Table 9.63 shows several functions that extract session and system information.
In addition to the functions listed in this section, there are a number of functions related to the statistics system that also provide system information. See Section 27.2.3 for more information.
Table 9.63. Session Information Functions
Name | Return Type | Description |
---|---|---|
| name | name of current database (called “catalog” in the SQL standard) |
| name | name of current database |
| text | text of the currently executing query, as submitted by the client (might contain more than one statement) |
| name | equivalent to current_user |
| name | name of current schema |
| name[] | names of schemas in search path, optionally including implicit schemas |
| name | user name of current execution context |
| inet | address of the remote connection |
| int | port of the remote connection |
| inet | address of the local connection |
| int | port of the local connection |
| int | Process ID of the server process attached to the current session |
| int[] | Process ID(s) that are blocking specified server process ID from acquiring a lock |
| timestamp with time zone | configuration load time |
| text | Primary log file name, or log in the requested format, currently in use by the logging collector |
| oid | OID of session's temporary schema, or 0 if none |
| boolean | is schema another session's temporary schema? |
| boolean | is a JIT compiler extension available
(see Chapter 31) and the jit
configuration parameter set to on . |
| setof text | channel names that the session is currently listening on |
| double | fraction of the asynchronous notification queue currently occupied (0-1) |
| timestamp with time zone | server start time |
| int[] | Process ID(s) that are blocking specified server process ID from acquiring a safe snapshot |
| int | current nesting level of PostgreSQL triggers (0 if not called, directly or indirectly, from inside a trigger) |
| name | session user name |
| name | equivalent to current_user |
| text | PostgreSQL version information. See also server_version_num for a machine-readable version. |
current_catalog
,
current_role
,
current_schema
,
current_user
,
session_user
,
and user
have special syntactic status
in SQL: they must be called without trailing
parentheses. (In PostgreSQL, parentheses can optionally be used with
current_schema
, but not with the others.)
The session_user
is normally the user who initiated
the current database connection; but superusers can change this setting
with SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION.
The current_user
is the user identifier
that is applicable for permission checking. Normally it is equal
to the session user, but it can be changed with
SET ROLE.
It also changes during the execution of
functions with the attribute SECURITY DEFINER
.
In Unix parlance, the session user is the “real user” and
the current user is the “effective user”.
current_role
and user
are
synonyms for current_user
. (The SQL standard draws
a distinction between current_role
and current_user
, but PostgreSQL
does not, since it unifies users and roles into a single kind of entity.)
current_schema
returns the name of the schema that is
first in the search path (or a null value if the search path is
empty). This is the schema that will be used for any tables or
other named objects that are created without specifying a target schema.
current_schemas(boolean)
returns an array of the names of all
schemas presently in the search path. The Boolean option determines whether or not
implicitly included system schemas such as pg_catalog
are included in the
returned search path.
The search path can be altered at run time. The command is:
SET search_path TOschema
[,schema
, ...]
inet_client_addr
returns the IP address of the
current client, and inet_client_port
returns the
port number.
inet_server_addr
returns the IP address on which
the server accepted the current connection, and
inet_server_port
returns the port number.
All these functions return NULL if the current connection is via a
Unix-domain socket.
pg_blocking_pids
returns an array of the process IDs
of the sessions that are blocking the server process with the specified
process ID, or an empty array if there is no such server process or it is
not blocked. One server process blocks another if it either holds a lock
that conflicts with the blocked process's lock request (hard block), or is
waiting for a lock that would conflict with the blocked process's lock
request and is ahead of it in the wait queue (soft block). When using
parallel queries the result always lists client-visible process IDs (that
is, pg_backend_pid
results) even if the actual lock is held
or awaited by a child worker process. As a result of that, there may be
duplicated PIDs in the result. Also note that when a prepared transaction
holds a conflicting lock, it will be represented by a zero process ID in
the result of this function.
Frequent calls to this function could have some impact on database
performance, because it needs exclusive access to the lock manager's
shared state for a short time.
pg_conf_load_time
returns the
timestamp with time zone
when the
server configuration files were last loaded.
(If the current session was alive at the time, this will be the time
when the session itself re-read the configuration files, so the
reading will vary a little in different sessions. Otherwise it is
the time when the postmaster process re-read the configuration files.)
pg_current_logfile
returns, as text
,
the path of the log file(s) currently in use by the logging collector.
