1 – ALIAS
Specifies the default alias for the module. If you do not specify a module alias, the default alias is the authorization identifier for the module. When the FIPS flagger is enabled, the ALIAS clause (by itself or used with the AUTHORIZATION clause) is flagged as nonstandard syntax. If the application needs to refer to only one database across multiple modules, it is good practice to use the same alias for the default database in all modules that will be linked to make up an executable image. If that image will include modules processed with the SQL precompiler, you should specify RDB$DBHANDLE in the AUTHORIZATION clause of all SQL modules in the image because the alias RDB$DBHANDLE always designates the default database in precompiled SQL programs.
2 – AUTHORIZATION
Specifies the authorization identifier for the module. If you do not specify a schema authorization, the authorization identifier is the user name of the user compiling the module. If you want to comply with the ANSI/ISO SQL89 standard, specify the AUTHORIZATION clause without the schema-name. Specify both the AUTHORIZATION clause and the schema name to comply with the ANSI/ISO SQL99 Standard. When you attach to a multischema database, the authorization identifier for each schema is the user name of the user compiling the module. This authorization identifier defines the default alias and schema. You can use the ALIAS and SCHEMA clauses to override the defaults. If you attach to a single-schema database or specify that MULTISCHEMA IS OFF in your ATTACH or DECLARE ALIAS statements and you specify both an AUTHORIZATION clause and an ALIAS clause, the authorization identifier is ignored by SQL unless you specify the RIGHTS clause in the module file. The RIGHTS clause causes SQL to use the authorization identifier specified in the module AUTHORIZATION clause for privilege checking. If procedures in the SQL module always qualify table names with an authorization identifier, the AUTHORIZATION clause has no effect on SQL statements in the procedures. When the FIPS flagger is enabled, the omission of an AUTHORIZATION clause is flagged as nonstandard ANSI syntax.
3 – BY_DESCRIPTOR
Specifies that the formal parameter will be passed to the calling program module by descriptor. The BY DESCRIPTOR clause is useful when: o You specify the GENERAL keyword in the LANGUAGE clause of an SQL module, but the default for the language is to pass parameters by descriptor. The default for GENERAL is to pass parameters by reference, but you can override that default passing mechanism by specifying BY DESCRIPTOR. o You want to take advantage of the CHECK option for parameter declarations. That option is available only for parameters declared with the BY DESCRIPTOR clause. o You need to override the default parameter passing mechanism for languages that pass parameters by reference. The BY DESCRIPTOR clause supports only OpenVMS static descriptors, which are fixed-length fields. For any language, the passing mechanism for SQL module formal parameters must be the same as the actual parameters in the host language module. Ada, BASIC, C, FORTRAN, Pascal, and PL/I do not support passing records by descriptor. You may construct a descriptor from elements in all these languages and pass the constructed descriptor to the SQL module language by reference. o When you construct a descriptor for a host language record when the module language is Ada, BASIC, C, FORTRAN, Pascal, PL/I, or GENERAL, use a fixed-length descriptor (CLASS_S) with a character string data type, and pass the length of the entire record. o If the language is Ada, BASIC, FORTRAN, or Pascal, pass indicator arrays using an array descriptor (CLASS_A) and the data type of all of the array elements. o If the language is COBOL, pass arrays using fixed-length (CLASS_S) descriptors and character string data types, regardless of the data types of the array elements. o If the language is C, the SQL module processor interprets CHAR fields one way when the data type is defined in the module, and another way when the definition is read from the dictionary. When the data type is defined in the module, the SQL module processor interprets character strings within records as null-terminated strings. In other words, if you declare a field specified as CHAR(9), the C module language interprets this as a field that is actually 10 characters long, with the tenth character being the null terminator. However, if you include a record in a C module from the data dictionary, you can specify any of three options for CHAR field interpretation.
4 – CATALOG
Specifies the default catalog for the module. Catalogs are groups of schemas within a multischema database. If you omit the catalog name when specifying an object in a multischema database, SQL uses the default catalog name RDB$CATALOG. Databases created without the multischema attribute do not have catalogs. You can use the SET CATALOG statement to change the current default catalog name in dynamic or interactive SQL.
