CREATE FUNCTION (sourced)
This CREATE FUNCTION statement registers a user-defined function that is based on an existing scalar or aggregate function with a database server.
Invocation
This statement can be embedded in an application program or issued interactively. It is an executable statement that can be dynamically prepared only if DYNAMICRULES run behavior is implicitly or explicitly specified.
Authorization
The privilege set defined below must include at least one of the following:
- The CREATEIN privilege on the schema
- SYSADM or SYSCTRL authority
- System DBADM
The authorization ID that matches the schema name implicitly has the CREATEIN privilege on the schema.
If the authorization ID that is used to create the function has installation SYSADM authority, the function is identified as system-defined function.
Additional privileges are required for the source function, and other privileges are also needed if the function uses a table as a parameter, or refers to a distinct type. These privileges are:
- The EXECUTE privilege for the function that the SOURCE clause references.
- The SELECT privilege on any table that is an input parameter to the function.
- The USAGE privilege on each distinct type that the function references.
Privilege set: If the statement is embedded in an application program, the privilege set is the privileges that are held by the owner of the plan or package. If the owner is a role, the implicit schema match does not apply and this role needs to include one of the previously listed conditions.
If the statement is dynamically prepared and is not running in a trusted context for which the ROLE AS OBJECT OWNER clause is specified, the privilege set is the set of privileges that are held by the SQL authorization ID of the process. If the schema name is not the same as the SQL authorization ID of the process, one of the following conditions must be met:
- The privilege set includes SYSADM or SYSCTRL authority.
- The SQL authorization ID of the process has the CREATEIN privilege on the schema.
Syntax
>>-CREATE FUNCTION--function-name-------------------------------> (1) >--(--+---------------------------+--)--------------------------> | .-,---------------------. | | V | | '---parameter-declaration-+-' >--RETURNS--data-type2--+----------------+----------------------> | (2) | '-AS LOCATOR-----' >--+-------------------------+----------------------------------> '-SPECIFIC--specific-name-' >--+------------------------------+-----------------------------> '-PARAMETER CCSID--+-ASCII---+-' +-EBCDIC--+ '-UNICODE-' >--SOURCE-+-function-name--+--------------------------+-+------>< | | .-,-----------------. | | | | V | | | | '-(----parameter-type--)-+-' | '-SPECIFIC--specific-name---------------------'
- RETURNS, SPECIFIC, and SOURCE can be specified in any order.
- AS LOCATOR can be specified only for a LOB data type or a distinct type based on a LOB data type.
parameter-declaration:
>>-+----------------+--parameter-type-------------------------->< '-parameter-name-'
parameter-type:
>>-+-data-type--+----------------+--------------+-------------->< | | (1) | | | '-AS LOCATOR-----' | | (2) | '-TABLE LIKE--+-table-name-+--AS LOCATOR-----' '-view-name--'
- AS LOCATOR can be specified only for a LOB data type or a distinct type based on a LOB data type.
- The TABLE LIKE name AS LOCATOR clause can only be specified for the parameter list of the function that is being defined.
