUMBER(4) := 50;
  PROCEDURE raise_salary (emp_id NUMBER, amount NUMBER) IS
    BEGIN
      UPDATE employees SET salary = salary + amount WHERE employee_id = emp_id;
  END raise_salary;
BEGIN
  raise_salary(emp_num, bonus); -- procedure call specifies actual parameters
  raise_salary(emp_num, merit + bonus); -- expressions can be used as parameters
END;
/

Using Positional, Named, or Mixed Notation for Subprogram Parameters

When calling a subprogram, you can write the actual parameters using either:

  • Positional notation. You specify the same parameters in the same order as they are declared in the procedure.

    This notation is compact, but if you specify the parameters (especially literals) in the wrong order, the bug can be hard to detect. You must change your code if the procedure's parameter list changes.

  • Named notation. You specify the name of each parameter along with its value. An arrow (=>) serves as the association operator. The order of the parameters is not significant.

    This notation is more verbose, but makes your code easier to read and maintain. You can sometimes avoid changing your code if the procedure's parameter list changes, for example if the parameters are reordered or a new optional parameter is added. Named notation is a good practice to use for any code that calls someone else's API, or defines an API for someone else to use.

  • Mixed notation. You specify the first parameters with positional notation, then switch to named notation for the last parameters.

    You can use this notation to call procedures that have some required parameters, followed by some optional parameters.

Example 8-5 shows equivalent procedure calls using positional, named, and mixed notation.

Example 8-5 Subprogram Calls Using Positional, Named, and Mixed Notation

DECLARE
  emp_num NUMBER(6) := 120;
  bonus   NUMBER(6) := 50;
  PROCEDURE raise_salary (emp_id NUMBER, amount NUMBER) IS
    BEGIN
      UPDATE employees SET salary = salary + amount WHERE employee_id = emp_id;
  END raise_salary;
BEGIN
  raise_salary(emp_num, bonus); -- positional procedure call for actual parameters
  raise_salary(amount => bonus, emp_id => emp_num); -- named parameters
  raise_salary(emp_num, amount => bonus); -- mixed parameters
END;
/

Specifying Subprogram Parameter Modes

You use parameter modes to define the behavior of formal parameters. The three parameter modes are IN (the default), OUT, and IN OUT.

Any parameter mode can be used with any subprogram. Avoid using the OUT and IN OUT modes with functions. To have a function return multiple values is a poor programming practice. Also, functions should be free from side effects, which change the values of variables not local to the subprogram.

Using the IN Mode

An IN parameter lets you pass values to the subprogram being called. Inside the subprogram, an IN parameter acts like a constant. It cannot be assigned a value.

You can pass a constant, literal, initialized variable, or expression as an IN parameter.

IN parameters can be initialized to default values, which are used if those parameters are omitted from the subprogram call. For more information, see "Using Default Values for Subprogram Parameters".

Using the OUT Mode

An OUT parameter returns a value to the caller of a subprogram. Inside the subprogram, an OUT parameter acts like a variable. You can change its value, and reference the value after assigning it:

Example 8-6 Using the OUT Mode

DECLARE
  emp_num       NUMBER(6) := 120;
  bonus         NUMBER(6) := 50;
  emp_last_name VARCHAR2(25);
  PROCEDURE raise_salary (emp_id IN NUMBER, amount IN NUMBER, 
                          emp_name OUT VARCHAR2) IS
    BEGIN
      UPDATE employees SET salary = salary + amount WHERE employee_id = emp_id;
      SELECT last_name INTO emp_name FROM employees WHERE employee_id = emp_id;
  END raise_salary;
BEGIN
  raise_salary(emp_num, bonus, emp_last_name); 
  DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('Salary has been updated for: ' || emp_last_name);
END;
/

You must pass a variable, not a constant or an expression, to an OUT parameter. Its previous value is lost unless you specify the NOCOPY keyword or the subprogram exits with an unhandled exception. See "Using Default Values for Subprogram Parameters".

Like variables, OUT formal parameters are initialized to NULL. The datatype of an OUT formal parameter cannot be a subtype defined as NOT NULL, such as the built-in subtypes NATURALN and POSITIVEN. Otherwise, when you call the subprogram, PL/SQL raises VALUE_ERROR.

Before exiting a subprogram, assign values to all OUT formal parameters. Otherwise, the corresponding actual parameters will be null. If you exit successfully, PL/SQL assigns values to the actual parameters. If you exit with an unhandled exception, PL/SQL does not assign values to the actual parameters.

Using the IN OUT Mode

An IN OUT parameter passes initial values to a subprogram and returns updated values to the caller. It can be assigned a value and its value can be read. Typically, an IN OUT parameter is a string buffer or numeric accumulator, that is read inside the subprogram and then updated.

The actual parameter that corresponds to an IN OUT formal parameter must be a variable; it cannot be a constant or an expression.

If you exit a subprogram successfully, PL/SQL assigns values to the actual parameters. If you exit with an unhandled exception, PL/SQL does not assign values to the actual parameters.

Summary of Subprogram Parameter Modes

Table 8-1 summarizes all you need to know about the parameter modes.

