SQL*Plus® User's Guide and Reference Release 11.2 Part Number E10823-01 |
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System Variable | Description |
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Sets automatic registering of scripts through the DBMS_APPLICATION_INFO package. | |
Sets the number of rows, called a batch, that SQL*Plus will fetch from the database at one time. | |
Controls when Oracle Database commits pending changes to the database. | |
Sets the automatic printing of bind variables. | |
ON sets the RECOVER command to automatically apply the default filenames of archived redo log files needed during recovery. | |
SET AUTOT[RACE] {ON | OFF | TRACE[ONLY]} [EXP[LAIN]] [STAT[ISTICS]] |
Displays a report on the execution of successful SQL DML statements (SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE or MERGE). |
Sets the non-alphanumeric character used to end PL/SQL blocks to c. | |
Sets the non-alphanumeric character used to separate multiple SQL*Plus commands entered on one line to c. | |
Sets the text to be printed between selected columns. | |
Sets the character you can use to terminate a substitution variable reference if you wish to immediately follow the variable with a character that SQL*Plus would otherwise interpret as a part of the substitution variable name. | |
Controls the number of batches after which the COPY command commits changes to the database. | |
Sets the suppression of the comparison of datatypes while inserting or appending to tables with the COPY command. | |
Sets the character used to prefix variables to c. | |
SET DESCRIBE [DEPTH {1 | n | ALL}] [LINENUM {ON | OFF}] [INDENT {ON | OFF}] |
Sets the depth of the level to which you can recursively describe an object. |
Controls whether the START command lists each command in a script as the command is executed. | |
Sets the default filename for the EDIT command. | |
Controls where on a page each report begins. | |
SET ERRORL[OGGING] {ON | OFF} [TABLE [schema.]tablename] [TRUNCATE] [IDENTIFIER identifier] |
Enables recording of SQL, PL/SQL and SQL*Plus errors to an error log table which you can query later. |
Defines the character you enter as the escape character. | |
Specifies a special character to escape in a filename. Prevents character translation causing an error. | |
Specifies whether the default EXIT behavior is COMMIT or ROLLBACK. | |
Displays the number of records returned by a query when a query selects at least n records. | |
Checks to make sure that SQL statements conform to the ANSI/ISO SQL92 standard. | |
Controls when output is sent to the user's display device. | |
Controls printing of column headings in reports. | |
Defines the character you enter as the heading separator character. | |
Changes the default instance for your session to the specified instance path. | |
Sets the total number of characters that SQL*Plus displays on one line before beginning a new line. | |
Sets the starting position from which BLOB, BFILE, CLOB and NCLOB data is retrieved and displayed. | |
Specifies the location from which archive logs are retrieved during recovery. | |
Sets maximum width (in bytes) for displaying LONG, BLOB, BFILE, CLOB, NCLOB and XMLType values; and for copying LONG values. | |
Sets the size (in bytes) of the increments in which SQL*Plus retrieves a LONG, BLOB, BFILE, CLOB, NCLOB or XMLType value. | |
Outputs HTML marked up text. | |
Sets the number of blank lines to be printed from the top of each page to the top title. | |
Sets the text that represents a null value in the result of a SQL SELECT command. | |
Sets the default format for displaying numbers. | |
Sets the default width for displaying numbers. | |
Sets the number of lines in each page. | |
Enables you to control scrolling of your terminal when running reports. | |
RECSEP tells SQL*Plus where to make the record separation. | |
Display or print record separators. | |
Controls whether to display the output (that is, DBMS_OUTPUT PUT_LINE) of stored procedures or PL/SQL blocks in SQL*Plus. | |
Enables correct alignment for terminals that display shift characters. | |
Controls whether SQL*Plus lists the old and new settings of a SQL*Plus system variable when you change the setting with SET. | |
Controls whether SQL*Plus puts blank lines within a SQL command or script. | |
Converts the case of SQL commands and PL/SQL blocks just prior to execution. | |
Sets the character sequence SQL*Plus displays as a prompt after you continue a SQL*Plus command on an additional line using a hyphen (–). | |
Sets the prompt for the second and subsequent lines of a SQL command or PL/SQL block. | |
Sets the behavior or output format of VARIABLE to that of the release or version specified by x.y[.z]. | |
Sets the SQL*Plus prefix character. | |
Sets the SQL*Plus command prompt. | |
Sets the character used to end and execute SQL commands to c. | |
Sets the default file that SQL*Plus uses in commands that refer to scripts. | |
Determines how SQL*Plus formats white space in terminal output. | |
Controls the display of output generated by commands executed from a script. | |
Controls the display of the current time. | |
Controls the display of timing statistics. | |
Determines whether SQL*Plus puts trailing blanks at the end of each displayed line. | |
Determines whether SQL*Plus puts trailing blanks at the end of each spooled line. | |
Sets the character used to underline column headings in SQL*Plus reports to c. | |
Controls whether SQL*Plus lists the text of a SQL statement or PL/SQL command before and after SQL*Plus replaces substitution variables with values. | |
Controls whether SQL*Plus truncates the display of a SELECTed row if it is too long for the current line width. | |
Defines the base URI to use. This is useful to change the prefix of the file to access when writing generic XQuery expressions. | |
Controls the ordering of results from an XQuery. | |
Sets the preservation mode for notes created or returned. | |
Specifies an XQuery context item which can be either a node or a value. |
Sets automatic registering of scripts through the DBMS_APPLICATION_INFO package.
This enables the performance and resource usage of each script to be monitored by your DBA. The registered name appears in the MODULE column of the V$SESSION and V$SQLAREA virtual tables. You can also read the registered name using the DBMS_APPLICATION_INFO.READ_MODULE procedure.
ON registers scripts invoked by the @, @@ or START commands. OFF disables registering of scripts. Instead, the current value of text is registered. text specifies the text to register when no script is being run or when APPINFO is OFF, which is the default. The default for text is "SQL*Plus". If you enter multiple words for text, you must enclose them in quotes. The maximum length for text is limited by the DBMS_APPLICATION_INFO package.
The registered name has the format nn@xfilename where: nn is the depth level of script; x is '<' when the script name is truncated, otherwise, it is blank; and filename is the script name, possibly truncated to the length allowed by the DBMS_APPLICATION_INFO package interface.
For more information on the DBMS_APPLICATION_INFO package, see the Oracle Database Performance Tuning Guide.