5 – CHARACTER_LENGTH
Specifies whether the length of character string parameters, columns, and domains are interpreted as characters or octets. If the dialect is set to SQL89, SQL92, SQL99 or MIA, the default is CHARACTERS. Otherwise, the default is OCTETS.
6 – char-data-types
Refer to the Oracle Rdb SQL Reference Manual for information about the character data types that SQL supports.
7 – CHECK
Specifies that SQL compares at run time the data type, length, and scale of the descriptor for an actual parameter to what was declared for the procedure parameter in the SQL module. If the two do not match, SQL returns an error. The CHECK clause works only with parameters passed by descriptor from the calling host language module. Because there is no connection between an SQL module and a calling host language program module when they are compiled, there is no way for SQL to check for agreement between formal parameter declarations and actual parameters in calls to the module. The CHECK clause provides a way to do such checking when the program runs. If a formal parameter declaration does not specify the CHECK clause, SQL assumes that procedure and calling parameters agree. If they do not, programs can give unpredictable results. However, you may choose not to use the CHECK clause because: o The CHECK clause is not part of ANSI-standard SQL. o There is a minor performance penalty for SQL to check parameters at run time. o Using CHECK can make host programs more complicated. The CHECK clause follows these rules in comparing formal parameters with call parameters: o If a formal parameter is TIMESTAMP data type, the CHECK clause accepts any corresponding actual parameter that is 8 bytes long. o If the language is C and the formal parameter is CHAR data type, the CHECK clause expects the descriptor to be 1 byte longer than the number of characters in the formal parameter. This occurs because character strings in C include a terminator character (they are in ASCIZ format) that is not included in the length of the formal parameter declaration. When you retrieve data definitions from the dictionary, however, you can change the default interpretation of character data by specifying FIXED or NULL TERMINATED CHARACTERS in the record-type clause of the FROM path-name clause. o The CHECK clause supports dynamic string descriptors (CLASS_D) in BASIC for procedure parameters declared with the CHARACTER data type. However, the CHECK clause does not compare the length of the descriptor with the length of the procedure parameter because the buffer to receive the data is allocated at run time. o If the formal parameter is VARCHAR data type, the descriptor that the CHECK clause accepts depends on the language. - If the language is PL/I or Pascal (languages that support varying character data type), the descriptor must be a varying string (CLASS_VS) descriptor, the data type must be varying text, and the length must be the same as the length of the formal parameter declaration. - If the language is not PL/I or Pascal, the CHECK clause accepts a varying string descriptor as in the preceding paragraph, or a fixed-length (CLASS_S) or unspecified (DTYPE_Z) descriptor with data type of text and a length 2 bytes longer than the length of the formal parameter declaration. For more detail on the different types of OpenVMS argument descriptors, see the OpenVMS programming documentation.
8 – compound-statement
Most commonly, includes multiple executable SQL statements, associated variable declarations, and control statements within a BEGIN . . . END block; however, each of these arguments is optional. For instance, you can create an empty BEGIN . . . END block (BEGIN END;). SQL executes the compound statement when the procedure in which it is embedded is called by a host language module. See the Oracle Rdb SQL Reference Manual for more complete information about a compound statement.