Table 8-1 Parameter Modes

IN OUT IN OUT
The default Must be specified Must be specified
Passes values to a subprogram Returns values to the caller Passes initial values to a subprogram and returns updated values to the caller
Formal parameter acts like a constant Formal parameter acts like an uninitialized variable Formal parameter acts like an initialized variable
Formal parameter cannot be assigned a value Formal parameter must be assigned a value Formal parameter should be assigned a value
Actual parameter can be a constant, initialized variable, literal, or expression Actual parameter must be a variable Actual parameter must be a variable
Actual parameter is passed by reference (a pointer to the value is passed in) Actual parameter is passed by value (a copy of the value is passed out) unless NOCOPY is specified Actual parameter is passed by value (a copy of the value is passed in and out) unless NOCOPY is specified

Using Default Values for Subprogram Parameters

By initializing IN parameters to default values, you can pass different numbers of actual parameters to a subprogram, accepting the default values for any parameters you omit. You can also add new formal parameters without having to change every call to the subprogram.

If a parameter is omitted, the default value of its corresponding formal parameter is used. You cannot skip a formal parameter by leaving out its actual parameter. To omit the first parameter and specify the second, use named notation.

You cannot assign a null to an uninitialized formal parameter by leaving out its actual parameter. You must pass the null explicitly, or you can specify a default value of NULL in the declaration.

Example 8-7 illustrates the use of default values for subprogram parameters.

Example 8-7 Procedure with Default Parameter Values

DECLARE
  emp_num NUMBER(6) := 120;
  bonus   NUMBER(6);
  merit   NUMBER(4);
  PROCEDURE raise_salary (emp_id IN NUMBER, amount IN NUMBER DEFAULT 100, 
                          extra IN NUMBER DEFAULT 50) IS
    BEGIN
      UPDATE employees SET salary = salary + amount + extra 
        WHERE employee_id = emp_id;
  END raise_salary;
BEGIN
  raise_salary(120); -- same as raise_salary(120, 100, 50)
  raise_salary(emp_num, extra => 25); -- same as raise_salary(120, 100, 25)
END;
/

Overloading Subprogram Names

PL/SQL lets you overload subprogram names and type methods. You can use the same name for several different subprograms as long as their formal parameters differ in number, order, or datatype family. For an example of an overloaded procedure in a package, see Example 9-3.

Example 8-8 shows how you can define two subprograms with the same name. The procedures initialize different types of collections. Because the processing in these two procedures is the same, it is logical to give them the same name.

You can place the two overloaded initialize procedures in the same block, subprogram, package, or object type. PL/SQL determines which procedure to call by checking their formal parameters. The version of initialize that PL/SQL uses depends on whether you call the procedure with a DateTabTyp or NumTabTyp parameter.

Example 8-8 Overloading a Subprogram Name

DECLARE
   TYPE DateTabTyp IS TABLE OF DATE INDEX BY PLS_INTEGER;
   TYPE NumTabTyp IS TABLE OF NUMBER INDEX BY PLS_INTEGER;
   hiredate_tab DateTabTyp;
   sal_tab NumTabTyp;
   PROCEDURE initialize (tab OUT DateTabTyp, n INTEGER) IS
     BEGIN
        FOR i IN 1..n LOOP
          tab(i) := SYSDATE;
     END LOOP;
   END initialize;
   PROCEDURE initialize (tab OUT NumTabTyp, n INTEGER) IS
     BEGIN
       FOR i IN 1..n LOOP
         tab(i) := 0.0;
     END LOOP;
   END initialize;
BEGIN
   initialize(hiredate_tab, 50);  -- calls first (DateTabTyp) version
   initialize(sal_tab, 100);      -- calls second (NumTabTyp) version
END;
/

Guidelines for Overloading with Numeric Types

You can overload two subprograms if their formal parameters differ only in numeric datatype. This technique might be useful in writing mathematical application programming interfaces (APIs), where several versions of a function could use the same name, each accepting a different numeric type. For example, a function accepting BINARY_FLOAT might be faster, while a function accepting BINARY_DOUBLE might provide more precision.

To avoid problems or unexpected results passing parameters to such overloaded subprograms:

  • Make sure to test that the expected version of a subprogram is called for each set of expected parameters. For example, if you have overloaded functions that accept BINARY_FLOAT and BINARY_DOUBLE, which is called if you pass a VARCHAR2 literal such as '5.0'?

  • Qualify numeric literals and use conversion functions to make clear what the intended parameter types are. For example, use literals such as 5.0f (for BINARY_FLOAT), 5.0d (for BINARY_DOUBLE), or conversion functions such as TO_BINARY_FLOAT(), TO_BINARY_DOUBLE(), and TO_NUMBER().

PL/SQL looks for matching numeric parameters starting with PLS_INTEGER or BINARY_INTEGER, then NUMBER, then BINARY_FLOAT, then BINARY_DOUBLE. The first overloaded subprogram that matches the supplied parameters is used. A VARCHAR2 value can match a NUMBER, BINARY_FLOAT, or BINARY_DOUBLE parameter.