Example
To display the value of APPINFO, as it is SET OFF by default, enter
SET APPINFO ON SHOW APPINFO
APPINFO is ON and set to "SQL*Plus" |
To change the default text, enter
SET APPINFO 'This is SQL*Plus'
To make sure that registration has taken place, enter
VARIABLE MOD VARCHAR2(50) VARIABLE ACT VARCHAR2(40) EXECUTE DBMS_APPLICATION_INFO.READ_MODULE(:MOD, :ACT);
PL/SQL procedure successfully completed. |
PRINT MOD
MOD --------------------------------------------------- This is SQL*Plus |
To change APPINFO back to its default setting, enter
SET APPINFO OFF
Sets the number of rows that SQL*Plus will fetch from the database at one time.
Valid values are 1 to 5000. A large value increases the efficiency of queries and subqueries that fetch many rows, but requires more memory. Values over approximately 100 provide little added performance. ARRAYSIZE has no effect on the results of SQL*Plus operations other than increasing efficiency.
Controls when Oracle Database commits pending changes to the database after SQL or PL/SQL commands.
ON commits pending changes to the database after Oracle Database executes each successful INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE, or PL/SQL block. OFF suppresses automatic committing so that you must commit changes manually (for example, with the SQL command COMMIT). IMMEDIATE functions in the same manner as ON. n commits pending changes to the database after Oracle Database executes n successful SQL INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE commands, or PL/SQL blocks. n cannot be less than zero or greater than 2,000,000,000. The statement counter is reset to zero after successful completion of n INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE commands or PL/SQL blocks, a commit, a rollback, or a SET AUTOCOMMIT command.
SET AUTOCOMMIT does not alter the commit behavior when SQL*Plus exits. Any uncommitted data is committed by default.
Note:
For this feature, a PL/SQL block is considered one transaction, regardless of the actual number of SQL commands contained within it.Sets the automatic printing of bind variables.
ON or OFF controls whether SQL*Plus automatically displays bind variables (referenced in a successful PL/SQL block or used in an EXECUTE command).
See PRINT for more information about displaying bind variables.
ON sets the RECOVER command to automatically apply the default filenames of archived redo log files needed during recovery.
No interaction is needed, provided the necessary files are in the expected locations with the expected names. The filenames used are derived from the values of the initialization parameters LOG_ARCHIVE_DEST and LOG_ARCHIVE_FORMAT.
OFF, the default option, requires that you enter the filenames manually or accept the suggested default filename given. See RECOVER for more information about database recovery.
Example
To set the recovery mode to AUTOMATIC, enter
SET AUTORECOVERY ON RECOVER DATABASE
Displays a report on the execution of successful SQL DML statements (such as SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE or MERGE).
The report can include execution statistics and the query execution path.
SQL*Plus report output may differ for DML if dynamic sampling is in effect.
OFF does not display a trace report. ON displays a trace report. TRACEONLY displays a trace report, but does not print query data, if any. EXPLAIN shows the query execution path by performing an EXPLAIN PLAN. STATISTICS displays SQL statement statistics. Information about EXPLAIN PLAN is documented in the Oracle Database SQL Language Reference.
Using ON or TRACEONLY with no explicit options defaults to EXPLAIN STATISTICS.
The TRACEONLY option may be useful to suppress the query data of large queries. If STATISTICS is specified, SQL*Plus still fetches the query data from the server, however, the data is not displayed.
The AUTOTRACE report is printed after the statement has successfully completed.
Information about Execution Plans and the statistics is documented in the Oracle Database Performance Tuning Guide.
When SQL*Plus produces a STATISTICS report, a second connection to the database is automatically created. This connection is closed when the STATISTICS option is set to OFF, or you log out of SQL*Plus.
The formatting of your AUTOTRACE report may vary depending on the version of the server to which you are connected and the configuration of the server. The additional information and tabular output of AUTOTRACE PLAN is supported when connecting to Oracle Database 10g (Release 10.1) or later. When you connect to an earlier database, the older form or AUTOTRACE reporting is used.
AUTOTRACE is not available when FIPS flagging is enabled.
See Tracing Statements for more information on AUTOTRACE.
Sets the character used to end PL/SQL blocks to c.
It cannot be an alphanumeric character or a whitespace. To execute the block, you must issue a RUN or / (slash) command.
OFF means that SQL*Plus recognizes no PL/SQL block terminator. ON changes the value of c back to the default period (.), not the most recently used character.
Sets the non-alphanumeric character used to separate multiple SQL*Plus commands entered on one line to c.
ON or OFF controls whether you can enter multiple commands on a line. ON automatically sets the command separator character to a semicolon (;).
Example
To specify a title with TTITLE and format a column with COLUMN, both on the same line, enter
SET CMDSEP + TTITLE LEFT 'SALARIES' + COLUMN SALARY FORMAT $99,999 SELECT LAST_NAME, SALARY FROM EMP_DETAILS_VIEW WHERE JOB_ID = 'SH_CLERK';
SALARIES LAST_NAME SALARY ------------------------- -------- Taylor $3,200 Fleaur $3,100 Sullivan $2,500 Geoni $2,800 Sarchand $4,200 Bull $4,100 Dellinger $3,400 Cabrio $3,000 Chung $3,800 Dilly $3,600 Gates $2,900 Perkins $2,500 Bell $4,000 Everett $3,900 McCain $3,200 Jones $2,800 SALARIES LAST_NAME SALARY ------------------------- -------- Walsh $3,100 Feeney $3,000 OConnell $2,600 Grant $2,600 20 rows selected. |
Sets the column separator character printed between columns in output.
If the COLSEP variable contains blanks or punctuation characters, you must enclose it with single quotes. The default value for text is a single space.
In multi-line rows, the column separator does not print between columns that begin on different lines. The column separator does not appear on blank lines produced by BREAK ... SKIP n and does not overwrite the record separator. See SET RECSEP {WR[APPED] | EA[CH] | OFF} for more information.
Example
To set the column separator to "|" enter
SET MARKUP HTML PREFORMAT ON SET COLSEP '|' SELECT LAST_NAME, JOB_ID, DEPARTMENT_ID FROM EMP_DETAILS_VIEW WHERE DEPARTMENT_ID = 20;
LAST_NAME |JOB_ID |DEPARTMENT_ID -------------------------|----------|------------- Hartstein |MK_MAN | 20 Fay |MK_REP | 20 |
Sets the character used to terminate a substitution variable reference when SQL*Plus would otherwise interpret the next character as a part of the variable name.
SQL*Plus resets the value of CONCAT to a period when you switch CONCAT on.