The path includes the log_directory directory
and the log file name. Log collection must be enabled or the return value
is NULL
. When multiple log files exist, each in a
different format, pg_current_logfile
called
without arguments returns the path of the file having the first format
found in the ordered list: stderr, csvlog.
NULL
is returned when no log file has any of these
formats. To request a specific file format supply, as text
,
either csvlog or stderr as the value of the
optional parameter. The return value is NULL
when the
log format requested is not a configured
log_destination. The
pg_current_logfile
reflects the contents of the
current_logfiles
file.
pg_my_temp_schema
returns the OID of the current
session's temporary schema, or zero if it has none (because it has not
created any temporary tables).
pg_is_other_temp_schema
returns true if the
given OID is the OID of another session's temporary schema.
(This can be useful, for example, to exclude other sessions' temporary
tables from a catalog display.)
pg_listening_channels
returns a set of names of
asynchronous notification channels that the current session is listening
to. pg_notification_queue_usage
returns the
fraction of the total available space for notifications currently
occupied by notifications that are waiting to be processed, as a
double
in the range 0-1.
See LISTEN and NOTIFY
for more information.
pg_postmaster_start_time
returns the
timestamp with time zone
when the
server started.
pg_safe_snapshot_blocking_pids
returns an array of
the process IDs of the sessions that are blocking the server process with
the specified process ID from acquiring a safe snapshot, or an empty array
if there is no such server process or it is not blocked. A session
running a SERIALIZABLE
transaction blocks
a SERIALIZABLE READ ONLY DEFERRABLE
transaction from
acquiring a snapshot until the latter determines that it is safe to avoid
taking any predicate locks. See Section 13.2.3 for
more information about serializable and deferrable transactions. Frequent
calls to this function could have some impact on database performance,
because it needs access to the predicate lock manager's shared
state for a short time.
version
returns a string describing the
PostgreSQL server's version. You can also
get this information from server_version or
for a machine-readable version, server_version_num.
Software developers should use server_version_num
(available since 8.2) or
PQserverVersion
instead
of parsing the text version.
Table 9.64 lists functions that allow the user to query object access privileges programmatically. See Section 5.7 for more information about privileges.
Table 9.64. Access Privilege Inquiry Functions
Name | Return Type | Description |
---|---|---|
| boolean | does user have privilege for any column of table |
| boolean | does current user have privilege for any column of table |
| boolean | does user have privilege for column |
| boolean | does current user have privilege for column |
| boolean | does user have privilege for database |
| boolean | does current user have privilege for database |
| boolean | does user have privilege for foreign-data wrapper |
| boolean | does current user have privilege for foreign-data wrapper |
| boolean | does user have privilege for function |
| boolean | does current user have privilege for function |
| boolean | does user have privilege for language |
| boolean | does current user have privilege for language |
| boolean | does user have privilege for schema |
| boolean | does current user have privilege for schema |
| boolean | does user have privilege for sequence |
| boolean | does current user have privilege for sequence |
| boolean | does user have privilege for foreign server |
| boolean | does current user have privilege for foreign server |
| boolean | does user have privilege for table |
| boolean | does current user have privilege for table |
| boolean | does user have privilege for tablespace |
| boolean | does current user have privilege for tablespace |
| boolean | does user have privilege for type |
| boolean | does current user have privilege for type |
| boolean | does user have privilege for role |
| boolean | does current user have privilege for role |
| boolean | does current user have row level security active for table |
has_table_privilege
checks whether a user
can access a table in a particular way. The user can be
specified by name, by OID (pg_authid.oid
),
public
to indicate the PUBLIC pseudo-role, or if the argument is
omitted
current_user
is assumed. The table can be specified
by name or by OID. (Thus, there are actually six variants of
has_table_privilege
, which can be distinguished by
the number and types of their arguments.) When specifying by name,
the name can be schema-qualified if necessary.
The desired access privilege type
is specified by a text string, which must evaluate to one of the
values SELECT
, INSERT
,
UPDATE
, DELETE
, TRUNCATE
,
REFERENCES
, or TRIGGER
. Optionally,
WITH GRANT OPTION
can be added to a privilege type to test
whether the privilege is held with grant option. Also, multiple privilege
types can be listed separated by commas, in which case the result will
be true
if any of the listed privileges is held.