For example, consider the SQRT function, which takes a single parameter. There are overloaded versions that accept a NUMBER, a BINARY_FLOAT, or a BINARY_DOUBLE parameter. If you pass a PLS_INTEGER parameter, the first matching overload (using the order given in the preceding paragraph) is the one with a NUMBER parameter, which is likely to be the slowest. To use one of the faster versions, use the TO_BINARY_FLOAT or TO_BINARY_DOUBLE functions to convert the parameter to the right datatype.

For another example, consider the ATAN2 function, which takes two parameters of the same type. If you pass two parameters of the same type, you can predict which overloaded version is used through the same rules as before. If you pass parameters of different types, for example one PLS_INTEGER and one BINARY_FLOAT, PL/SQL tries to find a match where both parameters use the higher type. In this case, that is the version of ATAN2 that takes two BINARY_FLOAT parameters; the PLS_INTEGER parameter is converted upwards.

The preference for converting upwards holds in more complicated situations. For example, you might have a complex function that takes two parameters of different types. One overloaded version might take a PLS_INTEGER and a BINARY_FLOAT parameter. Another overloaded version might take a NUMBER and a BINARY_DOUBLE parameter. What happens if you call this procedure name and pass two NUMBER parameters? PL/SQL looks upward first to find the overloaded version where the second parameter is BINARY_FLOAT. Because this parameter is a closer match than the BINARY_DOUBLE parameter in the other overload, PL/SQL then looks downward and converts the first NUMBER parameter to PLS_INTEGER.

Restrictions on Overloading

Only local or packaged subprograms, or type methods, can be overloaded. You cannot overload standalone subprograms.

You cannot overload two subprograms if their formal parameters differ only in name or parameter mode. For example, you cannot overload the following two procedures:

Example 8-9 Restrictions on Overloading PL/SQL Procedures

DECLARE
   PROCEDURE balance (acct_no IN INTEGER) IS
   BEGIN NULL; END;
   PROCEDURE balance (acct_no OUT INTEGER) IS
   BEGIN NULL; END;
BEGIN
  DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('The following procedure call raises an error.');
-- balance(100); raises an error because the procedure declaration is not unique
END;
/

You cannot overload subprograms whose parameters differ only in subtype. For example, you cannot overload procedures where one accepts an INTEGER parameter and the other accepts a REAL parameter, even though INTEGER and REAL are both subtypes of NUMBER and so are in the same family.

You cannot overload two functions that differ only in the datatype of the return value, even if the types are in different families. For example, you cannot overload two functions where one returns BOOLEAN and the other returns INTEGER.

How Subprogram Calls Are Resolved

Figure 8-1 shows how the PL/SQL compiler resolves subprogram calls. When the compiler encounters a procedure or function call, it tries to find a declaration that matches the call. The compiler searches first in the current scope and then, if necessary, in successive enclosing scopes. The compiler looks more closely when it finds one or more subprogram declarations in which the subprogram name matches the name of the called subprogram.

To resolve a call among possibly like-named subprograms at the same level of scope, the compiler must find an exact match between the actual and formal parameters. They must match in number, order, and datatype (unless some formal parameters were assigned default values). If no match is found or if multiple matches are found, the compiler generates a semantic error.

Figure 8-1 How the PL/SQL Compiler Resolves Calls

Description of lnpls012.gif follows
Description of the illustration lnpls012.gif

Example 8-10 calls the enclosing procedure swap from the function balance, generating an error because neither declaration of swap within the current scope matches the procedure call.

Example 8-10 Resolving PL/SQL Procedure Names

DECLARE
  PROCEDURE swap (n1 NUMBER, n2 NUMBER) IS
    num1 NUMBER;
    num2 NUMBER;
    FUNCTION balance (bal NUMBER) RETURN NUMBER IS
      x NUMBER := 10;
      PROCEDURE swap (d1 DATE, d2 DATE) IS BEGIN NULL; END;
      PROCEDURE swap (b1 BOOLEAN, b2 BOOLEAN) IS BEGIN NULL; END;
    BEGIN
      DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('The following raises an error');
--      swap(num1, num2); wrong number or types of arguments in call to 'SWAP'
      RETURN x;
    END balance;
  BEGIN NULL;END swap;
BEGIN
  NULL;
END;
/

How Overloading Works with Inheritance

The overloading algorithm allows substituting a subtype value for a formal parameter that is a supertype. This capability is known as substitutability. If more than one instance of an overloaded procedure matches the procedure call, the following rules apply to determine which procedure is called:

If the only difference in the signatures of the overloaded procedures is that some parameters are object types from the same supertype-subtype hierarchy, the closest match is used. The closest match is one where all the parameters are at least as close as any other overloaded instance, as determined by the depth of inheritance between the subtype and supertype, and at least one parameter is closer.

A semantic error occurs when two overloaded instances match, and some argument types are closer in one overloaded procedure to the actual arguments than in any other instance.

A semantic error also occurs if some parameters are different in their position within the object type hierarchy, and other parameters are of different datatypes so that an implicit conversion would be necessary.

