The DBMS_UTILITY package includes several utility modules you might find useful when managing objects in the database.
This procedure analyzes all the tables, clusters, and indexes in the specified schema. The specification is:
PROCEDURE DBMS_UTILITY.ANALYZE_SCHEMA (schema VARCHAR2, method VARCHAR2, estimate_rows NUMBER DEFAULT NULL, estimate_percent NUMBER DEFAULT NULL);
The COMMA_TO_TABLE procedure parses a comma-delimited list and places each name into a PL/SQL table. The specification is:
PROCEDURE DBMS_UTILITY.COMMA_TO_TABLE (list IN VARCHAR2, tablen OUT BINARY_INTEGER, tab OUT uncl_array);
This procedure compiles all procedures, functions, and packages in the specified schema. The specification is:
PROCEDURE DBMS_UTILITY.COMPILE_SCHEMA (schema VARCHAR2);
This function formats and returns the current call stack. You can use this function to access the call stack in your program. The specification is:
FUNCTION DBMS_UTILITY.FORMAT_CALL_STACK RETURN VARCHAR2;
This function formats and returns the current error stack. You might use this in an exception handler to examine the sequence of errors raised. The specification is:
FUNCTION DBMS_UTILITY.FORMAT_ERROR_STACK RETURN VARCHAR2;
This function returns the number of 100ths of seconds which have elapsed from an arbitrary time. Without GET_TIME, Oracle functions can only record and provide elapsed time in second intervals, which is a very coarse granularity in today's world of computing. With GET_TIME, you can get a much finer understanding of the processing times of lines in your program. The specification is:
FUNCTION DBMS_UTILITY.GET_TIME RETURN NUMBER;
This function helps determine if the database is running in Parallel Server mode. The specification is:
FUNCTION DBMS_UTILITY.IS_PARALLEL_SERVER RETURN BOOLEAN;
The function returns TRUE if the database is running in Parallel Server mode; otherwise it returns FALSE.
This procedure resolves the name of an object into its component parts, performing synonym translations as necessary. The specification is:
PROCEDURE DBMS_UTILITY.NAME_RESOLVE (name IN VARCHAR2, context IN NUMBER, schema OUT VARCHAR2, part1 OUT VARCHAR2, part2 OUT VARCHAR2, dblink OUT VARCHAR2, part1_type OUT NUMBER, object_number OUT NUMBER);
The NAME_TOKENIZE procedure calls the PL/SQL parser to parse the given name that is in the following format:
a [ . b [. c]] [@dblink ]
where dblink is the name of a database link. NAME_TOKENIZE follows these rules:
Strips off all double quotes
Converts to uppercase if there are no quotes
Ignores any inline comments
Does no semantic analysis
Leaves any missing values as NULL
The specification is:
PROCEDURE DBMS_UTILITY.NAME_TOKENIZE (name IN VARCHAR2, a OUT VARCHAR2, b OUT VARCHAR2, c OUT VARCHAR2, dblink OUT VARCHAR2, nextpos OUT BINARY_INTEGER);
The PORT_STRING function returns a string that uniquely identifies the version of Oracle Server and the platform or operating system of the current database instance. The specification is:
FUNCTION DBMS_UTILITY.PORT_STRING RETURN VARCHAR2;
The TABLE_TO_COMMA procedure converts a PL/SQL table into a comma-delimited list. The specification is:
PROCEDURE DBMS_UTILITY.TABLE_TO_COMMA (tab IN uncl_array, tablen OUT BINARY_INTEGER, list OUT VARCHAR2);
Copyright (c) 2000 O'Reilly & Associates. All rights reserved.
This HTML Help has been published using the chm2web software. |