GET DIAGNOSTICS
The GET DIAGNOSTICS statement obtains information about the previous SQL statement that was executed.
Invocation
This statement can only be embedded in an application program, SQL function, SQL procedure, or trigger. It cannot be issued interactively. It is an executable statement that cannot be dynamically prepared. It must not be specified in REXX.
Authorization
None required.
Syntax
.-CURRENT-. >>-GET--+---------+--DIAGNOSTICS--+-statement-information-+---->< '-STACKED-' +-condition-information-+ '-combined-information--' statement-information .-,-------------------------------------------. V | |--+---variable-1-- = --statement-information-item-+--+---------| +-variable-1-- = --DB2_GET_DIAGNOSTICS_DIAGNOSTICS-+ '-variable-1-- = --DB2_SQL_NESTING_LEVEL-----------' condition-information |--CONDITION--+-variable-2-+------------------------------------> '-integer----' .-,------------------------------------------------. V | >----variable-3-- = --+-connection-information-item-+-+---------| '-condition-information-item--' combined-information |--variable-4-- = ----------------------------------------------> (1) >--ALL--+----------------------------------------+--------------| | .-,----------------------------------. | | V | | '---+-STATEMENT----------------------+-+-' '-+-CONDITION--+--+------------+-' '-CONNECTION-' +-variable-5-+ '-integer----'
- STATEMENT can only be specified once. If variable-5 or integer is not specified, CONDITION and CONNECTION can only be specified once.
statement-information-item |--+-COMMAND_FUNCTION----------------+--------------------------| +-COMMAND_FUNCTION_CODE-----------+ +-DB2_DIAGNOSTIC_CONVERSION_ERROR-+ +-DB2_LAST_ROW--------------------+ +-DB2_NUMBER_CONNECTIONS----------+ +-DB2_NUMBER_PARAMETER_MARKERS----+ +-DB2_NUMBER_RESULT_SETS----------+ +-DB2_NUMBER_ROWS-----------------+ +-DB2_NUMBER_SUCCESSFUL_SUBSTMTS--+ +-DB2_RELATIVE_COST_ESTIMATE------+ +-DB2_RETURN_STATUS---------------+ +-DB2_ROW_COUNT_SECONDARY---------+ +-DB2_ROW_LENGTH------------------+ +-DB2_SQL_ATTR_CONCURRENCY--------+ +-DB2_SQL_ATTR_CURSOR_CAPABILITY--+ +-DB2_SQL_ATTR_CURSOR_HOLD--------+ +-DB2_SQL_ATTR_CURSOR_ROWSET------+ +-DB2_SQL_ATTR_CURSOR_SCROLLABLE--+ +-DB2_SQL_ATTR_CURSOR_SENSITIVITY-+ +-DB2_SQL_ATTR_CURSOR_TYPE--------+ +-DYNAMIC_FUNCTION----------------+ +-DYNAMIC_FUNCTION_CODE-----------+ +-MORE----------------------------+ +-NUMBER--------------------------+ +-ROW_COUNT-----------------------+ +-TRANSACTION_ACTIVE--------------+ +-TRANSACTIONS_COMMITTED----------+ '-TRANSACTIONS_ROLLED_BACK--------' connection-information-item |--+-CONNECTION_NAME---------+----------------------------------| +-DB2_AUTHENTICATION_TYPE-+ +-DB2_AUTHORIZATION_ID----+ +-DB2_CONNECTION_METHOD---+ +-DB2_CONNECTION_NUMBER---+ +-DB2_CONNECTION_STATE----+ +-DB2_CONNECTION_STATUS---+ +-DB2_CONNECTION_TYPE-----+ +-DB2_DYN_QUERY_MGMT -----+ +-DB2_ENCRYPTION_TYPE-----+ +-DB2_PRODUCT_ID----------+ +-DB2_SERVER_CLASS_NAME---+ '-DB2_SERVER_NAME---------'
condition-information-item |--+-CATALOG_NAME------------------+----------------------------| +-CLASS_ORIGIN------------------+ +-COLUMN_NAME-------------------+ +-CONDITION_IDENTIFIER----------+ +-CONDITION_NUMBER--------------+ +-CONSTRAINT_CATALOG------------+ +-CONSTRAINT_NAME---------------+ +-CONSTRAINT_SCHEMA-------------+ +-CURSOR_NAME-------------------+ +-DB2_ERROR_CODE1---------------+ +-DB2_ERROR_CODE2---------------+ +-DB2_ERROR_CODE3---------------+ +-DB2_ERROR_CODE4---------------+ +-DB2_INTERNAL_ERROR_POINTER----+ +-DB2_LINE_NUMBER---------------+ +-DB2_MESSAGE_ID----------------+ +-DB2_MESSAGE_ID1---------------+ +-DB2_MESSAGE_ID2---------------+ +-DB2_MESSAGE_KEY---------------+ +-DB2_MODULE_DETECTING_ERROR----+ +-DB2_NUMBER_FAILING_STATEMENTS-+ +-DB2_OFFSET--------------------+ +-DB2_ORDINAL_TOKEN_n-----------+ +-DB2_PARTITION_NUMBER----------+ +-DB2_REASON_CODE---------------+ +-DB2_RETURNED_SQLCODE----------+ +-DB2_ROW_NUMBER----------------+ +-DB2_SQLERRD_SET---------------+ +-DB2_SQLERRD1------------------+ +-DB2_SQLERRD2------------------+ +-DB2_SQLERRD3------------------+ +-DB2_SQLERRD4------------------+ +-DB2_SQLERRD5------------------+ +-DB2_SQLERRD6------------------+ +-DB2_TOKEN_COUNT---------------+ +-DB2_TOKEN_STRING--------------+ +-MESSAGE_LENGTH----------------+ +-MESSAGE_OCTET_LENGTH----------+ +-MESSAGE_TEXT------------------+ +-PARAMETER_MODE----------------+ +-PARAMETER_NAME----------------+ +-PARAMETER_ORDINAL_POSITION----+ +-RETURNED_SQLSTATE-------------+ +-ROUTINE_CATALOG---------------+ +-ROUTINE_NAME------------------+ +-ROUTINE_SCHEMA----------------+ +-SCHEMA_NAME-------------------+ +-SERVER_NAME-------------------+ +-SPECIFIC_NAME-----------------+ +-SUBCLASS_ORIGIN---------------+ +-TABLE_NAME--------------------+ +-TRIGGER_CATALOG---------------+ +-TRIGGER_NAME------------------+ '-TRIGGER_SCHEMA----------------'
Description
- CURRENT or STACKED
- Specifies which diagnostics area to access.
- CURRENT
- Specifies to access the first diagnostics area. It corresponds to the previous SQL statement that was executed and that was not a GET DIAGNOSTICS statement. This is the default.
- STACKED
- Specifies to access the second diagnostics area. The second diagnostics area is only available within a handler. It corresponds to the previous SQL statement that was executed before the handler was entered and that was not a GET DIAGNOSTICS statement. If the GET DIAGNOSTICS statement is the first statement within a handler, then the first diagnostics area and the second diagnostics area contain the same diagnostics information.
- statement-information
- Returns information about the last SQL statement executed.
- variable–1
- Identifies a variable declared in the program in accordance with
the rules for declaring variables. It must not be a
global variable. The data type of the variable must be compatible
with the data type as specified in Table 1 for
the specified condition information item. The variable is assigned
the value of the specified statement information item according to
the retrieval assignment rules described in Retrieval assignment. If the value
is truncated when assigning it to the variable, a warning (SQLSTATE
01004) is returned and the GET_DIAGNOSTICS_DIAGNOSTICS item of the
diagnostics area is updated with the details of this condition.
If a specified diagnostic item does not contain diagnostic information, then the variable is set to a default value based on its data type:
- 0 for an exact numeric diagnostic item,
- an empty string for a VARCHAR diagnostic item,
- and blanks for a CHAR diagnostic item.
- condition-information
- Returns information about the condition or conditions that occurred
when the last SQL statement was executed.
- CONDITION variable–2 or integer
- Identifies the diagnostic for which information is requested. Each diagnostic that occurs while executing an SQL statement is assigned an integer. The value 1 indicates the first diagnostic, 2 indicates the second diagnostic and so on. If the value is 1, then the diagnostic information retrieved corresponds to the condition indicated by the SQLSTATE value actually returned by the execution of the previous SQL statement (other than a GET DIAGNOSTICS statement). The variable specified must be declared in the program in accordance with the rules for declaring exact numeric variables with zero scale.It must not be a global variable. The value specified must not be less than one or greater than the number of available diagnostics.