data-type:
>>-+-built-in-type------+-------------------------------------->< '-distinct-type-name-'
built-in-type:
>>-+-+-SMALLINT----+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+->< | +-+-INTEGER-+-+ | | | '-INT-----' | | | '-BIGINT------' | | .-(5,0)--------------------. | +-+-DECIMAL-+--+--------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ | +-DEC-----+ '-(integer-+-----------+-)-' | | '-NUMERIC-' '-, integer-' | | .-(53)------. | +-+-FLOAT--+-----------+--+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ | | '-(integer)-' | | | +-REAL------------------+ | | | .-PRECISION-. | | | '-DOUBLE--+-----------+-' | | .-(34)-. | +-DECFLOAT--+------+----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ | '-(16)-' | | .-(1)-------. | +-+-+-+-CHARACTER-+--+-----------+----------+----+--------------------+--+----------------------+---------------+-+ | | | '-CHAR------' '-(integer)-' | '-CCSID--+-ASCII---+-' '-FOR--+-SBCS--+--DATA-' | | | | '-+-+-CHARACTER-+--VARYING-+--(integer)-' +-EBCDIC--+ +-MIXED-+ | | | | | '-CHAR------' | '-UNICODE-' '-BIT---' | | | | '-VARCHAR----------------' | | | | .-(1M)-------------. | | | '-+-+-CHARACTER-+--LARGE OBJECT-+--+------------------+----+--------------------+--+----------------------+---' | | | '-CHAR------' | '-(integer-+---+-)-' '-CCSID--+-ASCII---+-' '-FOR--+-SBCS--+--DATA-' | | '-CLOB------------------------' +-K-+ +-EBCDIC--+ '-MIXED-' | | +-M-+ '-UNICODE-' | | '-G-' | | .-(1)-------. | +-+-GRAPHIC--+-----------+-------+--+--------------------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | | '-(integer)-' | '-CCSID--+-ASCII---+-' | | +-VARGRAPHIC--(--integer--)----+ +-EBCDIC--+ | | | .-(1M)-------------. | '-UNICODE-' | | '-DBCLOB--+------------------+-' | | '-(integer-+---+-)-' | | +-K-+ | | +-M-+ | | '-G-' | | .-(1)-------. | +-+-BINARY--+-----------+-------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------+ | | '-(integer)-' | | | +-+-BINARY VARYING-+-(integer)------------------+ | | | '-VARBINARY------' | | | | .-(1M)-------------. | | | '-+-BINARY LARGE OBJECT-+--+------------------+-' | | '-BLOB----------------' '-(integer-+---+-)-' | | +-K-+ | | +-M-+ | | '-G-' | +-+-DATE------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------+ | +-TIME------------------------------------------------+ | | | .-(--6--)-------. .-WITHOUT TIME ZONE-. | | | '-TIMESTAMP--+---------------+--+-------------------+-' | | '-(--integer--)-' '-WITH TIME ZONE----' | '-ROWID-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------'
Description
- function-name
- Names the user-defined function. The name is implicitly
or explicitly qualified by a schema name.
The combination of name, schema name, the number of parameters, and the data type of each parameter1 (without regard for any length, precision, scale, subtype or encoding scheme attributes of the data type) must not identify a user-defined function that exists at the current server.
If the function is sourced on an existing function to enable the use of the existing function with a distinct type, the name can be the same name as the existing function. In general, more than one function can have the same name if the function signature of each function is unique.
You can use the same name for more than one function if the function signature of each function is unique.
- The unqualified form of function-name must
not be any of the following system-reserved keywords even if you specify
them as delimited identifiers:
ALL LIKE UNIQUE AND MATCH UNKNOWN ANY NOT = BETWEEN NULL ¬= DISTINCT ONLY < EXCEPT OR <= EXISTS OVERLAPS ¬< FALSE SIMILAR > FOR SOME >= FROM TABLE ¬> IN TRUE <> IS TYPE
The schema name can be 'SYSTOOLS' or 'SYSFUN' if the user who executes the CREATE statement has SYSADM or SYSCTRL privilege. Otherwise, the schema name must not begin with 'SYS' unless the schema name is 'SYSADM'.
- The unqualified form of function-name must
not be any of the following system-reserved keywords even if you specify
them as delimited identifiers:
- (parameter-declaration,…)
- Specifies the number of input parameters of the function and the
data type of each parameter. All of the parameters for a function
are input parameters and are nullable. There must be one entry in
the list for each parameter that the function expects to receive.
Although not required, you can give each parameter a name. A function can have no parameters. In this case, you must code an empty set of parentheses, for example:
CREATE FUNCTION WOOFER()
- parameter-name
- Specifies the name of the input parameter. The name is an SQL identifier, and each name in the parameter list must not be the same as any other name.
- data-type
- Specifies the data type of the input parameter. The data type
can be a built-in data type or a distinct type.
- built-in-type
- The data type of the input parameter is a built-in data type.
For information on the data types, see built-in-type.
For parameters with a character or graphic data type, the PARAMETER CCSID clause or CCSID clause indicates the encoding scheme of the parameter. If you do not specify either of these clauses, the encoding scheme is the value of field DEF ENCODING SCHEME on installation panel DSNTIPF.