Controls the number of rows after which the COPY command commits changes to the database.
COPY commits rows to the destination database each time it copies n row batches. Valid values are zero to 5000. You can set the size of a batch with the ARRAYSIZE variable. If you set COPYCOMMIT to zero, COPY performs a commit only at the end of a copy operation.
Sets the suppression of the comparison of datatypes while inserting or appending to tables with the COPY command.
This is to facilitate copying to DB2, which requires that a CHAR be copied to a DB2 DATE.
Sets the character used to prefix substitution variables to c.
ON or OFF controls whether SQL*Plus will scan commands for substitution variables and replace them with their values. ON changes the value of c back to the default '&', not the most recently used character. The setting of DEFINE to OFF overrides the setting of the SCAN variable.
See SET SCAN {ON|OFF} (obsolete) for more information on the SCAN variable.
Sets the depth of the level to which you can recursively describe an object.
The valid range of the DEPTH clause is from 1 to 50. If you SET DESCRIBE DEPTH ALL, then the depth will be set to 50, which is the maximum level allowed. You can also display the line number and indentation of the attribute or column name when an object contains multiple object types. Use the SET LINESIZE command to control the width of the data displayed.
See DESCRIBE for more information about describing objects.
Example
To create an object type ADDRESS, enter
CREATE TYPE ADDRESS AS OBJECT ( STREET VARCHAR2(20), CITY VARCHAR2(20) ); /
Type created |
To create the table EMPLOYEE that contains a nested object, EMPADDR, of type ADDRESS, enter
CREATE TABLE EMPLOYEE (LAST_NAME VARCHAR2(30), EMPADDR ADDRESS, JOB_ID VARCHAR2(20), SALARY NUMBER(7,2) ); /
Table created |
To describe the table EMPLOYEE to a depth of two levels, and to indent the output and display line numbers, enter:
SET DESCRIBE DEPTH 2 LINENUM ON INDENT ON DESCRIBE employee
Name Null? Type ------------------------------- -------- -------------------------- 1 LAST_NAME VARCHAR2(30) 2 EMPADDR ADDRESS 3 2 STREET VARCHAR2(20) 4 2 CITY VARCHAR2(20) 5 JOB_ID VARCHAR2(20) 6 SALARY NUMBER(7,2) |
Controls whether or not to echo commands in a script that is executed with @, @@ or START. ON displays the commands on screen. OFF suppresses the display. ECHO does not affect the display of commands you enter interactively or redirect to SQL*Plus from the operating system.
Sets the default filename for the EDIT command. See EDIT for more information about the EDIT command. The default filename for the EDIT command is afiedt.buf which is the SQL buffer. The buffer has no command history list and does not record SQL*Plus commands.
You can include a path and/or file extension. See SET SUF[FIX] {SQL | text} for information on changing the default extension. The default filename and maximum filename length are operating system specific.
Controls where on a page each report begins.
OFF forces each report to start at the top of a new page. ON enables a report to begin anywhere on a page. Set EMBEDDED to ON when you want a report to begin printing immediately following the end of the previously run report.
Turns SQL*Plus error logging ON or OFF. Error logging records SQL, PL/SQL and SQL*Plus errors and associated parameters in an error log table. You can then query the log table to review errors resulting from a query. When error logging is ON, errors are recorded whether the query is run interactively or from a script. This is particularly useful for capturing errors generated from long running queries and avoids capturing all output using the SPOOL command, or having to remain present during the run.
By default, errors are written to a the table SPERRORLOG in your schema. If this table does not exist, it is created automatically. You can also use the TABLE schema.tablename option to specify other tables to use. When using a table other than SPERRORLOG, it must already exist, and you must have access to it. See Creating a User Defined Error Log Table.
If an internal error occurs, to avoid recursion errors caused by the errorlog calling itself, errorlogging is automatically set OFF.
Error logging is set OFF by default.
ON
Writes ORA, PLS and SP2 errors to the default table, SPERRORLOG.
OFF
Disables error .
TABLE [schema.]tablename
Specifies a user defined table to use instead of the default, SPERRORLOG. If you omit schema. the table is created in the current schema. The table you specify must exist, and you must have access permissions.
If the table specified does not exist, or you do not have access, an error message is displayed and the default table, SPERRORLOG, is used.
TRUNCATE
Clears all existing rows in the error log table and begins recording errors from the current session.
IDENTIFIER identifier
A user defined string to identify errors. You can use it to identify errors from a particular session or from a particular version of a query.
Creating a User Defined Error Log Table
You can create one or more error log tables to use other than the default. Before specifying a user defined error log table with the TABLE schema.tablename option, you must create it and ensure that you have permissions to access it. The error log table has the following column definitions:
Table 12-4 SQL*Plus Error Log Column Definitions
Column | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
username |
VARCHAR(256) |
Oracle account name. |
timestamp |
TIMESTAMP |
Time when the error occurred. |
script |
VARCHAR(1024) |
Name of the originating script if applicable. |
identifier |
VARCHAR(256) |
User defined identifier string. |
message |
CLOB |
ORA, PLA or SP2 error message. No feed back messages are included. For example, "PL/SQL Block Created" is not recorded. |
statement |
CLOB |
The statement causing the error. |
Using User Defined Error Log Tables
To use a user defined log table, you must have permission to access the table, and you must issue the SET ERRORLOGGING command with the TABLE schema.tablename option to identify the error log table and the schema if applicable.
Querying Error Log Tables
To view the records recorded in an error log table, you query the columns you want to view as for any table. The columns available are shown in Table 12-4, "SQL*Plus Error Log Column Definitions".