9 – COMPOUND_TRANSACTIONS
Syntax options: COMPOUND TRANSACTIONS INTERNAL COMPOUND TRANSACTIONS EXTERNAL Allows you to specify whether SQL should start a transaction before executing a compound statement or stored procedure. The COMPOUND TRANSACTIONS EXTERNAL clause instructs SQL to start a transaction before executing a procedure. The COMPOUND TRANSACTIONS INTERNAL clause instructs SQL to allow a procedure to start a transaction as required by the procedure execution. By default, SQL starts a transaction before executing a compound statement if there is no current transaction
10 – data-type
You can specify the character set of parameters that are defined as character data types. SQL assumes the character set of parameters based on the following rules: o If a parameter is not qualified by a character set or defined as a national character data type, SQL considers the parameter to be of the default character set as specified in the DEFAULT CHARACTER SET clause. o If a parameter is defined as a national character data type (NCHAR, NCHAR VARYING), SQL considers the parameter to be of the national character set as specified in the NATIONAL CHARACTER SET clause. o If a parameter is defined as a data type qualified by a character set, SQL considers the parameter to be of that character set. See the Oracle Rdb SQL Reference Manual for information about data types and qualifying a data type with a character set. The Argument INTEGER topic describes the INTEGER data type with regard to the SQL module language. The SQL data type specified for the formal parameter in a module must be equivalent to the data type of the host language variable declaration for the actual parameter. If the formal parameter and actual parameter are not declared with equivalent data types, SQL can give unpredictable results. The data type for a database key is CHAR(n), where n equals the number of bytes of the database key. See the Oracle Rdb SQL Reference Manual for more information on database keys.
11 – declare-statement
Any of the following statements: o DECLARE ALIAS o DECLARE CURSOR o DECLARE STATEMENT o DECLARE TABLE o DECLARE TRANSACTION You must place all DECLARE statements in an SQL module together after the LANGUAGE clause of the module. All such DECLARE statements are optional. All the DECLARE statements except DECLARE TRANSACTION can be repeated. For each DECLARE CURSOR statement, however, there must be only one procedure in the SQL module that contains an OPEN statement that corresponds to the DECLARE CURSOR statement. Do not use any punctuation to separate DECLARE statements or to separate the declare-statement section from the procedure section.
12 – DEFAULT_CHARACTER_SET
Specifies the character set for parameters that are not qualified by a character set and are not defined as a national character data type. If you do not specify a character set in this clause or in the NAMES ARE clause, the default is DEC_MCS. This clause overrides the character set specified in the NAMES ARE clause. See the Oracle Rdb SQL Reference Manual for a list of the allowable character sets.
13 – DEFAULT_DATE_FORMAT
Controls the default interpretation for columns with the DATE or CURRENT_TIMESTAMP data type. The DATE and CURRENT_TIMESTAMP data types can be either VMS or SQL format. If you specify VMS, both data types are interpreted as VMS format. The VMS format DATE and CURRENT_TIMESTAMP contain YEAR to SECOND fields, like a TIMESTAMP. If you specify an SQL standard such as SQL99, both data types are interpreted as SQL format. The SQL format DATE contains only the YEAR to DAY fields. The default is VMS. Use the DEFAULT DATE FORMAT clause, rather than the ANSI_DATE qualifier, because the qualifier will be deprecated in a future release.
14 – DIALECT
Controls the following settings for the current connection: o Whether the length of character string parameters, columns, and domains are interpreted as characters or octets o Whether double quotation marks are interpreted as string literals or delimited identifiers o Whether or not identifiers may be keywords o Which views are read-only o Whether columns with the DATE or CURRENT_TIMESTAMP data type are interpreted as VMS or SQL99 format o Whether or not parameter names begin with a colon o Whether or not the session character sets change depending on the dialect specified The DIALECT clause lets you specify the settings with one clause, instead of specifying each setting individually. Because the module processor processes the module clauses sequentially, the DIALECT clause can override the settings of clauses (for example, QUOTING RULES) specified before it or be overridden by clauses specified after it. The following statements are specific to the SQL92 and SQL99 dialects: o The default constraint evaluation time setting changes from DEFERRABLE to NOT DEFERRABLE. o Conversions between character data types when storing data or retrieving data raise exceptions or warnings in certain situations. o You can specify DECIMAL or NUMERIC for formal parameters in SQL modules, and declare host language parameters with packed decimal or signed numeric storage format. SQL generates an error message if you attempt to exceed the precision specified. o The USER keyword specifies the current active user name for a request. o A warning is generated when a null value is eliminated from a SET function. o The WITH CHECK OPTION clause on views returns a discrete error code from an integrity constraint failure. o An exception is generated with non-null terminated C strings. See the Oracle Rdb SQL Reference Manual for more information on the settings for each option of the DIALECT clause.
