WHENEVER — specify the action to be taken when an SQL statement causes a specific class condition to be raised
WHENEVER { NOT FOUND | SQLERROR | SQLWARNING } action
Define a behavior which is called on the special cases (Rows not found, SQL warnings or errors) in the result of SQL execution.
See Section 35.8.1 for a description of the parameters.
EXEC SQL WHENEVER NOT FOUND CONTINUE; EXEC SQL WHENEVER NOT FOUND DO BREAK; EXEC SQL WHENEVER SQLWARNING SQLPRINT; EXEC SQL WHENEVER SQLWARNING DO warn(); EXEC SQL WHENEVER SQLERROR sqlprint; EXEC SQL WHENEVER SQLERROR CALL print2(); EXEC SQL WHENEVER SQLERROR DO handle_error("select"); EXEC SQL WHENEVER SQLERROR DO sqlnotice(NULL, NONO); EXEC SQL WHENEVER SQLERROR DO sqlprint(); EXEC SQL WHENEVER SQLERROR GOTO error_label; EXEC SQL WHENEVER SQLERROR STOP;
A typical application is the use of WHENEVER NOT FOUND
BREAK
to handle looping through result sets:
int main(void) { EXEC SQL CONNECT TO testdb AS con1; EXEC SQL ALLOCATE DESCRIPTOR d; EXEC SQL DECLARE cur CURSOR FOR SELECT current_database(), 'hoge', 256; EXEC SQL OPEN cur; /* when end of result set reached, break out of while loop */ EXEC SQL WHENEVER NOT FOUND DO BREAK; while (1) { EXEC SQL FETCH NEXT FROM cur INTO SQL DESCRIPTOR d; ... } EXEC SQL CLOSE cur; EXEC SQL COMMIT; EXEC SQL DEALLOCATE DESCRIPTOR d; EXEC SQL DISCONNECT ALL; return 0; }
WHENEVER
is specified in the SQL standard, but
most of the actions are PostgreSQL extensions.