Example
To use the default error log table to record query errors from a script, myfile.sql, which contains the following:
VARIABLE U REFCURSOR BEGIN OPEN :U FOR SELECT * FROM DEPT; END; / SHOW ERRORS PROCEDURE 'SSS' SET GARBAGE SELECT * FROM GARBAGE ;
Enter the following:
SET ERRORLOGGING ON @myfile
which produces the following output:
open :u for select * from dept; * ERROR at line 2: ORA-6550: line 2, column 29: PLS-00201: ORA-00942: table or view does not exist ORA-6550: line 2, column 16: PL/SQL: SQL Statement ignored ERROR: ORA-00907: missing right parenthesis SP2-0158: unknown SET option "garbage" garbage * ERROR at line 3: ORA-00942: table or view does not exist |
To view the errror log written to the default error log table, SPERRORLOG, enter:
SELECT TIMESTAMP, USERNAME, SCRIPT, IDENTIFIER, STATEMENT, MESSAGE FROM SPERRORLOG;
which produces the following output:
TIMESTAMP | USERNAME | SCRIPT | IDENTIFIER | STATEMENT | MESSAGE |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mon May 08 21:30:03 2006 | SYSTEM | d:\myfile.sql | open :u for select * from dept; | ORA-06550: line 2, column 27: | |
Mon May 08 21:30:05 2006 | SYSTEM | d:\myfile.sql | open :u for select * from dept; | PL/SQL: ORA-00942: table or view does not exist | |
Mon May 08 21:30:05 2006 | SYSTEM | d:\myfile.sql | open :u for select * from dept; | ORA-06550: line 2, column 13: | |
Mon May 08 21:30:05 2006 | SYSTEM | d:\myfile.sql | open :u for select * from dept; | PL/SQL: SQL Statement ignored | |
Mon May 08 21:30:06 2006 | SYSTEM | d:\myfile.sql | show errors procedure "sss" | ORA-00907: missing right parenthesis | |
Mon May 08 21:30:09 2006 | SYSTEM | d:\myfile.sql | set garbage | SP2-0158: unknown SET option "garbage" | |
Mon May 08 21:30:10 2006 | SYSTEM | d:\myfile.sql | garbage | ORA-00942: table or view does not exist |
Example 2
To use a user defined error log table to record query errors from a script, myfile.sql, which contains the following:
VARIABLE U REFCURSOR BEGIN OPEN :U FOR SELECT * FROM DEPT; END; / SHOW ERRORS PROCEDURE 'SSS' SET GARBAGE SELECT * FROM GARBAGE ;
Enter the following:
SET ERRORLOGGING ON @MYFILE
which produces the following output:
open :u for select * from dept; * ERROR at line 2: ORA-6550: line 2, column 29: PLS-00201: ORA-00942: table or view does not exist ORA-6550: line 2, column 16: PL/SQL: SQL Statement ignored ERROR: ORA-00907: missing right parenthesis SP2-0158: unknown SET option "garbage" garbage * ERROR at line 3: ORA-00942: table or view does not exist |
To view the errror log written to the default error log table, SPERRORLOG, enter:
SELECT TIMESTAMP, USERNAME, SCRIPT, IDENTIFIER, STATEMENT, MESSAGE FROM SPERRORLOG;
which produces the following output:
TIMESTAMP | USERNAME | SCRIPT | IDENTIFIER | STATEMENT | MESSAGE |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mon May 08 21:30:03 2006 | SYSTEM | d:\myfile.sql | open :u for select * from dept; | ORA-06550: line 2, column 27: | |
Mon May 08 21:30:05 2006 | SYSTEM | d:\myfile.sql | open :u for select * from dept; | PL/SQL: ORA-00942: table or view does not exist | |
Mon May 08 21:30:05 2006 | SYSTEM | d:\myfile.sql | open :u for select * from dept; | ORA-06550: line 2, column 13: | |
Mon May 08 21:30:05 2006 | SYSTEM | d:\myfile.sql | open :u for select * from dept; | PL/SQL: SQL Statement ignored | |
Mon May 08 21:30:06 2006 | SYSTEM | d:\myfile.sql | show errors procedure "sss" | ORA-00907: missing right parenthesis | |
Mon May 08 21:30:09 2006 | SYSTEM | d:\myfile.sql | set garbage | SP2-0158: unknown SET option "garbage" | |
Mon May 08 21:30:10 2006 | SYSTEM | d:\myfile.sql | garbage | ORA-00942: table or view does not exist |
Example 3
To use an error log table other than the default:
Create the error log table you want to use
Specify the table you want to use with the TABLE option of the SET ERRORLOGGING ON command.
The error log table must have the column definitions defined in Table 12-4, "SQL*Plus Error Log Column Definitions".
John wants to use an error log table named john_sperrorlog. John would run the following SQL statements to create the new error log table:
DROP TABLE john_sperrorlog; CREATE TABLE john_sperrorlog(username VARCHAR(256), timestamp TIMESTAMP, script VARCHAR(1024), identifier VARCHAR(256), message CLOB, statement CLOB);
John then issues the following SET command to enable error logging using the newly created error log table
SET ERRORLOGGING ON TABLE john_sperrorlog
All error logging for John is now recorded to john_sperrorlog, and not to the default error log table, SPERRORLOG.
Access privileges for the error log table are handled in the same way as for any user table. See the Oracle Database SQL Language Reference for more information about granting access to tables.
Defines the character used as the escape character.
OFF undefines the escape character. ON enables the escape character. ON changes the value of c back to the default "\".
You can use the escape character before the substitution character (set through SET DEFINE) to indicate that SQL*Plus should treat the substitution character as an ordinary character rather than as a request for variable substitution.
Example
If you define the escape character as an exclamation point (!), then
SET ESCAPE ! ACCEPT v1 PROMPT 'Enter !&1:'
displays this prompt:
Enter &1: |
To set the escape character back to the default value of \ (backslash), enter
SET ESCAPE ON
Specifies a character to be escaped and not interpreted when used in a file name for the SPOOL, START, @, RUN and EDIT commands. These special characters are translated to the following:
While it is not recommended that these characters are used in filenames, if you have legacy files that do use them, it might be useful to include a SET ESCCHAR command in your GLogin file to implement it across your site.
Example
If you include the character '$' in your filename, then
SET ESCCHAR $ RUN MYFILE$
behaves normally.
Specifies whether the default EXIT behavior is COMMIT or ROLLBACK.
The default setting is ON, which means that work is committed on exit, whether you expected it to be committed or not. Set EXITCOMMIT OFF to rollback work on exit.
Table 12-5 shows the exit action associated with combinations of SET commands (AUTOCOMMIT & EXITCOMMIT) and the EXIT command.
Table 12-5 Exit Behavior: AUTOCOMMIT, EXITCOMMIT, EXIT
AUTOCOMMIT | EXITCOMMIT | EXIT | Exit Behavior |
---|---|---|---|
ON |
ON |
- |
COMMIT |
ON |
OFF |
- |
COMMIT |
OFF |
ON |
- |
COMMIT |
OFF |
OFF |
- |
ROLLBACK |
ON |
ON |
COMMIT |
COMMIT |
ON |
ON |
ROLLBACK |
COMMIT |
ON |
OFF |
COMMIT |
COMMIT |
ON |
OFF |
ROLLBACK |
COMMIT |
OFF |
ON |
COMMIT |
COMMIT |
OFF |
ON |
ROLLBACK |
ROLLBACK |
OFF |
OFF |
COMMIT |
COMMIT |
OFF |
OFF |
ROLLBACK |
ROLLBACK |
Displays the number of records returned by a script when a script selects at least n records.
