07.11.2011 11:23, Thomas Steinmaurer wrote:
> With all the discussion, is it worth to create a JIRA issue for this
> feature request?
I don't mind :-)
Dmitry
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> is there any plan for supporting conditional trigger firing as in Oracle
> when specifying an optional WHEN clause in the trigger DDL syntax?
>
> Currently in Firebird, to omit trigger code execution, one can wrap the
> entire trigger body into an IF block, but the trigger still fires, but
> no P
Hi,
It's not only Oracle having a when, PostgreSQL has something similar:
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.1/interactive/sql-createtrigger.html
> If a WHEN clause implies that the trigger gets fired anyway, then right,
> this wouldn't make a difference. ;-)
I think an aspect would be a t
On 10/10/2011 07:43, Dimitry Sibiryakov wrote:
> 10.10.2011 12:36, Adriano dos Santos Fernandes wrote:
>> Wrong reason, as Oracle doesn't support external triggers.
> Oracle SQL Reference for version 10 has other opinion:
>
> -- quote ---
> CREATE TRIGGER sal
On 10/10/11 14:36, Adriano dos Santos Fernandes wrote:
> On 10/10/2011 04:47, Dimitry Sibiryakov wrote:
>> b) trigger body can be in Java. Firebird don't have both these problems.
> Wrong reason, as Oracle doesn't support external triggers.
>
> You would just need to code a PL/SQL trigger that ca
10.10.2011 14:43, Dimitry Sibiryakov wrote:
>> Wrong reason, as Oracle doesn't support external triggers.
>
> Oracle SQL Reference for version 10 has other opinion:
>
> -- quote ---
> CREATE TRIGGER salary_check
> BEFORE INSERT OR UPDATE OF salary, job_id ON
10.10.2011 12:36, Adriano dos Santos Fernandes wrote:
> Wrong reason, as Oracle doesn't support external triggers.
Oracle SQL Reference for version 10 has other opinion:
-- quote ---
CREATE TRIGGER salary_check
BEFORE INSERT OR UPDATE OF salary, job_id ON em
On 10/10/2011 06:48, Vlad Khorsun wrote:
> Seems conditional triggers have sence only for external (non-PSQL)
> triggers.
>
>
Moreover, only when the call is cost (like Java, but not for C++).
Adriano
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On 10/10/2011 04:47, Dimitry Sibiryakov wrote:
> b) trigger body can be in Java. Firebird don't have both these problems.
Wrong reason, as Oracle doesn't support external triggers.
You would just need to code a PL/SQL trigger that calls an external
procedure/function, so you would be able to us
On Mon, 10 Oct 2011 12:48:51 +0300, "Vlad Khorsun"
wrote:
>> 10.10.2011 12:26, Vlad Khorsun wrote:
>>
>>> If such clause is inside trigger code then it not affects security
>>> checks and
>>> *whole* trigger code is checked. SQL standard says something about
>>> security
>>> checks for conditiona
On 10/10/11 13:48, Vlad Khorsun wrote:
>> 10.10.2011 12:26, Vlad Khorsun wrote:
>>
>>> If such clause is inside trigger code then it not affects security checks
>>> and
>>> *whole* trigger code is checked. SQL standard says something about security
>>> checks for conditional triggers ?
>> I belie
> 10.10.2011 12:26, Vlad Khorsun wrote:
>
>> If such clause is inside trigger code then it not affects security checks and
>> *whole* trigger code is checked. SQL standard says something about security
>> checks for conditional triggers ?
>
> I believe the rules are the same. In general, it's imp
10.10.2011 12:54, Alex Peshkoff wrote:
> It says nothing about conditional triggers at all - at least I've failed
> to find such mention.
Search for .
Dmitry
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On 10/10/11 12:26, Vlad Khorsun wrote:
>> On 10/10/11 11:53, Vlad Khorsun wrote:
At the first glance it's possible to avoid loading trigger's body with
WHEN clause.
>>> Should we check permissions of trigger's code ? If yes - we will load
>>> it anyway at query (insert\update\delet
10.10.2011 12:26, Vlad Khorsun wrote:
> If such clause is inside trigger code then it not affects security checks and
> *whole* trigger code is checked. SQL standard says something about security
> checks for conditional triggers ?
I believe the rules are the same. In general, it's impossible to
> On 10/10/11 11:53, Vlad Khorsun wrote:
>>> At the first glance it's possible to avoid loading trigger's body with
>>> WHEN clause.
>> Should we check permissions of trigger's code ? If yes - we will load
>> it anyway at query (insert\update\delete) prepare time.
>
> We should not check per
On 10/10/11 11:53, Vlad Khorsun wrote:
>> At the first glance it's possible to avoid loading trigger's body with
>> WHEN clause.
> Should we check permissions of trigger's code ? If yes - we will load
> it anyway at query (insert\update\delete) prepare time.
We should not check permissions
> On 10/10/11 11:47, Dimitry Sibiryakov wrote:
>> 10.10.2011 9:41, Alex Peshkoff wrote:
>>> But telling true I do not think that such game
>>> is worth playing - too many conditions should be met.
>> It is worth for Oracle because
>> a) condition is evaluated in SQL machine and let it avoid s
On 10/10/11 11:47, Dimitry Sibiryakov wrote:
> 10.10.2011 9:41, Alex Peshkoff wrote:
>> But telling true I do not think that such game
>> is worth playing - too many conditions should be met.
>It is worth for Oracle because
> a) condition is evaluated in SQL machine and let it avoid switching
> At the first glance it's possible to avoid loading trigger's body with
> WHEN clause.
Should we check permissions of trigger's code ? If yes - we will load
it anyway at query (insert\update\delete) prepare time.
Regards,
Vlad
--
10.10.2011 9:41, Alex Peshkoff wrote:
> But telling true I do not think that such game
> is worth playing - too many conditions should be met.
It is worth for Oracle because
a) condition is evaluated in SQL machine and let it avoid switching to PL/SQL
machine if
the condition doesn't met. (Su
On 10/10/11 11:24, Mark Rotteveel wrote:
> On Mon, 10 Oct 2011 09:11:40 +0200, Thomas Steinmaurer
> wrote:
>>> I think that the Oracle WHEN-clause is simply syntactic sugar for
>>> wrapping
>>> the entire body in an IF-condition. I don't think there would be much
>>> difference performance-wise.
On Mon, 10 Oct 2011 09:11:40 +0200, Thomas Steinmaurer
wrote:
>> I think that the Oracle WHEN-clause is simply syntactic sugar for
>> wrapping
>> the entire body in an IF-condition. I don't think there would be much
>> difference performance-wise.
>
> If a WHEN clause implies that the trigger get
> On Mon, 10 Oct 2011 08:17:19 +0200, Thomas Steinmaurer
> wrote:
>> Hello,
>>
>> is there any plan for supporting conditional trigger firing as in Oracle
>
>> when specifying an optional WHEN clause in the trigger DDL syntax?
>>
>> Currently in Firebird, to omit trigger code execution, one can w
On Mon, 10 Oct 2011 08:17:19 +0200, Thomas Steinmaurer
wrote:
> Hello,
>
> is there any plan for supporting conditional trigger firing as in Oracle
> when specifying an optional WHEN clause in the trigger DDL syntax?
>
> Currently in Firebird, to omit trigger code execution, one can wrap the
>
Hello,
is there any plan for supporting conditional trigger firing as in Oracle
when specifying an optional WHEN clause in the trigger DDL syntax?
Currently in Firebird, to omit trigger code execution, one can wrap the
entire trigger body into an IF block, but the trigger still fires, but
no P
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