- variable–3
- Identifies a variable declared in the program in accordance with
the rules for declaring variables. It must not be a
global variable. The data type of the variable must be compatible
with the data type as specified in Table 1 for
the specified condition information item. The variable is assigned
the value of the specified condition information item according to
the retrieval assignment rules described in Retrieval assignment. If the value
is truncated when assigning it to the variable, an error is returned
and the GET_DIAGNOSTICS_DIAGNOSTICS item of the diagnostics area is
updated with the details of this condition.
If a specified diagnostic item does not contain diagnostic information , then the variable is set to a default value based on its data type:
- 0 for an exact numeric diagnostic item,
- an empty string for a VARCHAR diagnostic item,
- and blanks for a CHAR diagnostic item.
- combined-information
- Returns multiple information items combined into one string.
- variable–4
- Identifies a variable declared in the program in accordance with the rules for declaring variables. It must not be a global variable. The data type of the variable must be VARCHAR. The variable is assigned according to the retrieval assignment rules described in Retrieval assignment. If the length of variable–4 is not sufficient to hold the full returned diagnostic string, the string is truncated, an error is returned and the GET_DIAGNOSTICS_DIAGNOSTICS item of the diagnostics area is updated with the details of this condition.
- ALL
- Indicates that all diagnostic items that are set for the last
SQL statement executed should be combined into one string. The format
of the string is a semicolon separated list of all of the available
diagnostic information in the form:
The character form of a positive numeric value will not contain a leading plus sign (+) unless the item is DB2_RETURNED_SQLCODE. In this case, a leading plus sign (+) is added. For example:item-name=character-form-of-the-item-value;
Only items that contain diagnostic information are included in the string. There are also no entries in this string for the DB2_GET_DIAGNOSTICS_DIAGNOSTICS and DB2_SQL_NESTING_LEVEL items.NUMBER=1;RETURNED_SQLSTATE=02000;DB2_RETURNED_SQLCODE=+100;
- STATEMENT
- Indicates that all statement-information-item diagnostic items that contain diagnostic information for the last SQL statement executed should be combined into one string. The format is the same as described above for ALL.
- CONDITION
- Indicates that condition-information-item diagnostic
items that contain diagnostic information for the last SQL statement
executed should be combined into one string. If variable–5 or integer is
specified, then the format is the same as described above for the
ALL option. If variable–5 or integer is
not specified, then the format includes a condition number entry at
the beginning of the information for that condition in the form:
where X is the number of the condition. For example:CONDITION_NUMBER=X;item-name=character-form-of-the-item-value;
CONDITION_NUMBER=1;RETURNED_SQLSTATE=02000;DB2_RETURNED_SQLCODE=+100; CONDITION_NUMBER=2;RETURNED_SQLSTATE=01004;
- CONNECTION
- Indicates that connection-information-item diagnostic
items that contain diagnostic information for the last SQL statement
executed should be combined into one string. If variable–5 or integer is
specified, then the format is the same as described above for ALL.
If variable–5 or integer is
not specified, then the format includes a connection number entry
at the beginning of the information for that condition in the form:
where X is the number of the condition. For example:DB2_CONNECTION_NUMBER=X;item-name=character-form-of-the-item-value;
DB2_CONNECTION_NUMBER=1;CONNECTION_NAME=SVL1;DB2_PRODUCT_ID=DSN07010;
- variable–5 or integer
- Identifies the diagnostic for which ALL CONDITION or ALL CONNECTION information is requested. The variable specified must be declared in the program in accordance with the rules for declaring integer variables. It must not be a global variable. The value specified must not be less than one or greater than the number of available diagnostics.
statement-information-item
- COMMAND_FUNCTION
- Returns the name of the previous SQL statement. For information about the statement string values, see Table 2.
- COMMAND_FUNCTION_CODE
- Returns an integer that identifies the previous SQL statement. For information about the statement code values, see Table 2.
- DB2_DIAGNOSTIC_CONVERSION_ERROR
- Returns the value 1 if there was a conversion error when converting a character data value for one of the GET DIAGNOSTICS statement values. Otherwise, the value zero is returned.