15 – DISPLAY_CHARACTER_SET
Specifies the character set used for automatic translation between applications and SQL. If you do not specify a character set the default is DEC_MCS. See the Oracle Rdb SQL Reference Manual for a list of allowable character sets.
16 – domain-name
You can specify an SQL data type directly or name a domain. If you name a domain, the parameter inherits the data type of the domain.
17 – FIXED
The FIXED, NULL TERMINATED BYTES, and NULL TERMINATED CHARACTERS clauses tell the module processor how to interpret C language text fields. Example 3 shows how the size of the text field you declare varies according to which of the three interpretation options you select. If you specify FIXED, the module processor interprets CHAR fields from the dictionary as fixed-length character strings.
18 – FROM path name
Specifies the data dictionary path name of a data dictionary record definition. You can use this clause to retrieve data definitions from the dictionary. The data dictionary record definition that you specify cannot contain any OCCURS clauses or arrays. You must specify a data dictionary record definition that contains only valid SQL or Oracle Rdb data types. The FROM path-name clause cannot be used in a second-level record specification (a record-type that you specify within record- type).
19 – IDENTIFIER_CHARACTER_SET
Specifies the character set used for object names such as cursor names and table names. If you do not specify a character set in this clause or in the NAMES ARE clause, the default is DEC_MCS. This clause overrides the character set specified in the NAMES ARE clause. The specified character set must contain ASCII. NOTE If the dialect or character sets are not specified in the module header, SQL uses the RDB$CHARACTER_SET logical name to determine the character sets to be used by the database. See the Oracle Rdb SQL Reference Manual for more detail regarding the RDB$CHARACTER_SET logical name. The RDB$CHARACTER_SET logical name is deprecated and will not be supported in a future release.
20 – INDICATOR_ARRAY_OF
Specifies a one-dimensional array of elements with one of the data types shown in the exact-numeric-type diagram. An indicator array provides indicator parameters for fields in the host structure. The indicator array must have at least as many elements in it as the record definition has. You cannot use an indicator array as a record or contain it within a record. In other words, the INDICATOR ARRAY OF clause cannot be used in a second-level record specification (a record- type that you specify within record-type). You cannot explicitly refer to individual elements in an indicator array. For this reason, you cannot use indicator arrays in UPDATE statements or WHERE clauses.
21 – item-name
Specifies the name of an item in a record. Do not give the same name for two record items at the same level in the same record declaration. When SQL statements within a procedure refer to an item name within a subrecord in the same procedure as a parameter declaration, they must fully qualify the item name with the record name and all intervening subrecord names. Separate record names from item names with periods.
22 – KEYWORD_RULES
Controls whether or not identifiers can be keywords. If you specify SQL92, SQL99, SQL89, or MIA, you cannot use keywords as identifiers, unless you enclose them in double quotation marks. If you specify SQLV40, you can use keywords as identifiers. The default is SQLV40. Use the KEYWORD RULES clause, rather than the ANSI_IDENTIFIER qualifier, because the qualifier will be deprecated in a future release.
23 – LANGUAGE
A keyword that specifies the name of the host language in which the program is written. This program calls the procedures in the module. Specify GENERAL for languages that do not have a corresponding keyword in the LANGUAGE clause. The language identifier determines: o The kinds of data types that the SQL module processor considers valid in the module's formal parameter declarations. If a language does not support a data type equivalent to some SQL data type, the SQL module processor generates a warning message when it encounters the data type in a formal parameter. (A formal parameter is the name in an SQL module procedure declaration that represents the corresponding actual parameter in a host language call to the SQL module procedure.) For example, SQL supports the BIGINT data type, but PL/I does not. The module processor generates a warning message when it encounters a BIGINT formal parameter in an SQL module that specifies the PL/I language in the LANGUAGE section. o The default mechanism for passing parameters to and from a host language source file. Parameters are always passed by the default passing mechanism for the language specified in the language clause. The following table shows those defaults. Table 3 Default Passing Mechanism for Host Languages to SQL Modules Language Passing Mechanism Ada By reference BASIC CHAR by descriptor; all others by reference C By reference COBOL By reference FORTRAN CHAR, SQLCA, SQLDA by descriptor; all others by reference Pascal By reference PL/I By reference GENERAL By reference o The default data type that SQL expects for certain actual parameters. In COBOL, for example, if a DOUBLE PRECISION formal parameter is declared in an SQL module procedure, the procedure expects the parameter to be passed from the calling module as D_FLOAT rather than G_FLOAT because COBOL does not support G_FLOAT. Similarly, in C, if a CHAR(n) formal parameter is declared in an SQL module procedure, the procedure expects the parameter to be passed from the calling module as an ASCIZ string with a length of (n+1).