(Case of the privilege string is not significant, and extra whitespace
is allowed between but not within privilege names.)
Some examples:
SELECT has_table_privilege('myschema.mytable', 'select'); SELECT has_table_privilege('joe', 'mytable', 'INSERT, SELECT WITH GRANT OPTION');
has_sequence_privilege
checks whether a user
can access a sequence in a particular way. The possibilities for its
arguments are analogous to has_table_privilege
.
The desired access privilege type must evaluate to one of
USAGE
,
SELECT
, or
UPDATE
.
has_any_column_privilege
checks whether a user can
access any column of a table in a particular way.
Its argument possibilities
are analogous to has_table_privilege
,
except that the desired access privilege type must evaluate to some
combination of
SELECT
,
INSERT
,
UPDATE
, or
REFERENCES
. Note that having any of these privileges
at the table level implicitly grants it for each column of the table,
so has_any_column_privilege
will always return
true
if has_table_privilege
does for the same
arguments. But has_any_column_privilege
also succeeds if
there is a column-level grant of the privilege for at least one column.
has_column_privilege
checks whether a user
can access a column in a particular way.
Its argument possibilities
are analogous to has_table_privilege
,
with the addition that the column can be specified either by name
or attribute number.
The desired access privilege type must evaluate to some combination of
SELECT
,
INSERT
,
UPDATE
, or
REFERENCES
. Note that having any of these privileges
at the table level implicitly grants it for each column of the table.
has_database_privilege
checks whether a user
can access a database in a particular way.
Its argument possibilities
are analogous to has_table_privilege
.
The desired access privilege type must evaluate to some combination of
CREATE
,
CONNECT
,
TEMPORARY
, or
TEMP
(which is equivalent to
TEMPORARY
).
has_function_privilege
checks whether a user
can access a function in a particular way.
Its argument possibilities
are analogous to has_table_privilege
.
When specifying a function by a text string rather than by OID,
the allowed input is the same as for the regprocedure
data type
(see Section 8.19).
The desired access privilege type must evaluate to
EXECUTE
.
An example is:
SELECT has_function_privilege('joeuser', 'myfunc(int, text)', 'execute');
has_foreign_data_wrapper_privilege
checks whether a user
can access a foreign-data wrapper in a particular way.
Its argument possibilities
are analogous to has_table_privilege
.
The desired access privilege type must evaluate to
USAGE
.
has_language_privilege
checks whether a user
can access a procedural language in a particular way.
Its argument possibilities
are analogous to has_table_privilege
.
The desired access privilege type must evaluate to
USAGE
.
has_schema_privilege
checks whether a user
can access a schema in a particular way.
Its argument possibilities
are analogous to has_table_privilege
.
The desired access privilege type must evaluate to some combination of
CREATE
or
USAGE
.
has_server_privilege
checks whether a user
can access a foreign server in a particular way.
Its argument possibilities
are analogous to has_table_privilege
.
The desired access privilege type must evaluate to
USAGE
.
has_tablespace_privilege
checks whether a user
can access a tablespace in a particular way.
Its argument possibilities
are analogous to has_table_privilege
.
The desired access privilege type must evaluate to
CREATE
.
has_type_privilege
checks whether a user
can access a type in a particular way.
Its argument possibilities
are analogous to has_table_privilege
.
When specifying a type by a text string rather than by OID,
the allowed input is the same as for the regtype
data type
(see Section 8.19).
The desired access privilege type must evaluate to
USAGE
.
pg_has_role
checks whether a user
can access a role in a particular way.
Its argument possibilities
are analogous to has_table_privilege
,
except that public
is not allowed as a user name.
The desired access privilege type must evaluate to some combination of
MEMBER
or
USAGE
.
MEMBER
denotes direct or indirect membership in
the role (that is, the right to do SET ROLE
), while
USAGE
denotes whether the privileges of the role
are immediately available without doing SET ROLE
.
row_security_active
checks whether row level
security is active for the specified table in the context of the
current_user
and environment. The table can
be specified by name or by OID.
Table 9.65 shows the operators
available for the aclitem
type, which is the catalog
representation of access privileges. See Section 5.7
for information about how to read access privilege values.