For example, create a type hierarchy with three levels and then declare two overloaded instances of a function, where the only difference in argument types is their position in this type hierarchy, as shown in Example 8-11. We declare a variable of type final_t, then call the overloaded function. The instance of the function that is executed is the one that accepts a sub_t parameter, because that type is closer to final_t in the hierarchy than super_t is.

Example 8-11 Resolving PL/SQL Functions With Inheritance

CREATE OR REPLACE TYPE super_t AS OBJECT
  (n NUMBER) NOT final;
/
CREATE OR REPLACE TYPE sub_t UNDER super_t
  (n2 NUMBER) NOT final;
/
CREATE OR REPLACE TYPE final_t UNDER sub_t
  (n3 NUMBER);
/
CREATE OR REPLACE PACKAGE p IS
   FUNCTION func (arg super_t) RETURN NUMBER;
   FUNCTION func (arg sub_t) RETURN NUMBER;
END;
/
CREATE OR REPLACE PACKAGE BODY p IS
   FUNCTION func (arg super_t) RETURN NUMBER IS BEGIN RETURN 1; END;
   FUNCTION func (arg sub_t) RETURN NUMBER IS BEGIN RETURN 2; END;
END;
/

DECLARE
  v final_t := final_t(1,2,3);
BEGIN
  DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE(p.func(v));  -- prints 2
END;
/

In Example 8-11, the choice of which instance to call is made at compile time. In Example 8-12, this choice is made dynamically. We declare v as an instance of super_t, but because we assign a value of sub_t to it, the appropriate instance of the function is called. This feature is known as dynamic dispatch.

Example 8-12 Resolving PL/SQL Functions With Inheritance Dynamically

CREATE TYPE super_t AS OBJECT
  (n NUMBER, MEMBER FUNCTION func RETURN NUMBER) NOT final;
/
CREATE TYPE BODY super_t AS
 MEMBER FUNCTION func RETURN NUMBER IS BEGIN RETURN 1; END; END;
/
CREATE OR REPLACE TYPE sub_t UNDER super_t
  (n2 NUMBER,
   OVERRIDING MEMBER FUNCTION func RETURN NUMBER) NOT final;
/
CREATE TYPE BODY sub_t AS
 OVERRIDING MEMBER FUNCTION func RETURN NUMBER IS BEGIN RETURN 2; END; END;
/
CREATE OR REPLACE TYPE final_t UNDER sub_t
  (n3 NUMBER);
/

DECLARE
  v super_t := final_t(1,2,3);
BEGIN
  DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE(v.func); -- prints 2
END;
/

Using Invoker's Rights Versus Definer's Rights (AUTHID Clause)

By default, stored procedures and SQL methods execute with the privileges of their owner, not their current user. Such definer's rights subprograms are bound to the schema in which they reside, allowing you to refer to objects in the same schema without qualifying their names. For example, if schemas HR and OE both have a table called departments, a procedure owned by HR can refer to departments rather than HR.departments. If user OE calls HR's procedure, the procedure still accesses the departments table owned by HR.

If you compile the same procedure in both schemas, you can define the schema name as a variable in SQL*Plus and refer to the table like &schema..departments. The code is portable, but if you change it, you must recompile it in each schema.

A more maintainable way is to use the AUTHID clause, which makes stored procedures and SQL methods execute with the privileges and schema context of the calling user. You can create one instance of the procedure, and many users can call it to access their own data.

Such invoker's rights subprograms are not bound to a particular schema. The following version of procedure create_dept executes with the privileges of the calling user and inserts rows into that user's departments table:

Example 8-13 Specifying Invoker's Rights With a Procedure

CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE create_dept (
   v_deptno NUMBER,
   v_dname  VARCHAR2,
   v_mgr    NUMBER,
   v_loc    NUMBER) 
AUTHID CURRENT_USER AS
BEGIN
   INSERT INTO departments VALUES (v_deptno, v_dname, v_mgr, v_loc);
END;
/
CALL create_dept(44, 'Information Technology', 200, 1700);

Advantages of Invoker's Rights

Invoker's rights subprograms let you reuse code and centralize application logic. They are especially useful in applications that store data using identical tables in different schemas. All the schemas in one instance can call procedures owned by a central schema. You can even have schemas in different instances call centralized procedures using a database link.

Consider a company that uses a stored procedure to analyze sales. If the company has several schemas, each with a similar SALES table, normally it would also need several copies of the stored procedure, one in each schema.

To solve the problem, the company installs an invoker's rights version of the stored procedure in a central schema. Now, all the other schemas can call the same procedure, which queries the appropriate to SALES table in each case.

You can restrict access to sensitive data by calling from an invoker's rights subprogram to a definer's rights subprogram that queries or updates the table containing the sensitive data. Although multiple users can call the invoker's rights subprogram, they do not have direct access to the sensitive data.

Specifying the Privileges for a Subprogram with the AUTHID Clause

To implement invoker's rights, use the AUTHID clause, which specifies whether a subprogram executes with the privileges of its owner or its current user. It also specifies whether external references (that is, references to objects outside the subprogram) are resolved in the schema of the owner or the current user.

