Synopsis
Use the CALL
statement to execute a stored procedure.
Syntax
call_procedure ::= CALL subprogram_name ( [ actual_arg [ , ... ] ] )
actual_arg ::= [ formal_arg => ] expression
formal_arg ::= name
CALL
. A function cannot be invoked with the CALL
statement. Rather, it's invoked as (part of) an expression in DML statements like SELECT
or in PL/pgSQL source code.Semantics
CALL
executes a stored procedure. If the procedure has any output parameters, then a result row will be returned, containing the values of those parameters.
The caller must have both the usage privilege on the schema in which the to-be-called procedure exists and the execute privilege on it. If the caller lacks the required usage privilege, then it causes this error:
42501: permission denied for schema %"
If the caller has the required usage privilege but lacks the required execute privilege, then it causes this error:
42501: permission denied for procedure %
Notes
If CALL
is executed in a transaction block, then it cannot execute transaction control statements. The attempt causes this runtime error:
2D000: invalid transaction termination
Transaction control statements are allowed when CALL
is invoked with autocommit set to on—in which case the procedure executes in its own transaction.
Simple example
Create a simple procedure
set client_min_messages = warning;
drop procedure if exists p(text, int) cascade;
create procedure p(
caption in text default 'Caption',
int_val in int default 17)
language plpgsql
as $body$
begin
raise info 'Result: %: %', caption, int_val::text;
end;
$body$;
Invoke it using the simple syntax:
call p('Forty-two', 42);
This is the result:
INFO: Result: Forty-two: 42
Omit the second defaulted parameter:
call p('"int_val" default is');
This is the result:
INFO: Result: "int_val" default is: 17
Omit the both defaulted parameters:
call p();
This is the result:
INFO: Result: Caption: 17
Invoke it by using the names of the formal parameters.
call p(caption => 'Forty-two', int_val=>42);
This is the result:
INFO: Result: Forty-two: 42
Invoke it by just the named second parameter.
call p(int_val=>99);
This is the result:
INFO: Result: Caption: 99
Provoke an error by using just the second unnamed parameter.
call p(99);
It causes this error:
42883: procedure p(integer) does not exist
In this case, this generic hint:
You might need to add explicit type casts.
isn't helpful.
Example with 'inout' arguments
Create a procedure with INOUT
arguments.
drop procedure if exists x(int, int, int, int, int);
create procedure x(
a inout int,
b inout int,
c inout int,
d inout int,
e inout int)
language plpgsql
as $body$
begin
a := a + 1;
b := b + 2;
c := c + 3;
d := d + 4;
e := e + 5;
end;
$body$;
Notice that this is rather strange. The ordinary meaning of an INOUT
parameter is that its value will be changed by the invocation so that the caller sees different values after the call. Normally, a procedure designed and written to be called from another procedure or a DO
block with actual arguments that are declared as variables. But when such a procedure is called using a top-level CALL
statement, it returns the results in the same way that a SELECT
statement does. Try this:
call x(10, 20, 30, 40, 50);
This is the result:
a | b | c | d | e
----+----+----+----+----
11 | 22 | 33 | 44 | 55
Here's how to invoke procedure x() in PLpgSQL:
do $body$
declare
a_var int not null := 10;
b_var int not null := 20;
c_var int not null := 30;
d_var int not null := 40;
e_var int not null := 50;
begin
call x(a_var, b_var, c_var, d_var, e_var);
raise info 'Result: %, %, %, %, %', a_var, b_var, c_var, d_var, e_var;
end;
$body$;
This is the result:
INFO: Result: 11, 22, 33, 44, 55
You cannot create a procedure with OUT
formal arguments. The attempt causes the error
0A000: procedures cannot have OUT arguments
This is tracked by Github Issue #12348.