Table 9.65. aclitem
Operators
Operator | Description | Example | Result |
---|---|---|---|
= | equal | 'calvin=r*w/hobbes'::aclitem = 'calvin=r*w*/hobbes'::aclitem | f |
@> | contains element | '{calvin=r*w/hobbes,hobbes=r*w*/postgres}'::aclitem[] @> 'calvin=r*w/hobbes'::aclitem | t |
~ | contains element | '{calvin=r*w/hobbes,hobbes=r*w*/postgres}'::aclitem[] ~ 'calvin=r*w/hobbes'::aclitem | t |
Table 9.66 shows some additional
functions to manage the aclitem
type.
Table 9.66. aclitem
Functions
Name | Return Type | Description |
---|---|---|
| aclitem[] | get the default access privileges for an object belonging to ownerId |
| setof record | get aclitem array as tuples |
| aclitem | build an aclitem from input |
acldefault
returns the built-in default access
privileges for an object of type type
belonging to
role ownerId
. These represent the access
privileges that will be assumed when an object's ACL entry is null.
(The default access privileges are described in Section 5.7.)
The type
parameter is a CHAR
: write
'c' for COLUMN
,
'r' for TABLE
and table-like objects,
's' for SEQUENCE
,
'd' for DATABASE
,
'f' for FUNCTION
or PROCEDURE
,
'l' for LANGUAGE
,
'L' for LARGE OBJECT
,
'n' for SCHEMA
,
't' for TABLESPACE
,
'F' for FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER
,
'S' for FOREIGN SERVER
,
or
'T' for TYPE
or DOMAIN
.
aclexplode
returns an aclitem
array
as a set of rows. Output columns are grantor oid
,
grantee oid
(0
for PUBLIC
),
granted privilege as text
(SELECT
, ...)
and whether the privilege is grantable as boolean
.
makeaclitem
performs the inverse operation.
Table 9.67 shows functions that determine whether a certain object is visible in the current schema search path. For example, a table is said to be visible if its containing schema is in the search path and no table of the same name appears earlier in the search path. This is equivalent to the statement that the table can be referenced by name without explicit schema qualification. To list the names of all visible tables:
SELECT relname FROM pg_class WHERE pg_table_is_visible(oid);
Table 9.67. Schema Visibility Inquiry Functions
Name | Return Type | Description |
---|---|---|
| boolean | is collation visible in search path |
| boolean | is conversion visible in search path |
| boolean | is function visible in search path |
| boolean | is operator class visible in search path |
| boolean | is operator visible in search path |
| boolean | is operator family visible in search path |
| boolean | is statistics object visible in search path |
| boolean | is table visible in search path |
| boolean | is text search configuration visible in search path |
| boolean | is text search dictionary visible in search path |
| boolean | is text search parser visible in search path |
| boolean | is text search template visible in search path |
| boolean | is type (or domain) visible in search path |
Each function performs the visibility check for one type of database
object. Note that pg_table_is_visible
can also be used
with views, materialized views, indexes, sequences and foreign tables;
pg_function_is_visible
can also be used with
procedures and aggregates;
pg_type_is_visible
can also be used with domains.
For functions and operators, an object in
the search path is visible if there is no object of the same name
and argument data type(s) earlier in the path. For operator
classes, both name and associated index access method are considered.
All these functions require object OIDs to identify the object to be
checked. If you want to test an object by name, it is convenient to use
the OID alias types (regclass
, regtype
,
regprocedure
, regoperator
, regconfig
,
or regdictionary
),
for example:
SELECT pg_type_is_visible('myschema.widget'::regtype);
Note that it would not make much sense to test a non-schema-qualified type name in this way — if the name can be recognized at all, it must be visible.
Table 9.68 lists functions that extract information from the system catalogs.