- distinct-type-name
- The data type of the input parameter is a distinct type. Any length, precision, scale, subtype, or encoding scheme attributes for the parameter are those of the source type of the distinct type.
The implicitly or explicitly specified encoding scheme of all of the parameters with a character or graphic string data type must be the same—either all ASCII, all EBCDIC, or all UNICODE.
Although parameters with a character data type have an implicitly or explicitly specified subtype (BIT, SBCS, or MIXED), the function program can receive character data of any subtype. Therefore, conversion of the input data to the subtype of the parameter might occur when the function is invoked.
Parameters with a datetime data type or a distinct type are passed to the function as a different data type:
- A datetime type parameter is passed as a character data type,
and the data is passed in ISO format.
The encoding scheme for a datetime type parameter is the same as the implicitly or explicitly specified encoding scheme of any character or graphic string parameters. If no character or graphic string parameters are passed, the encoding scheme is the value of field DEF ENCODING SCHEME on installation panel DSNTIPF.
- A distinct type parameter is passed as the source type of the distinct type.
You can specify any built-in data type or distinct type that matches or can be cast to the data type of the corresponding parameter of the source function (the function that is identified in the SOURCE clause). (For information on casting data types, see Casting between data types.) Length, precision, or scale attributes do not have be specified for data types with these attributes. When specifying data types with these attributes, follow these rules:
- An empty set of parentheses can be used to indicate that the length, precision, or scale is the same as the source function.
- If length, precision, or scale is not explicitly specified, and empty parentheses are not specified, the default values are used.
- AS LOCATOR
- Specifies
that a locator to the value of the parameter is passed to the function
instead of the actual value. Specify AS LOCATOR only for parameters
with a LOB data type or a distinct type based on a LOB data type.
Passing locators instead of values can result in fewer bytes being
passed to the function, especially when the value of the parameter
is very large.
The AS LOCATOR clause has no effect on determining whether data types can be promoted, nor does it affect the function signature, which is used in function resolution.
- TABLE LIKE table-name or view-name AS LOCATOR
- Specifies
that the parameter is a transition table. However, when the function
is invoked, the actual values in the transition table are not passed
to the function. A single value is passed instead. This single value
is a locator to the table, which the function uses to access the columns
of the transition table. A function with a table parameter can only
be invoked from the triggered action of a trigger.
The use of TABLE LIKE provides an implicit definition of the transition table. It specifies that the transition table has the same number of columns as the identified table or view. If a table is specified, the transition table includes columns that are defined as implicitly hidden in the table. The columns have the same data type, length, precision, scale, subtype, and encoding scheme as the identified table or view, as they are described in catalog tables SYSCOLUMNS and SYSTABLESPACE. The number of columns and the attributes of those columns are determined at the time the CREATE FUNCTION statement is processed. Any subsequent changes to the number of columns in the table or the attributes of those columns do not affect the parameters of the function.
table-name or view-name must identify a table or view that exists at the current server. A view cannot have columns of length 0. The name must not identify a declared temporary table. The table that is identified can contain XML columns; however, the function cannot reference those XML columns. The name does not have to be the same name as the table that is associated with the transition table for the trigger. An unqualified table or view name is implicitly qualified according to the following rules:
- If the CREATE FUNCTION statement is embedded in a program, the implicit qualifier is the authorization ID in the QUALIFIER bind option when the plan or package was created or last rebound. If QUALIFIER was not used, the implicit qualifier is the owner of the plan or package.
- If the CREATE FUNCTION statement is dynamically prepared, the implicit qualifier is the SQL authorization ID in the CURRENT SCHEMA special register.
When the function is invoked, the corresponding columns of the transition table identified by the table locator and the table or view identified in the TABLE LIKE clause must have the same definition. The data type, length, precision, scale, and encoding scheme of these columns must match exactly. The description of the table or view at the time the CREATE FUNCTION statement was executed is used.