24 – LITERAL_CHARACTER_SET
Specifies the character set for literals that are not qualified by a character set or national character set. If you do not specify a character set in this clause or in the NAMES ARE clause, the default is DEC_MCS. This clause overrides the character set for unqualified literals specified in the NAMES ARE clause. See the Oracle Rdb SQL Reference Manual for a list of the allowable character sets.
25 – MODULE
An optional name for the module. If you do not supply a module name, the default name is SQL_MODULE. Use any valid operating system name. (See the Oracle Rdb SQL Reference Manual for more information on user-supplied names.) However, the name must be unique among the modules that are linked together to form an executable image.
26 – NAMES_ARE
Specifies the character set used for the default, identifier, and literal character sets for the module. This clause also specifies the character string parameters that are not qualified by a character set or national character set. If you do not specify a character set, the default is DEC_MCS. The character set specified in this clause must contain ASCII.
27 – NATIONAL_CHARACTER_SET
Specifies the character set for literals qualified by the national character set and for parameters defined as a national character data type (NCHAR, NCHAR VARYING). If you do not specify a character set in this clause, the default is DEC_MCS. See the Oracle Rdb SQL Reference Manual for a list of the allowable character sets.
28 – NULL_TERMINATED_BYTES
Specifies that text fields from the dictionary are null- terminated. The module processor interprets the length field in the dictionary as the number of bytes in the string. If n is the length in the dictionary, then the number of data bytes is n-1 and the length of the string is n bytes. In other words, the module processor assumes that the last character of the string is for the null terminator. Thus, a field that the dictionary lists as 10 characters can hold only a 9- character SQL field from the C module language. (Other module languages could fit a 10-character SQL field into it.) If you do not specify a character interpretation option, NULL TERMINATED BYTES is the default.
29 – NULL_TERMINATED_CHARACTERS
Specifies that CHAR fields from the dictionary are null- terminated, but the module processor interprets the length field as a character count. If n is the length in the dictionary, then the number of data bytes is n, and the length of the string is n+1 bytes.
30 – parameter-name
The name for a formal parameter. Use any valid SQL name. See the Oracle Rdb SQL Reference Manual for more information on user- supplied names. Formal parameter names do not have to be the same as the host language variables for the actual parameters to which they correspond. However, making the names the same is a useful convention for keeping track of which parameter corresponds to which host language variable. SQLCA, SQLCODE, SQLDA, SQLDA2, and SQLSTATE are special-purpose parameters and do not require user-supplied names (although you can optionally specify a parameter name with SQLDA or SQLDA2). There are three ways to specify a valid SQL data type for the formal parameter: o data-type o domain-name o record-type
31 – PARAMETER_COLONS
If you use the PARAMETER COLONS clause, all parameter names must begin with a colon (:). This rule applies to both declarations and references of module language procedure parameters. If you do not use this clause, no parameter name can begin with a colon. The current default behavior is no colons are used. However, this default is deprecated syntax. In the future, colons will be the default because it allows processing of ANSI-standard modules. Use the PARAMETER COLONS clause, rather than the ANSI_PARAMETERS qualifier, because the qualifier will be deprecated in a future release.
32 – PROCEDURE
Specifies the name of a procedure. Use any valid OpenVMS name.) (See the Oracle Rdb SQL Reference Manual for more information on user-supplied names.) The procedure name is used in host language calls to specify a particular procedure. In addition to a procedure name, a procedure in an SQL module must contain one or more parameter declarations and an SQL statement.