ON or OFF turns this display on or off. Turning feedback ON sets n to 1. Setting feedback to zero is equivalent to turning it OFF.
SET FEEDBACK OFF also turns off the statement confirmation messages such as 'Table created' and 'PL/SQL procedure successfully completed' that are displayed after successful SQL or PL/SQL statements.
Checks to make sure that SQL statements conform to the ANSI/ISO SQL92 standard.
If any non-standard constructs are found, the Oracle Database Server flags them as errors and displays the violating syntax. This is the equivalent of the SQL language ALTER SESSION SET FLAGGER command.
You may execute SET FLAGGER even if you are not connected to a database. FIPS flagging will remain in effect across SQL*Plus sessions until a SET FLAGGER OFF (or ALTER SESSION SET FLAGGER = OFF) command is successful or you exit SQL*Plus.
When FIPS flagging is enabled, SQL*Plus displays a warning for the CONNECT, DISCONNECT, and ALTER SESSION SET FLAGGER commands, even if they are successful.
Controls when output is sent to the user's display device. OFF enables the operating system to buffer output. ON disables buffering. FLUSH only affects display output, it does not affect spooled output.
Use OFF only when you run a script non-interactively (that is, when you do not need to see output and/or prompts until the script finishes running). The use of FLUSH OFF may improve performance by reducing the amount of program I/O.
Controls printing of column headings in reports.
ON prints column headings in reports; OFF suppresses column headings.
The SET HEADING OFF command does not affect the column width displayed, it only suppresses the printing of the column header itself.
Example
To suppress the display of column headings in a report, enter
SET HEADING OFF
If you then run a SQL SELECT command
SELECT LAST_NAME, SALARY FROM EMP_DETAILS_VIEW WHERE JOB_ID = 'AC_MGR';
the following output results:
Higgins 12000 |
To turn the display of column headings back on, enter
SET HEADING ON
Defines the character used as a line break in column headings.
The heading separator character cannot be alphanumeric or white space. You can use the heading separator character in the COLUMN command and in the old forms of BTITLE and TTITLE to divide a column heading or title onto more than one line. ON or OFF turns heading separation on or off. When heading separation is OFF, SQL*Plus prints a heading separator character like any other character. ON changes the value of c back to the default "|".
Changes the default instance for your session to the specified instance path.
Using the SET INSTANCE command does not connect to a database. The default instance is used for commands when no instance is specified. Any commands preceding the first use of SET INSTANCE communicate with the default instance.
To reset the instance to the default value for your operating system, you can either enter SET INSTANCE with no instance_path or SET INSTANCE LOCAL.
Note, you can only change the instance when you are not currently connected to any instance. That is, you must first make sure that you have disconnected from the current instance, then set or change the instance, and reconnect to an instance in order for the new setting to be enabled.
This command may only be issued when Oracle Net is running. You can use any valid Oracle Net connect identifier as the specified instance path. See your operating system-specific Oracle Database documentation for a complete description of how your operating system specifies Oracle Net connect identifiers. The maximum length of the instance path is 64 characters.
Example
To set the default instance to "PROD1" enter
DISCONNECT SET INSTANCE PROD1
To set the instance back to the default of local, enter
SET INSTANCE local
You must disconnect from any connected instances to change the instance.
Sets the total number of characters that SQL*Plus displays on one line before beginning a new line.
It also controls the position of centered and right-aligned text in TTITLE, BTITLE, REPHEADER and REPFOOTER. Changing the linesize setting can affect text wrapping in output from the DESCRIBE command. DESCRIBE output columns are typically allocated a proportion of the linesize. Decreasing or increasing the linesize may give unexpected text wrapping in your display. You can define LINESIZE as a value from 1 to a maximum that is system dependent.
Sets the starting position from which BLOB, BFILE, CLOB and NCLOB data is retrieved and displayed.
Example
To set the starting position from which a CLOB column's data is retrieved to the 22nd position, enter
SET LOBOFFSET 22
The CLOB data will wrap on your screen; SQL*Plus will not truncate until the 23rd character.
Specifies the location from which archive logs are retrieved during recovery.
The default value is set by the LOG_ARCHIVE_DEST initialization parameter in the Oracle Database initialization file, init.ora. Using the SET LOGSOURCE command without a pathname restores the default location.
Example
To set the default location of log files for recovery to the directory "/usr/oracle10/dbs/arch" enter
SET LOGSOURCE "/usr/oracle10/dbs/arch" RECOVER DATABASE
Sets maximum width (in bytes) for displaying BLOB, BFILE, CLOB, LONG, NCLOB and XMLType values; and for copying LONG values.
Querying LONG columns requires enough local memory to store the amount of data specified by SET LONG, irrespective of the value of the SET LONGCHUNKSIZE command. This requirement does not apply when querying LOBs.
It is recommended that you do not create tables with LONG columns. LONG columns are supported only for backward compatibility. Use LOB columns (BLOB, BFILE, CLOB, NCLOB) instead. LOB columns have fewer restrictions than LONG columns and are still being enhanced.
The maximum value of n is 2,000,000,000 bytes. It is important to check that the memory required by your SET LONG command is available on your machine, for example:
SET LONG 2000000000
assumes that available RAM (random access memory) on the machine exceeds 2 gigabytes.
Example
To set the maximum number of bytes to fetch for displaying and copying LONG values, to 500, enter
SET LONG 500
The LONG data will wrap on your screen; SQL*Plus will not truncate until the 501st byte. The default for LONG is 80 bytes.
Sets the size (in bytes) of the increments SQL*Plus uses to retrieve a BLOB, BFILE, CLOB, LONG, NCLOB or XMLType value.
LONGCHUNKSIZE is not used for object relational queries such as CLOB, or NCLOB.
Example
To set the size of the increments in which SQL*Plus retrieves LONG values to 100 bytes, enter
SET LONGCHUNKSIZE 100
The LONG data will be retrieved in increments of 100 bytes until the entire value is retrieved or the value of SET LONG is reached, whichever is the smaller.
Outputs HTML marked up text.
To be effective, SET MARKUP commands that change values in dynamic report output must occur before statements that produce query output. The first statement that produces query output triggers the output of information affected by SET MARKUP such as HEAD and TABLE settings. Subsequent SET MARKUP commands have no effect on the information already sent to the report.