Additionally, a character FOR BIT DATA column of the transition table cannot be passed as input for a table parameter for which the corresponding column of the table specified at the definition is not defined as character FOR BIT DATA. (The definition occurs with the CREATE FUNCTION statement.) Likewise, a character column of the transition table that is not FOR BIT DATA cannot be passed as input for a table parameter for which the corresponding column of the table specified at the definition is defined as character FOR BIT DATA.
For more information about using table locators, see DB2 Application Programming and SQL Guide.
- RETURNS
- Identifies
the output of the function.
- data-type2
- Specifies the data type of the output. The output is nullable.
You can specify any built-in data type or distinct type that can be cast from the data type of the result of the source function. (For information on casting data types, see Casting between data types.) For additional rules that apply to the data type that you can specify, see Rules for creating sourced functions.
- AS LOCATOR
- Specifies that the function returns a locator to the value rather than the actual value. You can specify AS LOCATOR only if the output from the function has a LOB data type or a distinct type based on a LOB data type.
- SPECIFIC specific-name
- Provides a
unique name for the function. The name is implicitly or explicitly qualified with a schema name. The
name, including the schema name, must not identify the specific name of another function that exists
at the current server.
The unqualified form of specific-name is an SQL identifier. The qualified form is an SQL identifier (the schema name) followed by a period and an SQL identifier.
If you do not specify a schema name, it is the same as the explicit or implicit schema name of the function name (function-name). If you specify a schema name, it must be the same as the explicit or implicit schema name of the function name.
If you do not specify the SPECIFIC clause, the default specific name is the name of the function. However, if the function name does not provide a unique specific name or if the function name is a single asterisk, DB2® generates a specific name in the form of:
where 'xxxxxxxxxxxx' is a string of 12 characters that make the name unique.SQLxxxxxxxxxxxx
The specific name is stored in the SPECIFIC column of the SYSROUTINES catalog table. The specific name can be used to uniquely identify the function in several SQL statements (such as ALTER FUNCTION, COMMENT, DROP, GRANT, and REVOKE) and in DB2 commands (START FUNCTION, STOP FUNCTION, and DISPLAY FUNCTION). However, the function cannot be invoked by its specific name.
- PARAMETER CCSID
- Indicates
whether the encoding scheme for character and graphic string
parameters is ASCII, EBCDIC, or UNICODE. The default encoding scheme
is the value specified in the CCSID clauses of the parameter list
or RETURNS clause, or in the field DEF ENCODING SCHEME on installation
panel DSNTIPF.
This clause provides a convenient way to specify the encoding scheme for character and graphic string parameters. If individual CCSID clauses are specified for individual parameters in addition to this PARAMETER CCSID clause, the value specified in all of the CCSID clauses must be the same value that is specified in this clause.
This clause also specifies the encoding scheme to be used for system-generated parameters of the routine such as message tokens and DBINFO.
- SOURCE
- Specifies that the new function
is being defined as a sourced function. A sourced function is implemented by another function
(the source function). The source function must be a scalar or aggregate function that exists
at the current server, and it must be one of the following types of functions:
- A function that was defined with a CREATE FUNCTION statement
- A cast function that was generated by a CREATE TYPE statement
- A built-in function
If the source function is not a built-in function, the particular function can be identified by its name, function signature, or specific name.
If the source function is a built-in function, the SOURCE clause must include a function signature for the built-in function.
The source function must not be any of the built-in functions (if a particular syntax is shown, only the indicated form cannot be specified):
- CHAR(datetime-expression, second-argument) where second-argument is ISO, USA, EUR, JIS, or LOCAL or if CHAR is specified with OCTETS, CODEUNITS16, or CODEUNITS32.