The AUTHID clause is allowed only in the header of a standalone subprogram, a package spec, or an object type spec. In the CREATE FUNCTION, CREATE PROCEDURE, CREATE PACKAGE, or CREATE TYPE statement, you can include either AUTHID CURRENT_USER or AUTHID DEFINER immediately before the IS or AS keyword that begins the declaration section.

DEFINER is the default option. In a package or object type, the AUTHID clause applies to all subprograms.

Most supplied PL/SQL packages (such as DBMS_LOB, DBMS_PIPE, DBMS_ROWID, DBMS_SQL, and UTL_REF) are invoker's rights packages.

Who Is the Current User During Subprogram Execution?

In a sequence of calls, whenever control is inside an invoker's rights subprogram, the current user is the session user. When a definer's rights subprogram is called, the owner of that subprogram becomes the current user. The current user might change as new subprograms are called or as subprograms exit.

To verify who the current user is at any time, you can check the USER_USERS data dictionary view. Inside an invoker's rights subprogram, the value from this view might be different from the value of the USER built-in function, which always returns the name of the session user.

How External References Are Resolved in Invoker's Rights Subprograms

If you specify AUTHID CURRENT_USER, the privileges of the current user are checked at run time, and external references are resolved in the schema of the current user. However, this applies only to external references in:

  • SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE data manipulation statements

  • The LOCK TABLE transaction control statement

  • OPEN and OPEN-FOR cursor control statements

  • EXECUTE IMMEDIATE and OPEN-FOR-USING dynamic SQL statements

  • SQL statements parsed using DBMS_SQL.PARSE()

For all other statements, the privileges of the owner are checked at compile time, and external references are resolved in the schema of the owner. For example, the assignment statement in Example 8-14 refers to the packaged function num_above_salary in the emp_actions package in Example 1-13. This external reference is resolved in the schema of the owner of procedure above_salary.

Example 8-14 Resolving External References in an Invoker's Rights Subprogram

CREATE PROCEDURE above_salary (emp_id IN NUMBER)
  AUTHID CURRENT_USER AS
  emps NUMBER;
BEGIN
  emps := emp_actions.num_above_salary(emp_id);
  DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE( 'Number of employees with higher salary: ' || 
                         TO_CHAR(emps));
END;
/
CALL above_salary(120);

The Need for Template Objects in Invoker's Rights Subprograms

The PL/SQL compiler must resolve all references to tables and other objects at compile time. The owner of an invoker's rights subprogram must have objects in the same schema with the right names and columns, even if they do not contain any data. At run time, the corresponding objects in the caller's schema must have matching definitions. Otherwise, you get an error or unexpected results, such as ignoring table columns that exist in the caller's schema but not in the schema that contains the subprogram.

Overriding Default Name Resolution in Invoker's Rights Subprograms

Occasionally, you might want an unqualified name to refer to some particular schema, not the schema of the caller. In the same schema as the invoker's rights subprogram, create a public synonym for the table, procedure, function, or other object using the CREATE SYNONYM statement:

CREATE PUBLIC SYNONYM emp FOR hr.employees;

When the invoker's rights subprogram refers to this name, it will match the synonym in its own schema, which resolves to the object in the specified schema. This technique does not work if the calling schema already has a schema object or private synonym with the same name. In that case, the invoker's rights subprogram must fully qualify the reference.

Granting Privileges on Invoker's Rights Subprograms

To call a subprogram directly, users must have the EXECUTE privilege on that subprogram. By granting the privilege, you allow a user to:

  • Call the subprogram directly

  • Compile functions and procedures that call the subprogram

For external references resolved in the current user's schema (such as those in DML statements), the current user must have the privileges needed to access schema objects referenced by the subprogram. For all other external references (such as function calls), the owner's privileges are checked at compile time, and no run-time check is done.

A definer's rights subprogram operates under the security domain of its owner, no matter who is executing it. The owner must have the privileges needed to access schema objects referenced by the subprogram.

You can write a program consisting of multiple subprograms, some with definer's rights and others with invoker's rights. Then, you can use the EXECUTE privilege to restrict program entry points. That way, users of an entry-point subprogram can execute the other subprograms indirectly but not directly.

Granting Privileges on an Invoker's Rights Subprogram: Example

Suppose user UTIL grants the EXECUTE privilege on subprogram FFT to user APP:

GRANT EXECUTE ON util.fft TO app;

Now, user APP can compile functions and procedures that call subprogram FFT. At run time, no privilege checks on the calls are done. As Figure 8-2 shows, user UTIL need not grant the EXECUTE privilege to every user who might call FFT indirectly.

Since subprogram util.fft is called directly only from invoker's rights subprogram app.entry, user util must grant the EXECUTE privilege only to user APP. When UTIL.FFT is executed, its current user could be APP, SCOTT, or BLAKE even though SCOTT and BLAKE were not granted the EXECUTE privilege.

Figure 8-2 Indirect Calls to an Invoker's Rights Subprogram

Description of lnpls026.gif follows
Description of the illustration lnpls026.gif

Using Roles with Invoker's Rights Subprograms

The use of roles in a subprogram depends on whether it executes with definer's rights or invoker's rights. Within a definer's rights subprogram, all roles are disabled. Roles are not used for privilege checking, and you cannot set roles.