SET MARKUP only specifies that SQL*Plus output will be HTML encoded. You must use SET MARKUP HTML ON SPOOL ON and the SQL*Plus SPOOL command to create and name a spool file, and to begin writing HMTL output to it. SET MARKUP has the same options and behavior as SQLPLUS -MARKUP.
See MARKUP Options for detailed information. For examples of usage, see SET MARK[UP] HTML [ON | OFF] [HEAD text] [BODY text] [TABLE text] [ENTMAP {ON | OFF}] [SPOOL {ON | OFF}] [PRE[FORMAT] {ON | OFF}], and Generating HTML Reports from SQL*Plus.
Use the SHOW MARKUP command to view the status of MARKUP options.
Example
The following is a script which uses the SET MARKUP HTML command to enable HTML marked up text to be spooled to a specified file:
Note:
The SET MARKUP example command is laid out for readability using line continuation characters "–" and spacing. Command options are concatenated in normal entry.Use your favorite text editor to enter the commands necessary to set up the HTML options and the query you want for your report.
SET MARKUP HTML ON SPOOL ON HEAD "<TITLE>SQL*Plus Report</title> - <STYLE TYPE='TEXT/CSS'><!--BODY {background: ffffc6} --></STYLE>" SET ECHO OFF SPOOL employee.htm SELECT FIRST_NAME, LAST_NAME, SALARY FROM EMP_DETAILS_VIEW WHERE SALARY>12000; SPOOL OFF SET MARKUP HTML OFF SET ECHO ON
As this script contains SQL*Plus commands, do not attempt to run it with / (slash) from the buffer because it will fail. Save the script in your text editor and use START to execute it:
START employee.sql
As well as writing the HTML spool file, employee.htm, the output is also displayed on screen because SET TERMOUT defaults to ON. You can view the spool file, employee.htm, in your web browser. It should appear something like the following:
Sets the number of blank lines to be printed from the top of each page to the top title. A value of zero places a formfeed at the beginning of each page (including the first page) and clears the screen on most terminals. If you set NEWPAGE to NONE, SQL*Plus does not print a blank line or formfeed between the report pages.
Sets the text displayed whenever a null value occurs in the result of a SQL SELECT command.
Use the NULL clause of the COLUMN command to override the setting of the NULL variable for a given column. The default output for a null is blank ("").
Sets the default format for displaying numbers. See the FORMAT clause of the COLUMN command for number format descriptions. Enter a number format for format. To use the default field width and formatting model specified by SET NUMWIDTH, enter
SET NUMFORMAT ""
Sets the default width for displaying numbers. See the FORMAT clause of the COLUMN command for number format descriptions.
COLUMN FORMAT settings take precedence over SET NUMFORMAT settings, which take precedence over SET NUMWIDTH settings.
Sets the number of lines on each page of output. You can set PAGESIZE to zero to suppress all headings, page breaks, titles, the initial blank line, and other formatting information.
Enables you to control scrolling of your terminal when running reports. You need to first, SET PAUSE text, and then SET PAUSE ON if you want text to appear each time SQL*Plus pauses.
SET PAUSE ON pauses output at the beginning of each PAGESIZE number of lines of report output. Press Return to view more output. SET PAUSE text specifies the text to be displayed each time SQL*Plus pauses. Multiple words in text must be enclosed in single quotes.
You can embed terminal-dependent escape sequences in the PAUSE command. These sequences allow you to create inverse video messages or other effects on terminals that support such characteristics.
RECSEP tells SQL*Plus where to make the record separation.
For example, if you set RECSEP to WRAPPED, SQL*Plus prints a record separator only after wrapped lines. If you set RECSEP to EACH, SQL*Plus prints a record separator following every row. If you set RECSEP to OFF, SQL*Plus does not print a record separator.
Defines the character to display or print to separate records.
A record separator consists of a single line of the RECSEPCHAR (record separating character) repeated LINESIZE times. The default is a single space.
Controls whether to display output (that is, DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE) of stored procedures or PL/SQL blocks in SQL*Plus. The DBMS_OUTPUT line length limit is 32767 bytes.
OFF suppresses the output of DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE. ON displays the output.
ON uses the SIZE and FORMAT of the previous SET SERVEROUTPUT ON SIZE n FORMAT f, or uses default values if no SET SERVEROUTPUT command was previously issued in the current connection.
SIZE sets the number of bytes of the output that can be buffered within the Oracle Database server. The default is UNLIMITED. n cannot be less than 2000 or greater than 1,000,000.
Resources are not pre-allocated when SERVEROUTPUT is set. As there is no performance penalty, use UNLIMITED unless you want to conserve physical memory.
Every server output line begins on a new output line.
When WRAPPED is enabled SQL*Plus wraps the server output within the line size specified by SET LINESIZE, beginning new lines when required.
When WORD_WRAPPED is enabled, each line of server output is wrapped within the line size specified by SET LINESIZE. Lines are broken on word boundaries. SQL*Plus left justifies each line, skipping all leading whitespace.
When TRUNCATED is enabled, each line of server output is truncated to the line size specified by SET LINESIZE.
For detailed information about using UTL_FILE and associated utilities, see the Oracle Database PL/SQL Packages and Types Reference .
For more information on DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE, see your Oracle Database Advanced Application Developer's Guide.
Example
To enable text display in a PL/SQL block using DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE, enter
SET SERVEROUTPUT ON
The following example shows what happens when you execute an anonymous procedure with SET SERVEROUTPUT ON:
BEGIN DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('Task is complete'); END; /
Task is complete. PL/SQL procedure successfully completed. |
The following example shows what happens when you create a trigger with SET SERVEROUTPUT ON:
CREATE TABLE SERVER_TAB (Letter CHAR); CREATE TRIGGER SERVER_TRIG BEFORE INSERT OR UPDATE - OR DELETE ON SERVER_TAB BEGIN DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('Task is complete.'); END; /
Trigger Created. |
INSERT INTO SERVER_TAB VALUES ('M'); DROP TABLE SERVER_TAB; /* Remove SERVER_TAB from database */
Task is complete. 1 row created. |
To set the output to WORD_WRAPPED, enter
SET SERVEROUTPUT ON FORMAT WORD_WRAPPED SET LINESIZE 20 BEGIN DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('If there is nothing left to do'); DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('shall we continue with plan B?'); END; /
If there is nothing left to do shall we continue with plan B? |
To set the output to TRUNCATED, enter
SET SERVEROUTPUT ON FORMAT TRUNCATED SET LINESIZE 20 BEGIN DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('If there is nothing left to do'); DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('shall we continue with plan B?'); END; /
If there is nothing shall we continue wi |
Enables correct alignment for terminals that display shift characters. The SET SHIFTINOUT command is useful for terminals which display shift characters together with data (for example, IBM 3270 terminals). You can only use this command with shift sensitive character sets (for example, JA16DBCS).