- DB2_GET_DIAGNOSTICS_DIAGNOSTICS
- After a GET DIAGNOSTICS statement,
if any errors or warnings occurred during the execution of the GET
DIAGNOSTICS statement, DB2_GET_DIAGNOSTICS_DIAGNOSTICS returns textual
information about these errors or warnings. The format of the information
is similar to what would be returned by a GET DIAGNOSTICS :hv = ALL
statement.
If a request was made for an information item that the server does not understand, for example, if the server was at a lower DRDA level than the requesting client, DB2_GET_DIAGNOSTICS_DIAGNOSTICS returns the text 'Item not supported:' followed by a comma separated list of item names that were requested but that the server does not support.
- DB2_LAST_ROW
- For a multiple-row-fetch statement,
a value of +100 might be returned if the set of rows that have been
fetched contains the last row currently in the result table for cursors
that are fetching forward, or contains the first row currently in
the result table, for cursors that are fetching backward. If the number
of rows returned is equal to the number of rows requested, then an
end of data warning may not occur and DB2_LAST_ROW may not contain
+100.
If a value of +100 for DB2_LAST_ROW is returned for a cursor that is not sensitive to updates, a subsequent FETCH would return with the SQLCODE set to +100 and SQLSTATE set to '02000'. For a cursor that is sensitive to updates, a subsequent FETCH might return more data if any rows have been inserted before the FETCH was executed.
For statements other than multiple-row-fetch statements, for multiple-row-fetch statements that do not contain the last row currently in the result table, for cursors that are fetching forwards, or that do not contain the first row currently in the result table, for cursors that are fetching backwards, or if the server only returns an SQLCA, the value zero is returned.
- DB2_NUMBER_CONNECTIONS
- Returns the number of connections that were made in order to get to the server that fulfilled the request from the client. Each such connection may generate a connection information item area which would be available for the single condition.
- DB2_NUMBER_PARAMETER_MARKERS
- For a PREPARE statement, returns the number of parameter markers in the prepared statement. Otherwise, the value zero is returned.
- DB2_NUMBER_RESULT_SETS
- For a CALL statement, returns the actual number of result sets returned by the procedure. Otherwise, the value zero is returned.
- DB2_NUMBER_ROWS
- If the previous SQL statement was an OPEN or a FETCH which caused the size of the result table to be known, returns the number of rows in the result table. For SENSITIVE cursors, this value can be thought of as an approximation since rows inserted and deleted will affect the next retrieval of this value. Otherwise, the value zero is returned.
- DB2_NUMBER_SUCCESSFUL_SUBSTMTS
- For embedded compound SQL statements, returns a count of the number of successful sub-statements. Otherwise, the value zero is returned.
- DB2_RELATIVE_COST_ESTIMATE
- For a PREPARE statement, returns a relative cost estimate of the resources required for every execution. It does not reflect an estimate of the time required. When preparing a dynamically defined statement, this value can be used as an indicator of the relative cost of the prepared statement. The value varies depending on changes to statistics and can vary between releases of the product. It is an estimated cost for the access plan chosen by the optimizer. The value zero is returned if the statement is not a PREPARE statement.
- DB2_RETURN_STATUS
- Identifies the status
value returned from the previous SQL CALL statement. If the previous
statement is not a CALL statement, the value returned has no meaning
and is unpredictable. For more information, see RETURN statement. Otherwise, the value zero is
returned.
For external procedures, if the returned SQLCODE < 0, the SQL_ERROR_CODE1 and DB2_RETURN_STATUS will be set to -1, otherwise SQL_ERROR_CODE1 and DB2_RETURN_STATUS are set to 0.
- DB2_ROW_COUNT_SECONDARY
- Identifies
the number of rows associated with secondary actions from the previous
SQL statement that was executed. If the previous SQL statement is
a DELETE or MERGE, the value is the total number
of rows affected by referential constraints, including cascaded actions
and the processing of triggered SQL statements from activated triggers.
If the previous SQL statement is an INSERT or an UPDATE, the value
is the total number of rows affected as the result of the processing
of triggered SQL statements from activated triggers. Otherwise, the
value zero is returned.
If the SQL statement is run using isolation level No Commit, this value may be zero.
- DB2_ROW_LENGTH
- For FETCH, if the result row does not contain a LOB, returns the length of the row(s) retrieved. For OPEN, if the result row does not contain a LOB, returns the length of a result row. For FETCH and OPEN, if the result does contain a LOB, the length returned is unpredictable. Otherwise, the value zero is returned.