Within an invoker's rights subprogram, roles are enabled (unless the subprogram was called directly or indirectly by a definer's rights subprogram). Roles are used for privilege checking, and you can use native dynamic SQL to set roles for the session. However, you cannot use roles to grant privileges on template objects because roles apply at run time, not at compile time.

Using Views and Database Triggers with Invoker's Rights Subprograms

For invoker's rights subprograms executed within a view expression, the schema that created the view, not the schema that is querying the view, is considered to be the current user. This rule also applies to database triggers.

Using Database Links with Invoker's Rights Subprograms

You can create a database link to use invoker's rights:


CREATE DATABASE LINK link_name CONNECT TO CURRENT_USER
  USING connect_string;

A current-user link lets you connect to a remote database as another user, with that user's privileges. To connect, Oracle uses the username of the current user (who must be a global user). Suppose an invoker's rights subprogram owned by user OE references the following database link. If global user HR calls the subprogram, it connects to the Dallas database as user HR, who is the current user.

CREATE DATABASE LINK dallas CONNECT TO CURRENT_USER USING ...

If it were a definer's rights subprogram, the current user would be OE, and the subprogram would connect to the Dallas database as global user OE.

Using Object Types with Invoker's Rights Subprograms

To define object types for use in any schema, specify the AUTHID CURRENT_USER clause. For information on object types, see Oracle Database Application Developer's Guide - Object-Relational Features.

Suppose user HR creates the following object type:

Example 8-15 Creating an Object Type With AUTHID CURRENT USER

CREATE TYPE person_typ AUTHID CURRENT_USER AS OBJECT (
  person_id   NUMBER,
  person_name VARCHAR2(30),
  person_job  VARCHAR2(10),
  STATIC PROCEDURE new_person_typ (
    person_id NUMBER, person_name VARCHAR2, person_job VARCHAR2, 
    schema_name VARCHAR2, table_name VARCHAR2),
  MEMBER PROCEDURE change_job (SELF IN OUT NOCOPY person_typ, new_job VARCHAR2) 
);
/
CREATE TYPE BODY person_typ AS
  STATIC PROCEDURE new_person_typ (
    person_id NUMBER, person_name VARCHAR2, person_job VARCHAR2, 
    schema_name VARCHAR2, table_name VARCHAR2) IS
    sql_stmt VARCHAR2(200);
  BEGIN 
    sql_stmt := 'INSERT INTO ' || schema_name || '.'
       || table_name || ' VALUES (HR.person_typ(:1, :2, :3))';
    EXECUTE IMMEDIATE sql_stmt USING person_id, person_name, person_job;
  END;
  MEMBER PROCEDURE change_job (SELF IN OUT NOCOPY person_typ, new_job VARCHAR2) IS
  BEGIN
    person_job := new_job;
  END;
END;
/

Then, user HR grants the EXECUTE privilege on object type person_typ to user OE:

GRANT EXECUTE ON person_typ TO OE;

Finally, user OE creates an object table to store objects of type person_typ, then calls procedure new_person_typ to populate the table:

CONNECT oe/oe;
CREATE TABLE person_tab OF hr.person_typ;

BEGIN
  hr.person_typ.new_person_typ(1001, 'Jane Smith', 'CLERK', 'oe', 'person_tab');
  hr.person_typ.new_person_typ(1002, 'Joe Perkins', 'SALES','oe', 'person_tab');
  hr.person_typ.new_person_typ(1003, 'Robert Lange', 'DEV','oe', 'person_tab');
END;
/

The calls succeed because the procedure executes with the privileges of its current user (OE), not its owner (HR).

For subtypes in an object type hierarchy, the following rules apply:

  • If a subtype does not explicitly specify an AUTHID clause, it inherits the AUTHID of its supertype.

  • If a subtype does specify an AUTHID clause, its AUTHID must match the AUTHID of its supertype. Also, if the AUTHID is DEFINER, both the supertype and subtype must have been created in the same schema.

Calling Invoker's Rights Instance Methods

An invoker's rights instance method executes with the privileges of the invoker, not the creator of the instance. Suppose that person_typ is an invoker's rights object type as created in Example 8-15, and that user HR creates p1, an object of type person_typ. If user OE calls instance method change_job to operate on object p1, the current user of the method is OE, not HR, as shown in Example 8-16.

Example 8-16 Calling an Invoker's Rights Instance Methods

-- oe creates a procedure that calls change_job
CREATE PROCEDURE reassign (p IN OUT NOCOPY hr.person_typ, new_job VARCHAR2) AS
BEGIN
   p.change_job(new_job); -- executes with the privileges of oe
END;
/
-- OE grants EXECUTE to HR on procedure reassign
GRANT EXECUTE ON reassign to HR;
CONNECT hr/hr

-- user hr passes a person_typ object to the procedure reassign
DECLARE
   p1 person_typ;
BEGIN
   p1 := person_typ(1004,  'June Washburn', 'SALES');
   oe.reassign(p1, 'CLERK'); -- current user is oe, not hr
END;
/

Using Recursion with PL/SQL

Recursion is a powerful technique for simplifying the design of algorithms. Basically, recursion means self-reference. In a recursive mathematical sequence, each term is derived by applying a formula to preceding terms. The Fibonacci sequence (0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, ...), is an example. Each term in the sequence (after the second) is the sum of the two terms that immediately precede it.

