Oracle EXECUTE IMMEDIATE and PostgreSQL EXECUTE and PREPARE - Oracle to Aurora PostgreSQL Migration Playbook

Oracle EXECUTE IMMEDIATE and PostgreSQL EXECUTE and PREPARE

Feature compatibility AWS SCT / AWS DMS automation level AWS SCT action code index Key differences

Four star feature compatibility

Two star automation level

N/A

N/A

Oracle Usage

You can use Oracle EXECUTE IMMEDIATE statement to parse and run a dynamic SQL statement or an anonymous PL/SQL block. It also supports bind variables.

Examples

Run a dynamic SQL statement from within a PL/SQL procedure:

  1. Create a PL/SQL procedure named raise_sal.

  2. Define a SQL statement with a dynamic value for the column name included in the WHERE statement.

  3. Use the EXECUTE IMMEDIATE command supplying the two bind variables to be used as part of the SELECT statement: amount and col_val.

    CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE raise_sal (col_val NUMBER,
    emp_col VARCHAR2, amount NUMBER) IS
      col_name VARCHAR2(30);
      sql_stmt VARCHAR2(350);
    BEGIN
      -- determine if a valid column name has been given as input
      SELECT COLUMN_NAME INTO col_name FROM USER_TAB_COLS
      WHERE TABLE_NAME = 'EMPLOYEES' AND COLUMN_NAME = emp_col;
    
      -- define the SQL statment (with bind variables)
      sql_stmt := 'UPDATE employees SET salary = salary + :1 WHERE ' ||
      col_name || ' = :2';
    
      -- Run the command
      EXECUTE IMMEDIATE sql_stmt USING amount, col_val;
    END raise_sal;
    /
  4. Run the DDL operation from within an EXECUTE IMMEDIATE command.

    EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'CREATE TABLE link_emp (idemp1 NUMBER, idemp2 NUMBER)';
    EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'ALTER SESSION SET SQL_TRACE TRUE';
  5. Run an anonymous block with bind variables using EXECUTE IMMEDIATE.

    EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'BEGIN raise_sal (:col_val, :col_name, :amount); END;'
      USING 134, 'EMPLOYEE_ID', 10;

For more information, see EXECUTE IMMEDIATE Statement in the Oracle documentation.

PostgreSQL Usage

The PostgreSQL EXECUTE command prepares and runs commands dynamically. The EXECUTE command can also run DDL statements and retrieve data using SQL commands. Similar to Oracle, you can use the PostgreSQL EXECUTE command with bind variables.

Examples

Execute a SQL SELECT query with the table name as a dynamic variable using bind variables. This query returns the number of employees under a manager with a specific ID.

DO $$DECLARE
Tabname varchar(30) := 'employees';
num integer := 1;
cnt integer;
BEGIN
EXECUTE format('SELECT count(*) FROM %I WHERE manager = $1', tabname)
INTO cnt USING num;
RAISE NOTICE 'Count is % int table %', cnt, tabname;
END$$;
;

Run a DML command with no variables and then with variables.

DO $$DECLARE
BEGIN
EXECUTE 'INSERT INTO numbers (a) VALUES (1)';
EXECUTE format('INSERT INTO numbers (a) VALUES (%s)', 42);
END$$;
;
Note

%s formats the argument value as a simple string. A null value is treated as an empty string.

%I treats the argument value as an SQL identifier and double-quoting it if necessary. It is an error for the value to be null.

Run a DDL command.

DO $$DECLARE
BEGIN
EXECUTE 'CREATE TABLE numbers (num integer)';
END$$;
;

For more information, see String Functions and Operators in the PostgreSQL documentation.

Using a PREPARE statement can improve performance for reusable SQL statements.

The PREPARE command can receive a SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, or VALUES statement and parse it with a user-specified qualifying name so you can use the EXECUTE command later without the need to re-parse the SQL statement on each run.

  • When using PREPARE to create a prepared statement, it will be viable for the scope of the current session.

  • If you run a DDL command on a database object referenced by the prepared SQL statement, the next EXECUTE command requires a hard parse of the SQL statement.

Example

Use PREPARE and EXECUTE commands together.

  1. The SQL command is prepared with a user-specified qualifying name.

  2. The SQL command runs several times, without the need for re-parsing.

PREPARE numplan (int, text, bool) AS
INSERT INTO numbers VALUES($1, $2, $3);

EXECUTE numplan(100, 'New number 100', 't');
EXECUTE numplan(101, 'New number 101', 't');
EXECUTE numplan(102, 'New number 102', 'f');
EXECUTE numplan(103, 'New number 103', 't');

Summary

Functionality Oracle EXECUTE IMMEDIATE PostgreSQL EXECUTE

Execute SQL with results and bind variables

EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'select salary
from employees WHERE ' || col_name ||
' = :1' INTO amount USING col_val;
EXECUTE format('select salary from employees
WHERE %I = $1', col_name) INTO
amount USING col_val;

Execute DML with variables and bind variables

EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'UPDATE
employees SET salary = salary + :1
WHERE ' || col_name || ' = :2'
USING amount, col_val;
EXECUTE format('UPDATE employees
SET salary = salary + $1 WHERE %I = $2',
col_name) USING amount, col_val;

Execute DDL

EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'CREATE
TABLE link_emp (idemp1 NUMBER,
idemp2 NUMBER)';
EXECUTE 'CREATE TABLE link_emp
(idemp1 integer, idemp2 integer)';

Execute anonymous block

EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'BEGIN
DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE
("Anonymous Block"); END;';
DO $$DECLARE
BEGIN ... END$$;

For more information, see Basic Statements in the PostgreSQL documentation.