Table 9.68. System Catalog Information Functions
Name | Return Type | Description |
---|---|---|
| text | get SQL name of a data type |
| text | get definition of a constraint |
| text | get definition of a constraint |
| text | decompile internal form of an expression, assuming that any Vars in it refer to the relation indicated by the second parameter |
| text | decompile internal form of an expression, assuming that any Vars in it refer to the relation indicated by the second parameter |
| text | get definition of a function or procedure |
| text | get argument list of function's or procedure's definition (with default values) |
| text | get argument list to identify a function or procedure (without default values) |
| text | get RETURNS clause for function (returns null for a procedure) |
| text | get CREATE INDEX command for index |
| text | get CREATE INDEX command for index,
or definition of just one index column when
column_no is not zero |
| setof record | get list of SQL keywords and their categories |
| text | get CREATE RULE command for rule |
| text | get CREATE RULE command for rule |
| text | get name of the sequence that a serial or identity column uses |
| text | get CREATE STATISTICS command for extended statistics object |
pg_get_triggerdef (trigger_oid ) | text | get CREATE [ CONSTRAINT ] TRIGGER command for trigger |
pg_get_triggerdef (trigger_oid , pretty_bool ) | text | get CREATE [ CONSTRAINT ] TRIGGER command for trigger |
| name | get role name with given OID |
| text | get underlying SELECT command for view or materialized view (deprecated) |
| text | get underlying SELECT command for view or materialized view (deprecated) |
| text | get underlying SELECT command for view or materialized view |
| text | get underlying SELECT command for view or materialized view |
| text | get underlying SELECT command for view or
materialized view; lines with fields are wrapped to specified
number of columns, pretty-printing is implied |
| boolean | test whether an index column has a specified property |
| boolean | test whether an index has a specified property |
| boolean | test whether an index access method has a specified property |
| setof record | get the set of storage option name/value pairs |
| setof oid | get the set of database OIDs that have objects in the tablespace |
| text | get the path in the file system that this tablespace is located in |
| regtype | get the data type of any value |
| text | get the collation of the argument |
| regclass | get the OID of the named relation |
| regproc | get the OID of the named function |
| regprocedure | get the OID of the named function |
| regoper | get the OID of the named operator |
| regoperator | get the OID of the named operator |
| regtype | get the OID of the named type |
| regnamespace | get the OID of the named schema |
| regrole | get the OID of the named role |
format_type
returns the SQL name of a data type that
is identified by its type OID and possibly a type modifier. Pass NULL
for the type modifier if no specific modifier is known.
pg_get_keywords
returns a set of records describing
the SQL keywords recognized by the server. The word
column
contains the keyword. The catcode
column contains a
category code: U
for unreserved, C
for column name,
T
for type or function name, or R
for reserved.
The catdesc
column contains a possibly-localized string
describing the category.
pg_get_constraintdef
,
pg_get_indexdef
, pg_get_ruledef
,
pg_get_statisticsobjdef
, and
pg_get_triggerdef
, respectively reconstruct the
creating command for a constraint, index, rule, extended statistics object,
or trigger. (Note that this is a decompiled reconstruction, not the
original text of the command.) pg_get_expr
decompiles
the internal form of an individual expression, such as the default value
for a column. It can be useful when examining the contents of system
catalogs. If the expression might contain Vars, specify the OID of the
relation they refer to as the second parameter; if no Vars are expected,
zero is sufficient. pg_get_viewdef
reconstructs the
SELECT
query that defines a view. Most of these functions come
in two variants, one of which can optionally “pretty-print” the
result. The pretty-printed format is more readable, but the default format
is more likely to be interpreted the same way by future versions of
PostgreSQL; avoid using pretty-printed output for dump
purposes. Passing false
for the pretty-print parameter yields
the same result as the variant that does not have the parameter at all.
pg_get_functiondef
returns a complete
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION
statement for a function.
pg_get_function_arguments
returns the argument list
of a function, in the form it would need to appear in within
CREATE FUNCTION
.
pg_get_function_result
similarly returns the
appropriate RETURNS
clause for the function.
pg_get_function_identity_arguments
returns the
argument list necessary to identify a function, in the form it
would need to appear in within ALTER FUNCTION
, for
instance. This form omits default values.
pg_get_serial_sequence
returns the name of the
sequence associated with a column, or NULL if no sequence is associated
with the column. If the column is an identity column, the associated
sequence is the sequence internally created for the identity column. For
columns created using one of the serial types
(serial
, smallserial
, bigserial
), it
is the sequence created for that serial column definition. In the latter
case, this association can be modified or removed with ALTER
SEQUENCE OWNED BY
. (The function probably should have been called
pg_get_owned_sequence
; its current name reflects the
fact that it has typically been used with serial
or bigserial
columns.) The first input parameter is a table name
with optional schema, and the second parameter is a column name. Because
the first parameter is potentially a schema and table, it is not treated as
a double-quoted identifier, meaning it is lower cased by default, while the
second parameter, being just a column name, is treated as double-quoted and
has its case preserved. The function returns a value suitably formatted
for passing to sequence functions
(see Section 9.16). A typical use is in reading the
current value of a sequence for an identity or serial column, for example:
SELECT currval(pg_get_serial_sequence('sometable', 'id'));
pg_get_userbyid
extracts a role's name given
its OID.