In a recursive definition, something is defined as simpler versions of itself. Consider the definition of n factorial (n!), the product of all integers from 1 to n:

n! = n * (n - 1)!

What Is a Recursive Subprogram?

A recursive subprogram is one that calls itself. Each recursive call creates a new instance of any items declared in the subprogram, including parameters, variables, cursors, and exceptions. Likewise, new instances of SQL statements are created at each level in the recursive descent.

Be careful where you place a recursive call. If you place it inside a cursor FOR loop or between OPEN and CLOSE statements, another cursor is opened at each call, which might exceed the limit set by the Oracle initialization parameter OPEN_CURSORS.

There must be at least two paths through a recursive subprogram: one that leads to the recursive call and one that does not. At least one path must lead to a terminating condition. Otherwise, the recursion would go on until PL/SQL runs out of memory and raises the predefined exception STORAGE_ERROR.

Calling External Subprograms

Although PL/SQL is a powerful, flexible language, some tasks are more easily done in another language. Low-level languages such as C are very fast. Widely used languages such as Java have reusable libraries for common design patterns.

You can use PL/SQL call specs to invoke external subprograms written in other languages, making their capabilities and libraries available from PL/SQL. For example, you can call Java stored procedures from any PL/SQL block, subprogram, or package. For more information about Java stored procedures, see Oracle Database Java Developer's Guide.

If the following Java class is stored in the database, it can be called as shown in Example 8-17.


import java.sql.*;
import oracle.jdbc.driver.*;
public class Adjuster {
  public static void raiseSalary (int empNo, float percent)
  throws SQLException {
    Connection conn = new OracleDriver().defaultConnection();
    String sql = "UPDATE employees SET salary = salary * ?
                    WHERE employee_id = ?";
    try {
      PreparedStatement pstmt = conn.prepareStatement(sql);
      pstmt.setFloat(1, (1 + percent / 100));
      pstmt.setInt(2, empNo);
      pstmt.executeUpdate();
      pstmt.close();
    } catch (SQLException e)
          {System.err.println(e.getMessage());}
    }
}

The class Adjuster has one method, which raises the salary of an employee by a given percentage. Because raiseSalary is a void method, you publish it as a procedure using the call specification shown inExample 8-17 and then can call the procedure raise_salary from an anonymous PL/SQL block.

Example 8-17 Calling an External Procedure From PL/SQL

CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE raise_salary (empid NUMBER, pct NUMBER)
AS LANGUAGE JAVA
NAME 'Adjuster.raiseSalary(int, float)';
/

DECLARE
   emp_id  NUMBER := 120;
   percent NUMBER := 10;
BEGIN
   -- get values for emp_id and percent
   raise_salary(emp_id, percent);  -- call external subprogram
END;
/

Java call specs cannot be declared as nested procedures, but can be specified in object type specifications, object type bodies, PL/SQL package specifications, PL/SQL package bodies, and as top level PL/SQL procedures and functions.

Example 8-18 shows a call to a Java function from a PL/SQL procedure.

Example 8-18 Calling a Java Function From PL/SQL

-- the following nested Java call spec is not valid, throws PLS-00999
--   CREATE PROCEDURE sleep (milli_seconds in number) IS
--     PROCEDURE java_sleep (milli_seconds IN NUMBER) AS ...

-- first, create the Java call spec, then call from a PL/SQL procedure
CREATE PROCEDURE java_sleep (milli_seconds IN NUMBER)
  AS LANGUAGE JAVA NAME 'java.lang.Thread.sleep(long)';
/
CREATE PROCEDURE sleep (milli_seconds in number) IS
-- the following nested PROCEDURE spec is not legal
--  PROCEDURE java_sleep (milli_seconds IN NUMBER)
--    AS LANGUAGE JAVA NAME 'java.lang.Thread.sleep(long)';
BEGIN
  DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE(DBMS_UTILITY.get_time());
  java_sleep (milli_seconds);
  DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE(DBMS_UTILITY.get_time());
END;
/ 

External C subprograms are used to interface with embedded systems, solve engineering problems, analyze data, or control real-time devices and processes. External C subprograms extend the functionality of the database server, and move computation-bound programs from client to server, where they execute faster. For more information about external C subprograms, see Oracle Database Application Developer's Guide - Fundamentals.

Controlling Side Effects of PL/SQL Subprograms

To be callable from SQL statements, a stored function (and any subprograms called by that function) must obey certain purity rules, which are meant to control side effects:

  • When called from a SELECT statement or a parallelized INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE statement, the function cannot modify any database tables.

  • When called from an INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE statement, the function cannot query or modify any database tables modified by that statement.

  • When called from a SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE statement, the function cannot execute SQL transaction control statements (such as COMMIT), session control statements (such as SET ROLE), or system control statements (such as ALTER SYSTEM). Also, it cannot execute DDL statements (such as CREATE) because they are followed by an automatic commit.

If any SQL statement inside the function body violates a rule, you get an error at run time (when the statement is parsed).