- CHARACTER_LENGTH
- CLOB if OCTETS, CODEUNITS16, or CODEUNITS32 is specified
- COUNT(*)
- COUNT_BIG(*)
- DBCLOB if OCTETS, CODEUNITS16, or CODEUNITS32 is specified
- DECODE
- DECRYPT_BIT where the second argument is DEFAULT
- DECRYPT_CHAR where the second argument is DEFAULT
- DECRYPT_DB where the second argument is DEFAULT
- EXTRACT
- GETVARIABLE where the second argument is DEFAULT
- GRAPHIC if OCTETS, CODEUNITS16, or CODEUNITS32 is specified
- INSERT if OCTETS, CODEUNITS16, or CODEUNITS32 is specified
- LEFT if OCTETS, CODEUNITS16, or CODEUNITS32 is specified
- LOCAL
- LOCATE if OCTETS, CODEUNITS16, or CODEUNITS32 is specified
- MAX
- MIN
- NULLIF
- POSITION
- RID
- RIGHT if OCTETS, CODEUNITS16, or CODEUNITS32 is specified
- STRIP where multiple arguments are specified
- SUBSTRING
- TRIM where the first argument is BOTH, B, LEADING, L, TRAILING, T, or the first or second argument is FROM
- VARCHAR if OCTETS, CODEUNITS16, or CODEUNITS32 is specified
- VARGRAPHIC if OCTETS, CODEUNITS16, or CODEUNITS32 is specified
- XMLAGG
- XMLCONCAT
- XMLELEMENT
- XMLFOREST
- XMLNAMESPACES
If you base the sourced function directly or indirectly on an external scalar function, the sourced function inherits the attributes of the external scalar function. This can involve several layers of sourced functions. For example, assume that function A is sourced on function B, which in turn is sourced on function C. Function C is an external scalar function. Functions A and B inherit all of the attributes that are specified on the EXTERNAL clause of the CREATE FUNCTION statement for function C.
- function-name
- Identifies the function that is to be used as the source function. The source function can be
defined with any number of parameters. If more than one function is defined with the specified name
in the specified or implicit schema, an error is returned.
If you specify an unqualified function-name, DB2 searches the schemas of the SQL path. DB2 selects the first schema that has only one function with this name on which the user has EXECUTE authority. An error is returned if a function is not found or a schema has more than one function with this name.
- function-name (parameter-type,...)
- Identifies the function that is to be used as the source function by its function signature,
which uniquely identifies the function. Thefunction-name
(parameter-type,...) must identify a function with the specified signature. The
specified parameters must match the data types in the corresponding position that were specified
when the function was created. DB2 uses the
number of data types and the logical concatenation of the data types to identify the specific
function instance. Synonyms for data types are considered a match.
If the function was defined with a table parameter (the LIKE TABLE name AS LOCATOR clause was specified in the CREATE FUNCTION statement to indicate that one of the input parameters is a transition table), the function signature cannot be used to uniquely identify the function. Instead, use one of the other syntax variations to identify the function with its function name, if unique, or its specific name.
If function-name() is specified, the identified function must have zero parameters.
- function-name
- Identifies the function name of the source function. If you specify an unqualified name, DB2 searches the schemas of the SQL path. Otherwise, DB2 searches for the function in the specified schema.
- parameter-type,...
- Identifies the parameters of the function.
If an unqualified distinct type name is specified, DB2 searches the SQL path to resolve the schema name for the distinct type.
Empty parentheses are allowed for some data types that are specified in this context. For data types that have a length, precision, or scale attribute, use one of the following specifications:
- Empty parentheses indicate that DB2 ignores the attribute when determining whether the data types match. For example, DEC() is considered a match for a parameter of a function that is defined with a data type of DEC(7,2). However, FLOAT cannot be specified with empty parentheses because its parameter value indicates a specific data type (REAL or DOUBLE).
- If a specific value for a length, precision, or scale attribute is specified, the value must exactly match the value that was specified (implicitly or explicitly) in the CREATE FUNCTION statement. If the data type is FLOAT, the precision does not need to exactly match the value that was specified because matching is based on the data type (REAL or DOUBLE).
- If length, precision, or scale is not explicitly specified, and empty parentheses are not specified, the default attributes of the data type are implied. The implicit length must exactly match the value that was specified (implicitly or explicitly) in the CREATE FUNCTION statement.