Use VISIBLE for terminals that display shift characters as a visible character (for example, a space or a colon). INVISIBLE is the opposite and does not display any shift characters.
Example
To enable the display of shift characters on a terminal that supports them, enter
SET SHIFTINOUT VISIBLE SELECT LAST_NAME, JOB_ID FROM EMP_DETAILS_VIEW WHERE SALARY > 12000;
LAST_NAME JOB_ID ---------- ---------- :JJOO: :AABBCC: :AA:abc :DDEE:e |
where ":" = visible shift character uppercase represents multibyte characters
lowercase represents singlebyte characters
Controls whether SQL*Plus lists the old and new settings of a SQL*Plus system variable when you change the setting with SET. ON lists the settings; OFF suppresses the listing. SHOWMODE ON has the same behavior as the obsolete SHOWMODE BOTH.
Controls whether SQL*Plus puts blank lines within a SQL command or script. ON interprets blank lines and new lines as part of a SQL command or script. OFF, the default value, does not allow blank lines or new lines in a SQL command or script or script.
Enter the BLOCKTERMINATOR to stop SQL command entry without running the SQL command. Enter the SQLTERMINATOR character to stop SQL command entry and run the SQL statement.
Example
To allow blank lines in a SQL statement, enter
SET SQLBLANKLINES ON REM Using the SQLTERMINATOR (default is ";") REM Could have used the BLOCKTERMINATOR (default is ".") SELECT * FROM DUAL ;
The following output results:
D - X |
Converts the case of SQL commands and PL/SQL blocks just prior to execution.
SQL*Plus converts all text within the command, including quoted literals and identifiers, to uppercase if SQLCASE equals UPPER, to lowercase if SQLCASE equals LOWER, and makes no changes if SQLCASE equals MIXED.
SQLCASE does not change the SQL buffer itself.
Sets the character sequence SQL*Plus displays as a prompt after you continue a SQL*Plus command on an additional line using a hyphen (–).
Example
To set the SQL*Plus command continuation prompt to an exclamation point followed by a space, enter
SET SQLCONTINUE '! '
SQL*Plus will prompt for continuation as follows:
TTITLE 'MONTHLY INCOME' - ! RIGHT SQL.PNO SKIP 2 - ! CENTER 'PC DIVISION'
The default continuation prompt is "> ".
Sets the prompt for the second and subsequent lines of a SQL command or PL/SQL block. ON sets the prompt to be the line number. OFF sets the prompt to the value of SQLPROMPT.
Sets the behavior to that of the release or version specified by x.y[.z].
Where x is the version number, y is the release number, and z is the update number. For example, 8.1.7, 9.0.1 or 10.2. The features affected by SQLPLUSCOMPATIBILITY are tabulated in the SQL*Plus Compatibility Matrix shown. You can also set the value of SQLPLUSCOMPATIBILITY using the -C[OMPATIBILITY] argument of the SQLPLUS command when starting SQL*Plus from the command line.
The default setting for SQLPLUSCOMPATIBILITY is the value of the SQL*Plus client.
It is recommended that you add SET SQLPLUSCOMPATIBILITY 11.2 to your scripts to maximize their compatibility with future versions of SQL*Plus.
The SQL*Plus Compatibility Matrix tabulates behavior affected by each SQL*Plus compatibility setting. SQL*Plus compatibility modes can be set in three ways:
You can include a SET SQLPLUSCOMPATIBILITY command in your site or user profile. On installation, there is no SET SQLPLUSCOMPATIBILITY setting in glogin.sql. Therefore the default compatibility is 11.2.
You can use the SQLPLUS -C[OMPATIBILITY] {x.y[.z]} command argument at startup to set the compatibility mode of that session.
You can use the SET SQLPLUSCOMPATIBILITY {x.y[.z]} command during a session to set the SQL*Plus behavior you want for that session.
The following table shows the release of SQL*Plus which introduced the behavior change, and hence the minimum value of SQLPLUSCOMPATIBILITY to obtain that behavior. For example, to obtain the earlier behavior of the VARIABLE command, you must either use a version of SQL*Plus earlier than 9.0.1, or you must use a SQLPLUSCOMPATIBILITY value of less than 9.0.1. The lowest value that can be set for SQLPLUSCOMPATIBILITY is 7.3.4
Table 12-6 Compatibility Matrix
Value | Consequence | When available |
---|---|---|
>=10.1 |
SHOW ERRORS sorts PL/SQL error messages using new columns only available in Oracle Database 10g. |
10.1 |
>=10.1 |
SPOOL Options CREATE, REPLACE, SAVE were added which may affect filename parsing on some platforms. |
10.1 |
>=10.1 |
SET SQLPROMPT |
10.1 |
>=10.1 |
Whitespace characters are allowed in Windows file names that are enclosed in quotes. Some other special punctuation characters are now disallowed in Windows. |
10.1 |
>=10.1 |
10.1 |
|
<10.1 |
Uses the obsolete DOC> prompt when echoing /* comments. |
10.1 |
>= 9.2 |
A wide column defined FOLD_AFTER may be displayed at the start of a new line. Otherwise it is incorrectly put at the end of the preceding line with a smaller width than expected. |
9.2. |
>= 9.0 |
Whitespace before a slash ("/") in a SQL statement is ignored and the slash is taken to mean execute the statement. Otherwise the slash is treated as part of the statement, for example, as a division sign. |
9.0.1.4. |
>= 9.0 |
The length specified for NCHAR and NVARCHAR2 types is characters. Otherwise the length may represent bytes or characters depending on the character set. |
9.0.1 |
Sets the SQL*Plus prefix character. While you are entering a SQL command or PL/SQL block, you can enter a SQL*Plus command on a separate line, prefixed by the SQL*Plus prefix character. SQL*Plus will execute the command immediately without affecting the SQL command or PL/SQL block that you are entering. The prefix character must be a non-alphanumeric character.
Sets the SQL*Plus command prompt. SET SQLPROMPT substitute variables dynamically. This enables the inclusion of runtime variables such as the current connection identifier. Substitution variables used in SQLPROMPT do not have to be prefixed with '&', and they can be used and accessed like any other substitution variable. Variable substitution is not attempted for the default prompt, "SQL> ".