To check for violations of the rules, you can use the pragma (compiler directive) RESTRICT_REFERENCES. The pragma asserts that a function does not read or write database tables or package variables. For example, the following pragma asserts that packaged function credit_ok writes no database state (WNDS) and reads no package state (RNPS):

CREATE PACKAGE loans AS
   FUNCTION credit_ok RETURN BOOLEAN;
   PRAGMA RESTRICT_REFERENCES (credit_ok, WNDS, RNPS);
END loans;
/

A static INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE statement always violates WNDS. It also violates RNDS (reads no database state) if it reads any columns. A dynamic INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE statement always violates WNDS and RNDS.

For syntax details, see "RESTRICT_REFERENCES Pragma". For more information about the purity rules, see Oracle Database Application Developer's Guide - Fundamentals.

Understanding Subprogram Parameter Aliasing

To optimize a subprogram call, the PL/SQL compiler can choose between two methods of parameter passing. With the by-value method, the value of an actual parameter is passed to the subprogram. With the by-reference method, only a pointer to the value is passed; the actual and formal parameters reference the same item.

The NOCOPY compiler hint increases the possibility of aliasing (that is, having two different names refer to the same memory location). This can occur when a global variable appears as an actual parameter in a subprogram call and then is referenced within the subprogram. The result is indeterminate because it depends on the method of parameter passing chosen by the compiler.

In Example 8-19, procedure ADD_ENTRY refers to varray LEXICON both as a parameter and as a global variable. When ADD_ENTRY is called, the identifiers WORD_LIST and LEXICON point to the same varray.

Example 8-19 Aliasing from Passing Global Variable with NOCOPY Hint

DECLARE
   TYPE Definition IS RECORD (
      word    VARCHAR2(20),
      meaning VARCHAR2(200));
   TYPE Dictionary IS VARRAY(2000) OF Definition;
   lexicon Dictionary := Dictionary();
   PROCEDURE add_entry (word_list IN OUT NOCOPY Dictionary) IS
   BEGIN
     word_list(1).word := 'aardvark';
     lexicon(1).word := 'aardwolf';
   END;
BEGIN
   lexicon.EXTEND;
   add_entry(lexicon);
   DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE(lexicon(1).word);
END;
/

The program prints aardwolf if the compiler obeys the NOCOPY hint. The assignment to WORD_LIST is done immediately through a pointer, then is overwritten by the assignment to LEXICON.

The program prints aardvark if the NOCOPY hint is omitted, or if the compiler does not obey the hint. The assignment to WORD_LIST uses an internal copy of the varray, which is copied back to the actual parameter (overwriting the contents of LEXICON) when the procedure ends.

Aliasing can also occur when the same actual parameter appears more than once in a subprogram call. In Example 8-20, n2 is an IN OUT parameter, so the value of the actual parameter is not updated until the procedure exits. That is why the first PUT_LINE prints 10 (the initial value of n) and the third PUT_LINE prints 20. However, n3 is a NOCOPY parameter, so the value of the actual parameter is updated immediately. That is why the second PUT_LINE prints 30.

Example 8-20 Aliasing Passing Same Parameter Multiple Times

DECLARE
   n NUMBER := 10;
   PROCEDURE do_something (
      n1 IN NUMBER,
      n2 IN OUT NUMBER,
      n3 IN OUT NOCOPY NUMBER) IS
   BEGIN
      n2 := 20;
      DBMS_OUTPUT.put_line(n1);  -- prints 10
      n3 := 30;
      DBMS_OUTPUT.put_line(n1);  -- prints 30
   END;
BEGIN
   do_something(n, n, n);
   DBMS_OUTPUT.put_line(n);  -- prints 20
END;
/

Because they are pointers, cursor variables also increase the possibility of aliasing. In Example 8-21, after the assignment, emp_cv2 is an alias of emp_cv1; both point to the same query work area. The first fetch from emp_cv2 fetches the third row, not the first, because the first two rows were already fetched from emp_cv1. The second fetch from emp_cv2 fails because emp_cv1 is closed.

Example 8-21 Aliasing from Assigning Cursor Variables to Same Work Area

DECLARE
  TYPE EmpCurTyp IS REF CURSOR;
  c1 EmpCurTyp;
  c2 EmpCurTyp;
  PROCEDURE get_emp_data (emp_cv1 IN OUT EmpCurTyp, emp_cv2 IN OUT EmpCurTyp) IS
    emp_rec employees%ROWTYPE;
  BEGIN
    OPEN emp_cv1 FOR SELECT * FROM employees;
    emp_cv2 := emp_cv1;
    FETCH emp_cv1 INTO emp_rec;  -- fetches first row
    FETCH emp_cv1 INTO emp_rec;  -- fetches second row
    FETCH emp_cv2 INTO emp_rec;  -- fetches third row
    CLOSE emp_cv1;
    DBMS_OUTPUT.put_line('The following raises an invalid cursor');
--  FETCH emp_cv2 INTO emp_rec; raises invalid cursor when get_emp_data is called
  END;
BEGIN
  get_emp_data(c1, c2);
END;
/

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