If you omit the FOR subtype DATA clause or the CCSID clause for data types with a subtype or encoding scheme attribute, DB2 is to ignore the attribute when determining whether the data types match. An exception to ignoring the attribute is FOR BIT DATA. A character FOR BIT DATA parameter of the new function cannot correspond to a parameter of the source function that is not defined as character FOR BIT DATA. Likewise, a character parameter of the new function that is not FOR BIT DATA cannot correspond to a parameter of the source function that is defined as character FOR BIT DATA.
The number of input parameters in the function that is being created must be the same as the number of parameters in the source function. If the data type of each input parameter is not the same as or castable to the corresponding parameter of the source function, an error occurs. The data type of the final result of the source function must match or be castable to the result of the sourced function.
- AS LOCATOR
- Specifies that the function is defined to receive a locator for this parameter. If AS LOCATOR is specified, the data type must be a LOB or distinct type that is based on a LOB.
- SPECIFIC specific-name
- Identifies the function to be used as the source function by its specific name.
If you specify an unqualified specific-name, DB2 searches the SQL path to locate the schema. DB2 selects the first schema that contains a function with this specific name for which the user has EXECUTE authority. DB2 returns an error if it cannot find a function with the specific name in one of the schemas in the SQL path.
If you specify a qualified specific-name, DB2 searches the named schema for the function. DB2 returns an error if it cannot find a function with the specific name.
Notes
- Owner privileges:
- The owner is authorized to execute the function (EXECUTE privilege)
in the following cases:
- If the underlying function is a user-defined function, and the owner is authorized with the grant option to execute the underlying function, the privilege on the new function includes the grant option. Otherwise, the owner can execute the new function but cannot grant others the privilege to do so.
- If the underlying function is a built-in function, the owner is authorized with the grant option to execute the underlying built-in function and the privilege on the new function includes the grant option.
For more information, see GRANT (function or procedure privileges). For more information about ownership of the object, see Authorization, privileges, permissions, masks, and object ownership.
- Choosing data types for parameters:
- When you choose the data types of the input and output parameters
for your function, consider the rules of promotion that can affect
the values of the parameters. (See Promotion of data types).
For example, a constant that is one of the input arguments to the
function might have a built-in data type that is different from the
data type that the function expects, and more significantly, might
not be promotable to that expected data type. Based on the rules of
promotion, consider using the following data types for parameters:
- INTEGER instead of SMALLINT
- DOUBLE instead of REAL
- VARCHAR instead of CHAR
- VARGRAPHIC instead of GRAPHIC
- VARBINARY instead of BINARY
For portability of functions across platforms that are not DB2 for z/OS®, do not use the following data types, which might have different representations on different platforms:
- FLOAT. Use DOUBLE or REAL instead.
- NUMERIC. Use DECIMAL instead.
- Specifying the encoding scheme for parameters:
- The implicitly or explicitly specified encoding scheme of all of the parameters with a character or graphic string data type (both input and output parameters) must be the same—either all ASCII, all EBCDIC, or all UNICODE.
- Determining the uniqueness of functions in a schema:
- At the current server, the function signature of each function,
which is the qualified function name combined with the number and
data types of the input parameters, must be unique. If the function
has more than 30 input parameters, only the data types of the first
30 are used to determine uniqueness. This means that two different
schemas can each contain a function with the same name that have the
same data types for all of their corresponding data types. However,
a single schema must not contain multiple functions with the same
name that have the same data types for all of their corresponding
data types.
When determining whether corresponding data types match, DB2 does not consider any length, precision, or scale attributes in the comparison. DB2 considers the synonyms of data types as a match. For example, REAL and FLOAT, and DOUBLE and FLOAT are considered a match. Therefore, CHAR(8) and CHAR(35) are considered to be the same, as are DECIMAL(11,2), DECIMAL(4,3), DECFLOAT(16) and DECFLOAT(34), TIMESTAMP(6) and TIMESTAMP(9), TIMESTAMP(6) WITH TIME ZONE and TIMESTAMP(9) WITH TIME ZONE. Furthermore, the character and graphic types, and the timestamp types are considered to be the same. For example, the following are considered to be the same type: CHAR and GRAPHIC, VARCHAR and VARGRAPHIC, CLOB and DBCLOB, TIMESTAMP WITHOUT TIME ZONE and TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE. CHAR(13) and GRAPHIC(8) are considered to be the same type. An error is returned if the signature of the function being created is a duplicate of a signature for an existing user-defined function with the same name and schema.