- DB2_SQL_ATTR_CONCURRENCY
- For an OPEN statement, indicates
the concurrency control option of read-only, locking, optimistic using
timestamps, or optimistic using values.
- R indicates read-only.
- L indicates locking.
- T indicates comparing row versions using timestamps or ROWIDs.
- V indicates comparing values.
- DB2_SQL_ATTR_CURSOR_CAPABILITY
- For an OPEN statement, indicates
the capability of the cursor, whether a cursor is read-only, deletable,
or updatable.
- R indicates that this cursor can only be used to read.
- D indicates that this cursor can be used to read as well as delete.
- U indicates that this cursor can be used to read, delete as well as update.
- DB2_SQL_ATTR_CURSOR_HOLD
- For an OPEN statement, indicates
whether a cursor can be held open across multiple units of work or
not.
- N indicates that this cursor will not remain open across multiple units of work.
- Y indicates that this cursor will remain open across multiple units of work.
- DB2_SQL_ATTR_CURSOR_ROWSET
- For an OPEN statement, whether a
cursor can be accessed using rowset positioning or not.
- N indicates that this cursor only supports row positioned operations.
- Y indicates that this cursor supports rowset positioned operations.
- DB2_SQL_ATTR_CURSOR_SCROLLABLE
- For an OPEN statement, indicates
whether a cursor can be scrolled forward and backward or not.
- N indicates that this cursor is not scrollable.
- Y indicates that this cursor is scrollable.
- DB2_SQL_ATTR_CURSOR_SENSITIVITY
- For an OPEN statement, indicates
whether a cursor does or does not show updates to cursor rows made
by other connections.
- I indicates insensitive.
- P indicates partial sensitivity.
- S indicates sensitive.
- U indicates unspecified.
- DB2_SQL_ATTR_CURSOR_TYPE
- For an OPEN statement, indicates
whether a cursor type is dynamic, forward-only, or static.
- D indicates a dynamic cursor.
- F indicates a forward-only cursor.
- S indicates a static cursor.
- DB2_SQL_NESTING_LEVEL
- Identifies
the current level of nesting or recursion in effect when the GET DIAGNOSTICS
statement was executed. Each level of nesting corresponds to a nested
or recursive invocation of a function, procedure, or trigger. If the
GET DIAGNOSTICS statement is executed outside of a level of nesting,
the value zero is returned.
If GET DIAGNOSTIC is issued in a user-defined function that is running in parallel, the nesting level is not predictable.
- DYNAMIC_FUNCTION
- Returns a character string that identifies the type of the SQL-statement being prepared or executed dynamically. For information about the statement string values, see Table 2.
- DYNAMIC_FUNCTION_CODE
- Returns a number that identifies the type of the SQL-statement being prepared or executed dynamically. For information about the statement code values, see Table 2.
- MORE
- Indicates
whether more errors were raised than could be handled.
- N indicates that all the errors and warnings from the previous SQL statement were stored in the diagnostics area.
- Y indicates that more errors and warnings were raised from the previous SQL statement than there are condition areas in the diagnostics area. The maximum size of the diagnostics area is 90K.
- NUMBER
- Returns the number of errors and warnings detected by the execution of the previous SQL statement, other than a GET DIAGNOSTICS statement, that have been stored in the diagnostics area. If the previous SQL statement returned success (SQLSTATE 00000), or no previous SQL statement has been executed, the number returned is one. The GET DIAGNOSTICS statement itself may return information via the SQLSTATE parameter, but does not modify the previous contents of the diagnostics area, except for the DB2_GET_DIAGNOSTICS_DIAGNOSTICS item.
- ROW_COUNT
- Identifies the number of rows associated with the previous SQL statement that was executed. If the previous SQL statement is a DELETE, INSERT, REFRESH, or UPDATE statement, ROW_COUNT identifies the number of rows deleted, inserted, or updated by that statement, excluding rows affected by either triggers or referential integrity constraints. If the previous SQL statement is a MERGE statement, ROW_COUNT identifies the total number of rows deleted, inserted, and updated by that statement, excluding rows affected by either triggers or referential integrity constraints. If the previous SQL statement is a multiple-row-fetch, ROW_COUNT identifies the number of rows fetched. Otherwise, the value zero is returned.