pg_index_column_has_property
,
pg_index_has_property
, and
pg_indexam_has_property
return whether the
specified index column, index, or index access method possesses the named
property. NULL
is returned if the property name is not
known or does not apply to the particular object, or if the OID or column
number does not identify a valid object. Refer to
Table 9.69 for column properties,
Table 9.70 for index properties, and
Table 9.71 for access method properties.
(Note that extension access methods can define additional property names
for their indexes.)
Table 9.69. Index Column Properties
Name | Description |
---|---|
asc | Does the column sort in ascending order on a forward scan? |
desc | Does the column sort in descending order on a forward scan? |
nulls_first | Does the column sort with nulls first on a forward scan? |
nulls_last | Does the column sort with nulls last on a forward scan? |
orderable | Does the column possess any defined sort ordering? |
distance_orderable | Can the column be scanned in order by a “distance”
operator, for example ORDER BY col <-> constant ?
|
returnable | Can the column value be returned by an index-only scan? |
search_array | Does the column natively support col = ANY(array)
searches?
|
search_nulls | Does the column support IS NULL and
IS NOT NULL searches?
|
Table 9.70. Index Properties
Name | Description |
---|---|
clusterable | Can the index be used in a CLUSTER command?
|
index_scan | Does the index support plain (non-bitmap) scans? |
bitmap_scan | Does the index support bitmap scans? |
backward_scan | Can the scan direction be changed in mid-scan (to
support FETCH BACKWARD on a cursor without
needing materialization)?
|
Table 9.71. Index Access Method Properties
Name | Description |
---|---|
can_order | Does the access method support ASC ,
DESC and related keywords in
CREATE INDEX ?
|
can_unique | Does the access method support unique indexes? |
can_multi_col | Does the access method support indexes with multiple columns? |
can_exclude | Does the access method support exclusion constraints? |
can_include | Does the access method support the INCLUDE
clause of CREATE INDEX ?
|
pg_options_to_table
returns the set of storage
option name/value pairs
(option_name
/option_value
) when passed
pg_class
.reloptions
or
pg_attribute
.attoptions
.
pg_tablespace_databases
allows a tablespace to be
examined. It returns the set of OIDs of databases that have objects stored
in the tablespace. If this function returns any rows, the tablespace is not
empty and cannot be dropped. To display the specific objects populating the
tablespace, you will need to connect to the databases identified by
pg_tablespace_databases
and query their
pg_class
catalogs.
pg_typeof
returns the OID of the data type of the
value that is passed to it. This can be helpful for troubleshooting or
dynamically constructing SQL queries. The function is declared as
returning regtype
, which is an OID alias type (see
Section 8.19); this means that it is the same as an
OID for comparison purposes but displays as a type name. For example:
SELECT pg_typeof(33); pg_typeof ----------- integer (1 row) SELECT typlen FROM pg_type WHERE oid = pg_typeof(33); typlen -------- 4 (1 row)
The expression collation for
returns the collation of the
value that is passed to it. Example:
SELECT collation for (description) FROM pg_description LIMIT 1; pg_collation_for ------------------ "default" (1 row) SELECT collation for ('foo' COLLATE "de_DE"); pg_collation_for ------------------ "de_DE" (1 row)
The value might be quoted and schema-qualified. If no collation is derived for the argument expression, then a null value is returned. If the argument is not of a collatable data type, then an error is raised.
The to_regclass
, to_regproc
,
to_regprocedure
, to_regoper
,
to_regoperator
, to_regtype
,
to_regnamespace
, and to_regrole
functions translate relation, function, operator, type, schema, and role
names (given as text
) to objects of
type regclass
, regproc
, regprocedure
,
regoper
, regoperator
, regtype
,
regnamespace
, and regrole
respectively. These functions differ from a cast from
text in that they don't accept a numeric OID, and that they return null
rather than throwing an error if the name is not found (or, for
to_regproc
and to_regoper
, if
the given name matches multiple objects).