33 – QUIET_COMMIT
Syntax options: QUIET COMMIT ON | QUIET COMMIT OFF The QUIET COMMIT ON clause disables error reporting for the COMMIT and ROLLBACK statements if either statement is executed when no transaction is active. The QUIET COMMIT OFF clause enables error reporting for the COMMIT and ROLLBACK statements if either statement is executed when no transaction is active: MODULE TXN_CONTROL LANGUAGE BASIC PARAMETER COLONS QUIET COMMIT ON PROCEDURE S_TXN (SQLCODE); SET TRANSACTION READ WRITE; PROCEDURE C_TXN (SQLCODE); COMMIT; The QUIET COMMIT OFF clause is the default.
34 – QUOTING_RULES
Controls whether double quotation marks are interpreted as string literals or delimited identifiers. If you specify SQL99, SQL92, SQL89, or MIA, SQL interprets double quotation marks as delimited identifiers. If you specify SQLV40, SQL interprets double quotation marks as literals. The default is SQLV40. Use the QUOTING RULES clause, rather than the ANSI_QUOTING qualifier, because the qualifier will be deprecated in a future release.
35 – RECORD...END_RECORD
Specifies the beginning and end of the record that you are supplying in a module language parameter declaration. A record definition cannot contain an SQLDA, an SQLDA2, an SQLCODE, an SQLCA, or an SQLSTATE.
36 – record-type
You can pass records and indicator arrays to SQL module language procedures using the record-type clause. You can also pass records and indicator arrays to SQL module language procedures and retrieve data dictionary record declarations using the record-type clause. If a record reference has an indicator, it must be an indicator array. Specify the INDICATOR ARRAY OF clause instead of an item name or path name. The following example shows the use of record structures and indicator arrays in an SQL module language program. Because parameters in the module are preceded by colons, you must include the PARAMETER COLONS clause in the module header. MODULE employee_module LANGUAGE pascal AUTHORIZATION pers PARAMETER COLONS DECLARE pers ALIAS FOR FILENAME mf_personnel DECLARE WORK_STATUS_CURSOR CURSOR FOR SELECT * FROM PERS.WORK_STATUS PROCEDURE OPEN_WORK_STATUS SQLCODE; OPEN WORK_STATUS_CURSOR; PROCEDURE CLOSE_WORK_STATUS SQLCODE; CLOSE WORK_STATUS_CURSOR; PROCEDURE FETCH_EMPS_TO_DEPS_CURSOR SQLCODE, :work_status_rec record status_code PERS.work_status.STATUS_CODE_DOM status_name PERS.work_status.STATUS_NAME_DOM status_type PERS.work_status.STATUS_DESC_DOM end record :ind_array record indicator array of 3 SMALLINT end record ; FETCH WORK_STATUS_CURSOR INTO :work_status_rec INDICATOR :ind_array;
37 – RIGHTS
Specifies whether or not a module must be executed by a user whose authorization identifier matches the module authorization identifier. If you specify RESTRICT, SQL bases privilege checking on the default authorization identifier. The default authorization identifier is the authorization identifier of the user who compiles a module unless you specify a different authorization identifier using an AUTHORIZATION clause in the module. The RESTRICT option causes SQL to compare the user name of the person who executes a module with the default authorization identifier and prevent any user other than one with the correct authorization identifier from invoking that module. All applications that use multischema will be the invoker by default. If you specify INVOKER, SQL bases the privilege on the authorization identifier of the user running the module. The default is INVOKER. Use the RIGHTS clause, rather than the ANSI_AUTHORIZATION qualifier, because the qualifier will be deprecated in a future release.