Variable substitution occurs each time SQLPROMPT is SET. If SQLPROMPT is included in glogin.sql, then substitution variables in SQLPROMPT are refreshed with each login or connect.
Example
To change your SQL*Plus prompt to display your connection identifier, enter:
SET SQLPROMPT "_CONNECT_IDENTIFIER > "
To set the SQL*Plus command prompt to show the current user, enter
SET SQLPROMPT "_USER > "
To change your SQL*Plus prompt to display your the current date, the current user and the users privilege level, enter:
SET SQLPROMPT "_DATE _USER _PRIVILEGE> "
To change your SQL*Plus prompt to display a variable you have defined, enter:
DEFINE mycon = Prod1 SET SQLPROMPT "mycon> "
Prod1> |
Text in nested quotes is not parsed for substitution. To have a SQL*Plus prompt of your username, followed by "@", and then your connection identifier, enter:
SET SQLPROMPT "_USER'@'_CONNECT_IDENTIFIER > "
Sets the character used to end script or data entry for PL/SQL blocks or SQL statements, to execute the script, and to load it into the buffer.
It cannot be an alphanumeric character or a whitespace. OFF means that SQL*Plus recognizes no command terminator; you terminate a SQL command by entering an empty line or a slash (/). If SQLBLANKLINES is set ON, you must use the BLOCKTERMINATOR to terminate a SQL command. ON resets the terminator to the default semicolon (;).
Sets the default file extension that SQL*Plus uses in commands that refer to scripts. SUFFIX does not control extensions for spool files.
Example
To change the default command-file extension from the default, .SQL to .TXT, enter
SET SUFFIX TXT
If you then enter
GET EXAMPLE
SQL*Plus will look for a file named EXAMPLE.TXT instead of EXAMPLE.SQL.
Determines how SQL*Plus formats white space in terminal output. OFF uses spaces to format white space in the output. ON uses the TAB character. TAB settings are every eight characters. The default value for TAB is system dependent.
Controls the display of output generated by commands in a script that is executed with @, @@ or START. OFF suppresses the display so that you can spool output to a file without displaying the output on screen. ON displays the output on screen. TERMOUT OFF does not affect output from commands you enter interactively or redirect to SQL*Plus from the operating system.
Controls the display of the current time. ON displays the current time before each command prompt. OFF suppresses the time display.
Controls the display of timing statistics.
ON displays timing statistics on each SQL command or PL/SQL block run. OFF suppresses timing of each command.
See TIMING for information on timing multiple commands.
Example
The format of timing statistics is dependent on the operating system. In Linux and Windows, the timing statistics are in 24 hour format displaying hours, minutes, seconds and hundredths of seconds
SET SUFFIX TXT
If you enter
GET EXAMPLE
SQL*Plus displays output like
GET EXAMPLE
Determines whether SQL*Plus puts trailing blanks at the end of each displayed line. ON removes blanks at the end of each line, improving performance especially when you access SQL*Plus from a slow communications device. OFF enables SQL*Plus to display trailing blanks. TRIMOUT ON does not affect spooled output.
Determines whether SQL*Plus puts trailing blanks at the end of each spooled line. ON removes blanks at the end of each line. OFF enables SQL*Plus to include trailing blanks. TRIMSPOOL ON does not affect terminal output.
Sets the character used to underline column headings in reports. The underline character cannot be an alphanumeric character or a white space. ON or OFF turns underlining on or off. ON changes the value of c back to the default "-".
Controls whether to list the text of a SQL statement or PL/SQL command before and after replacing substitution variables with values. ON lists the text; OFF suppresses the listing.
Controls whether to truncate the display of a selected row if it is too long for the current line width. OFF truncates the selected row; ON enables the selected row to wrap to the next line.
Use the WRAPPED and TRUNCATED clauses of the COLUMN command to override the setting of WRAP for specific columns.
Specifies the base URI used to resolve relative URIs in functions. It enables the prefix of the file accessed by an XQuery to be changed.
To unset the BASEURI, set an empty string, for example:
SET XQUERY BASEURI ''
Take care to enter valid values as values are checked only when an XQUERY command is issued.
Example
SET XQUERY BASEURI '/public/scott' XQUERY for $i in doc("foo.xml") return $i /
This is equivalent to:
XQuery declare base-uri "/public/hr"; for $i in doc("foo.xml") return $i
Sets the ordering of output from an XQuery. There are three values:
UNORDERED specifies that results are sorted in the order they are retrieved from the database.
ORDERED specifies that results are sorted as defined by the XQuery.
DEFAULT specifies the database default. In Oracle Database 10g the default is UNORDERED.
When SET XQUERY ORDERING is not set, the default is DEFAULT (UNORDERED).
Example
SET XQUERY ORDERING ORDERED XQUERY for $i in doc("foo.xml") return $i /
This is equivalent to:
XQuery declare ordering ordered; for $i in doc("foo.xml") return $i /
Sets the node identity preservation mode. The preservation mode applies to all expressions that either create a new node (such as element constructors) or return an item or sequence containing nodes (such as path expressions). There are three values:
BYVALUE specifies that the node identity need not be preserved. This means that any node operation such as creation, or that is returned as a result of an expression is deep copied and loses its context from the original tree. Subsequent operations on this node that test for node identity, parent or sibling axes or ordering will be undefined.
BYREFERENCE specifies that node identities are to be preserved. Subsequent operations on this node preserve the node's context and definition.
DEFAULT specifies the database default. In Oracle Database 10g the default is BYVALUE.
When SET XQUERY NODE is not set, the default is DEFAULT (BYVALUE).
Example
SET XQUERY NODE BYREFERENCE XQUERY for $i in doc("foo.xml") return $i /
This is equivalent to:
XQuery declare node byreference; for $i in doc("foo.xml") return $i /
Specifies an XQuery context item expression. A context item expression evaluates to the context item, which may be either a node (as in the expression fn:doc("bib.xml")//book[fn:count(./author)>1]), or an atomic value (as in the expression (1 to 100)[. mod 5 eq 0]).
To unset the XQUERY CONTEXT, set an empty string, for example:
SET XQUERY CONTEXT ''
Take care to enter valid values as values are checked only when an XQUERY command is issued.
Example
SET XQUERY CONTEXT 'doc("foo.xml")' XQUERY for $i in /a return $i /
This is equivalent to:
XQuery for $i in /a return $i passing XMLQuery("doc('foo.xml')") /