- TRANSACTION_ACTIVE
- Returns the value 1 if an SQL transaction is currently active, and 0 if an SQL transaction is not currently active.
- TRANSACTIONS_COMMITTED
- If the previous statement was a CALL, returns the number of transactions that were committed during the execution of the SQL or external procedure. Otherwise, the value zero is returned.
- TRANSACTIONS_ROLLED_BACK
- If the previous statement was a CALL, returns the number of transactions that were rolled back during the execution of the SQL or external procedure. Otherwise, the value zero is returned.
connection-information-item
- CONNECTION_NAME
- If the previous SQL statement is a CONNECT, DISCONNECT, or SET CONNECTION, returns the name of the server specified in the previous statement. Otherwise, the name of the current connection.
- DB2_AUTHENTICATION_TYPE
- Indicates
the authentication type, whether server or client.
- C for client authentication.
- E for DCE security services authentication.
- S for server authentication.
- DB2_AUTHORIZATION_ID
- Returns the authorization id used by connected server. Because of userid translation and authorization exits, the local userid may not be the authid used by the server.
- DB2_CONNECTION_METHOD
- For
a CONNECT or SET CONNECTION statement, returns the connection method.
- D indicates *DUW (Distributed Unit of Work).
- R indicates *RUW (Remote Unit of Work).
- DB2_CONNECTION_NUMBER
- Returns the number of the connections.
- DB2_CONNECTION_STATE
- Indicates
the connection state, whether connected or not.
- -1 indicates the connection is unconnected.
- 1 indicates the connection is connected.
- DB2_CONNECTION_STATUS
- Indicates
whether committable update can be performed or not.
- 1 indicates committable updates can be performed on the connection for this unit of work.
- 2 indicates no committable updates can be performed on the connection for this unit of work.
- DB2_CONNECTION_TYPE
- Indicated
the connection type (either local, remote, or to a driver program)
and whether the conversation is protected or not.
- 1 indicates a connection to a local relational database.
- 2 indicates a connection to a remote relational database with the conversation unprotected.
- 3 indicates a connection to a remote relational database with the conversation protected.
- 4 indicates a connection to an application requester driver program.
- DB2_DYN_QUERY_MGMT
- Returns a value of 1 if DYN_QUERY_MGMT database configuration parameter is enabled. Otherwise, the value zero is returned.
- DB2_ENCRYPTION_TYPE
- Returns
the level of encryption.
- A indicates only the authentication tokens (authid and password) are encrypted.
- D indicates all data is encrypted for the connection.
- DB2_PRODUCT_ID
- Returns
a product signature. If the application server is an IBM® relational database product, the form is
pppvvrrm, where:
- ppp identifies the product as follows: ARI for DB2® for VM and VSE, DSN for DB2 for z/OS®, QSQ for DB2 for i, and SQL for all other DB2 products
- vv is a two-digit version identifier such as '04'
- rr is a two-digit release identifier such as '01'
- m is a one-digit modification level such as '0'
- DB2_SERVER_CLASS_NAME
- Returns the server class name. For example, DB2 for z/OS, DB2 for AIX®, DB2 for Windows, and DB2 for i.
- DB2_SERVER_NAME
- For a CONNECT or SET CONNECTION statement, returns the relational database name. Otherwise, the empty string is returned.
condition-information-item
- CATALOG_NAME
- If
the returned SQLSTATE is:
- class 09 (Triggered Action Exception), or
- class 23 (Integrity Constraint Violation), or
- class 27 (Triggered Data Change Violation), or
- 40002 (Transaction Rollback - Integrity Constraint Violation),
If the returned SQLSTATE is class 42 (Syntax Error or Access Rule Violation), the server name of the table that caused the error is returned.
If the returned SQLSTATE is class 44 (WITH CHECK OPTION Violation), the server name of the view that caused the error is returned. Otherwise, the empty string is returned.
- CLASS_ORIGIN
- Returns 'ISO 9075' for those SQLSTATEs whose class is defined by ISO 9075. Returns 'ISO/IEC 13249' for those SQLSTATEs whose class is defined by SQL/MM. Returns 'DB2 SQL' for those SQLSTATEs whose class is defined by IBM DB2 SQL. Returns the value set by user written code if available. Otherwise, the empty string is returned.