Table 9.72 lists functions related to database object identification and addressing.
Table 9.72. Object Information and Addressing Functions
Name | Return Type | Description |
---|---|---|
| text | get description of a database object |
| type text , schema text , name text , identity text | get identity of a database object |
| type text , object_names text[] , object_args text[] | get external representation of a database object's address |
| classid oid , objid oid , objsubid integer | get address of a database object from its external representation |
pg_describe_object
returns a textual description of a database
object specified by catalog OID, object OID, and sub-object ID (such as
a column number within a table; the sub-object ID is zero when referring
to a whole object).
This description is intended to be human-readable, and might be translated,
depending on server configuration.
This is useful to determine the identity of an object as stored in the
pg_depend
catalog.
pg_identify_object
returns a row containing enough information
to uniquely identify the database object specified by catalog OID, object OID and
sub-object ID. This information is intended to be machine-readable,
and is never translated.
type
identifies the type of database object;
schema
is the schema name that the object belongs in, or
NULL
for object types that do not belong to schemas;
name
is the name of the object, quoted if necessary,
if the name (along with schema name, if pertinent) is sufficient to
uniquely identify the object, otherwise NULL
;
identity
is the complete object identity, with the
precise format depending on object type, and each name within the format
being schema-qualified and quoted as necessary.
pg_identify_object_as_address
returns a row containing
enough information to uniquely identify the database object specified by
catalog OID, object OID and sub-object ID. The returned
information is independent of the current server, that is, it could be used
to identify an identically named object in another server.
type
identifies the type of database object;
object_names
and object_args
are text arrays that together form a reference to the object.
These three values can be passed to
pg_get_object_address
to obtain the internal address
of the object.
This function is the inverse of pg_get_object_address
.
pg_get_object_address
returns a row containing enough
information to uniquely identify the database object specified by its
type and object name and argument arrays. The returned values are the
ones that would be used in system catalogs such as pg_depend
and can be passed to other system functions such as
pg_identify_object
or pg_describe_object
.
classid
is the OID of the system catalog containing the
object;
objid
is the OID of the object itself, and
objsubid
is the sub-object ID, or zero if none.
This function is the inverse of pg_identify_object_as_address
.
The functions shown in Table 9.73 extract comments previously stored with the COMMENT command. A null value is returned if no comment could be found for the specified parameters.
Table 9.73. Comment Information Functions
Name | Return Type | Description |
---|---|---|
| text | get comment for a table column |
| text | get comment for a database object |
| text | get comment for a database object (deprecated) |
| text | get comment for a shared database object |
col_description
returns the comment for a table
column, which is specified by the OID of its table and its column number.
(obj_description
cannot be used for table columns
since columns do not have OIDs of their own.)
The two-parameter form of obj_description
returns the
comment for a database object specified by its OID and the name of the
containing system catalog. For example,
obj_description(123456,'pg_class')
would retrieve the comment for the table with OID 123456.
The one-parameter form of obj_description
requires only
the object OID. It is deprecated since there is no guarantee that
OIDs are unique across different system catalogs; therefore, the wrong
comment might be returned.
shobj_description
is used just like
obj_description
except it is used for retrieving
comments on shared objects. Some system catalogs are global to all
databases within each cluster, and the descriptions for objects in them
are stored globally as well.
The functions shown in Table 9.74 provide server transaction information in an exportable form. The main use of these functions is to determine which transactions were committed between two snapshots.
Table 9.74. Transaction IDs and Snapshots
Name | Return Type | Description |
---|---|---|
| bigint | get current transaction ID, assigning a new one if the current transaction does not have one |
| bigint | same as txid_current() but returns null instead of assigning a new transaction ID if none is already assigned |
| txid_snapshot | get current snapshot |
| setof bigint | get in-progress transaction IDs in snapshot |
| bigint | get xmax of snapshot |
| bigint | get xmin of snapshot |
| boolean | is transaction ID visible in snapshot? (do not use with subtransaction ids) |
| text | report the status of the given transaction: committed , aborted , in progress , or null if the transaction ID is too old |
The internal transaction ID type (xid
) is 32 bits wide and
wraps around every 4 billion transactions. However, these functions
export a 64-bit format that is extended with an “epoch” counter
so it will not wrap around during the life of an installation.