Assume that the following statements are executed to create four functions in the same schema. The second and fourth statements fail because they create functions that are duplicates of the functions that the first and third statements created.
CREATE FUNCTION PART (INT, CHAR(15)) … CREATE FUNCTION PART (INTEGER, CHAR(40)) … CREATE FUNCTION ANGLE (DECIMAL(12,2)) … CREATE FUNCTION ANGLE (DEC(10,7)) …
- Rules for creating sourced functions:
- Assume that the function that is being created is named NEWF and
the source function is named SOURCEF. Consider the following rules
when creating a sourced function:
- The unqualified names of the sourced function and source function can be different (NEWF and SOURCEF).
- The number of input parameters for NEWF and SOURCEF must be the same.
- When specifying the input parameters and output for NEWF, you can specify a value for the
precision, scale, subtype, or encoding scheme for a data type with any of these attributes or use
empty parentheses.
Empty parentheses, such as VARCHAR(), indicate that the value of the attribute is the same as the attribute for the corresponding parameter of SOURCEF, or that is determined by data type promotion. If you specify any values for the attributes, DB2 checks the values against the corresponding input parameters and returned output of SOURCEF as described next.
- When the CREATE FUNCTION statement is executed, DB2 checks the input parameters of NEWF against
those of SOURCEF. The data type of each input parameter of NEWF function must be either the same as,
or promotable to, the data type of the corresponding parameter of SOURCEF. (For information on the
promotion of data types, see Casting between data types.)
This checking does not guarantee that an error will not occur when NEWF is invoked. For example, an argument that matches the data type and length or precision attributes of a NEWF parameter might not be promotable if the corresponding SOURCEF parameter has a shorter length or less precision. In general, do not define the parameters of a sourced function with length or precision attributes that are greater than the attributes of the corresponding parameters of the source function.
- When the CREATE FUNCTION statement is executed, DB2 checks the data type identified in the RETURNS
clause of NEWF against the data type that SOURCEF returns. The data type that SOURCEF returns must
be either the same as, or promotable to, the RETURNS data type of NEWF.
This checking does not guarantee that an error will not occur when NEWF is invoked. For example, the value of a result that matches the data type and length or precision attributes of those specified for the SOURCEF result might not be promotable if the RETURNS data type of NEWF has a shorter length or less precision. Consider the possible effects of defining the RETURNS data type of a sourced function with length or precision attributes that are less than the attributes defined for the data type returned by source function.
- Scrollable cursors specified with user-defined functions:
- A row can be fetched more than once with a scrollable cursor. Therefore, if a scrollable cursor is defined with a function that is not deterministic in the select list of the cursor, a row can be fetched multiple times with different results for each fetch. Similarly, if a scrollable cursor is defined with a user-defined function with external action, the action is executed with every fetch.
- SECURED functions:
- The sourced user-defined function inherits the SECURED or NOT SECURED attribute from the source
function in which only the topmost user-defined function is considered. If the topmost user-defined
function is secure, any nested user-defined functions are also considered secure. DB2 does not validate whether those nested
user-defined functions are secure. If those nested functions can access sensitive data, the security
administrator needs to ensure that those functions are allowed to access sensitive data and should
ensure that a change control audit procedure has been established for all changes to those
functions.
If the sourced function is using the VERIFY_GROUP_FOR_USER or VERIFY_ ROLE_FOR_USER function as its source, the sourced function must specify only two input parameters.
Examples
CREATE FUNCTION AVE (HATSIZE) RETURNS HATSIZE
SOURCE SYSIBM.AVG (INTEGER);
When you created distinct type HATSIZE, two cast functions were generated, which allow HATSIZE to be cast to INTEGER for the argument and INTEGER to be cast to HATSIZE for the result of the function.
CREATE FUNCTION MYCENTER (INTEGER, INTEGER)
RETURNS FLOAT
SOURCE SMITH.CENTER (INTEGER, FLOAT);