38 – SCHEMA
Specifies the default schema name for the module. The default schema is the schema to which SQL statements refer if those statements do not qualify table and other schema names with an authorization identifier. If you do not specify a default schema name for a module, the default schema name is the same as the authorization identifier. Using the SCHEMA clause, separate SQL modules can each declare different schemas as default schemas. This can be convenient for an application that needs to refer to more than one schema. By putting SQL statements that refer to a schema in the appropriate module's procedures, you can minimize tedious qualification of schema element names in those statements. When you specify SCHEMA schema-name AUTHORIZATION authorization- name, you specify the schema name and the schema authorization identifier for the module. The schema authorization identifier is considered the owner and creator of the schema and everything in it. When the FIPS flagger is enabled for entry-level SQL92 or lower, the SCHEMA clause (by itself or used with the AUTHORIZATION clause) is flagged as nonstandard ANSI syntax. If procedures in the SQL module always qualify table names with an authorization identifier, the SCHEMA clause has no effect on SQL statements in the procedures.
39 – SQLCA
A formal parameter for the SQLCA (see the Oracle Rdb SQL Reference Manual for more information on the SQLCA). The calling program module must declare a record that corresponds to the structure of the SQLCA and specify that record declaration as the calling parameter for the SQLCA formal parameter. Specifying SQLCA as a formal parameter is an alternative to specifying SQLCODE. Using SQLCA instead of SQLCODE lets the calling program module take advantage of the information SQL puts in the third element of the SQLERRD array in the SQLCA. Future versions of SQL may use the SQLCA for additional information.
40 – SQLCODE
A formal parameter that SQL uses to indicate the execution status of the SQL statement in the procedure. The SQLCODE formal parameter does not require a data type declaration; SQL automatically declares SQLCODE with an INTEGER data type. However, the calling program module must still declare an integer variable for the actual parameter that corresponds to SQLCODE. The SQLCODE parameter must be passed by reference. Oracle Rdb recommends that you use the SQLSTATE status parameter rather than SQLCODE. SQLSTATE complies with ANSI/ISO SQL standard and SQLCODE may be deprecated in a future release of Oracle Rdb. See the Oracle Rdb SQL Reference Manual for more information about SQLCODE.
41 – SQLDA_SQLDA2
A formal parameter for the SQLDA or SQLDA2 (see the Oracle Rdb SQL Reference Manual for more information on the SQLDA and SQLDA2). The calling program module must declare a record that corresponds to the structure of the SQLDA or SQLDA2 and specify that record declaration as the calling parameter for the SQLDA or SQLDA2 formal parameter. You can optionally precede SQLDA or SQLDA2 in the parameter declaration with another name the SQL statement in the module procedure can use to refer to the SQLDA or SQLDA2.
42 – SQLSTATE
A formal parameter that SQL uses to indicate the execution status of the SQL statement in the procedure. The SQLSTATE formal parameter does not require a data type declaration; SQL automatically declares SQLSTATE with a CHAR(5) data type. However, the calling program module must still declare a character variable for the actual parameter that corresponds to SQLSTATE. The SQLSTATE parameter must be passed by reference. Oracle Rdb recommends that you use the SQLSTATE status parameter rather than SQLCODE. SQLSTATE complies with the ANSI/ISO SQL standard and SQLCODE may be deprecated in a future release of Oracle Rdb.
43 – VIEW_UPDATE_RULES
Specifies whether or not the SQL module processor applies the ANSI/ISO standard for updatable views to all views created during compilation. If you specify SQL92, SQL99, SQL89, or MIA, the SQL module processor applies the ANSI/ISO standard for updatable views to all views created during compilation. Views that do not comply with the ANSI/ISO standard for updatable views cannot be updated. The default is SQLV40. The ANSI/ISO standard for updatable views requires the following conditions to be met in the SELECT statement: o The DISTINCT keyword is not specified. o Only column names can appear in the select list. Each column name can appear only once. Functions and expressions such as max(column_name) or column_name +1 cannot appear in the select list. o The FROM clause refers to only one table. This table must be either a base table or a derived table that can be updated. o The WHERE clause does not contain a subquery. o The GROUP BY clause is not specified. o The HAVING clause is not specified. If you specify SQLV40, SQL does not apply the ANSI/ISO standard for updatable views. Instead, SQL considers views that meet the following conditions to be updatable: o The DISTINCT keyword is not specified. o The FROM clause refers to only one table. This table must be either a base table or a view that can be updated. o The GROUP BY clause is not specified. o The HAVING clause is not specified.