The data type used by these functions, txid_snapshot
,
stores information about transaction ID
visibility at a particular moment in time. Its components are
described in Table 9.75.
Table 9.75. Snapshot Components
Name | Description |
---|---|
xmin | Earliest transaction ID (txid) that is still active. All earlier transactions will either be committed and visible, or rolled back and dead. |
xmax | First as-yet-unassigned txid. All txids greater than or equal to this are not yet started as of the time of the snapshot, and thus invisible. |
xip_list |
Active txids at the time of the snapshot. The list
includes only those active txids between xmin
and xmax ; there might be active txids higher
than xmax . A txid that is xmin <= txid <
xmax and not in this list was already completed
at the time of the snapshot, and thus either visible or
dead according to its commit status. The list does not
include txids of subtransactions.
|
txid_snapshot
's textual representation is
.
For example xmin
:xmax
:xip_list
10:20:10,14,15
means
xmin=10, xmax=20, xip_list=10, 14, 15
.
txid_status(bigint)
reports the commit status of a recent
transaction. Applications may use it to determine whether a transaction
committed or aborted when the application and database server become
disconnected while a COMMIT
is in progress.
The status of a transaction will be reported as either
in progress
,
committed
, or aborted
, provided that the
transaction is recent enough that the system retains the commit status
of that transaction. If is old enough that no references to that
transaction survive in the system and the commit status information has
been discarded, this function will return NULL. Note that prepared
transactions are reported as in progress
; applications must
check pg_prepared_xacts
if they
need to determine whether the txid is a prepared transaction.
The functions shown in Table 9.76 provide information about transactions that have been already committed. These functions mainly provide information about when the transactions were committed. They only provide useful data when track_commit_timestamp configuration option is enabled and only for transactions that were committed after it was enabled.
Table 9.76. Committed Transaction Information
The functions shown in Table 9.77
print information initialized during initdb
, such
as the catalog version. They also show information about write-ahead
logging and checkpoint processing. This information is cluster-wide,
and not specific to any one database. They provide most of the same
information, from the same source, as
pg_controldata, although in a form better suited
to SQL functions.
Table 9.77. Control Data Functions
pg_control_checkpoint
returns a record, shown in
Table 9.78
Table 9.78. pg_control_checkpoint
Columns
Column Name | Data Type |
---|---|
checkpoint_lsn | pg_lsn |
redo_lsn | pg_lsn |
redo_wal_file | text |
timeline_id | integer |
prev_timeline_id | integer |
full_page_writes | boolean |
next_xid | text |
next_oid | oid |
next_multixact_id | xid |
next_multi_offset | xid |
oldest_xid | xid |
oldest_xid_dbid | oid |
oldest_active_xid | xid |
oldest_multi_xid | xid |
oldest_multi_dbid | oid |
oldest_commit_ts_xid | xid |
newest_commit_ts_xid | xid |
checkpoint_time | timestamp with time zone |
pg_control_system
returns a record, shown in
Table 9.79
Table 9.79. pg_control_system
Columns
Column Name | Data Type |
---|---|
pg_control_version | integer |
catalog_version_no | integer |
system_identifier | bigint |
pg_control_last_modified | timestamp with time zone |
pg_control_init
returns a record, shown in
Table 9.80
Table 9.80. pg_control_init
Columns
Column Name | Data Type |
---|---|
max_data_alignment | integer |
database_block_size | integer |
blocks_per_segment | integer |
wal_block_size | integer |
bytes_per_wal_segment | integer |
max_identifier_length | integer |
max_index_columns | integer |
max_toast_chunk_size | integer |
large_object_chunk_size | integer |
float4_pass_by_value | boolean |
float8_pass_by_value | boolean |
data_page_checksum_version | integer |
pg_control_recovery
returns a record, shown in
Table 9.81
Table 9.81. pg_control_recovery
Columns
Column Name | Data Type |
---|---|
min_recovery_end_lsn | pg_lsn |
min_recovery_end_timeline | integer |
backup_start_lsn | pg_lsn |
backup_end_lsn | pg_lsn |
end_of_backup_record_required | boolean |