- COLUMN_NAME
- If the returned SQLSTATE is class 42 (Syntax Error or Access Rule Violation) and the error was caused by an inaccessible column, the name of the column that caused the error is returned. Otherwise, the empty string is returned.
- CONDITION_IDENTIFIER
- If the value of the RETURNED_SQLSTATE corresponds to an unhandled user-defined exception (SQLSTATE 45000), then the condition name of the user-defined exception is returned.
- CONDITION_NUMBER
- Returns the number of the conditions.
- CONSTRAINT_CATALOG
- If
the returned SQLSTATE is:
- class 23 (Integrity Constraint Violation), or
- class 27 (Triggered Data Change Violation), or
- 40002 (Transaction Rollback - Integrity Constraint Violation),
- CONSTRAINT_NAME
- If
the returned SQLSTATE is:
- class 23 (Integrity Constraint Violation), or
- class 27 (Triggered Data Change Violation), or
- 40002 (Transaction Rollback - Integrity Constraint Violation),
- CONSTRAINT_SCHEMA
- If
the returned SQLSTATE is:
- class 23 (Integrity Constraint Violation), or
- class 27 (Triggered Data Change Violation), or
- 40002 (Transaction Rollback - Integrity Constraint Violation),
- CURSOR_NAME
- If the returned SQLSTATE is class 24 (Invalid Cursor State), the name of the cursor is returned. Otherwise, the empty string is returned.
- DB2_ERROR_CODE1
- Returns an internal error code. Otherwise, the value zero is returned.
- DB2_ERROR_CODE2
- Returns an internal error code. Otherwise, the value zero is returned.
- DB2_ERROR_CODE3
- Returns an internal error code. Otherwise, the value zero is returned.
- DB2_ERROR_CODE4
- Returns an internal error code. Otherwise, the value zero is returned.
- DB2_INTERNAL_ERROR_POINTER
- For some errors, this will be a negative value that is an internal error pointer. Otherwise, the value zero is returned.
- DB2_LINE_NUMBER
- For a CREATE PROCEDURE for an SQL function, SQL procedure, or SQL trigger where an error is encountered parsing the SQL procedure body, returns the line number where the error possibly occurred. Otherwise, the value zero is returned.
- DB2_MESSAGE_ID
- Returns the message ID corresponding to the MESSAGE_TEXT.
- DB2_MESSAGE_ID1
- Returns the underlying IBM i CPF escape message that originally caused this error. Otherwise, the empty string is returned.
- DB2_MESSAGE_ID2
- Returns the underlying IBM i CPD diagnostic message that originally caused this error. Otherwise, the empty string is returned.
- DB2_MESSAGE_KEY
- For a CALL statement, returns the IBM i message key of the error that caused the procedure to fail. For a trigger error in a DELETE, INSERT, or UPDATE statement, returns the message key of the error that was signaled from the trigger program. The IBM i QMHRCVPM API can be used to return the message description and message data for the message key. Otherwise, the value zero is returned.
- DB2_MODULE_DETECTING_ERROR
- Returns an identifier indicating which module detected the error. For a SIGNAL statement issued from a routine, the value 'ROUTINE' is returned. For other SIGNAL statements, the value 'PROGRAM' is returned.
- DB2_NUMBER_FAILING_STATEMENTS
- For a NOT ATOMIC embedded compound SQL statement, returns the number of statements that failed. Otherwise, the value zero is returned.
- DB2_OFFSET
- For a CREATE PROCEDURE for an SQL procedure where an error is encountered parsing the SQL procedure body, returns the offset into the line number where the error possibly occurred, if available. For an EXECUTE IMMEDIATE or a PREPARE statement where an error is encountered parsing the source statement, returns the offset into the source statement where the error possibly occurred. Otherwise, the value zero is returned.
- DB2_ORDINAL_TOKEN_n
- Returns the nth token. n must be a value from 1 to 100. For example, DB2_ORDINAL_TOKEN_1 would return the value of the first token, DB2_ORDINAL_TOKEN_2 the second token. A numeric value for a token is converted to character before being returned. If there is no value for the token, the empty string is returned.
- DB2_PARTITION_NUMBER
- For a partitioned database, returns the partition number of the database partition that encountered the error or warning. If no errors or warnings were encountered, returns the partition number of the current node. Otherwise, the value zero is returned.
- DB2_REASON_CODE
- Returns the reason code for errors that have a reason code token in the message text. Otherwise, the value zero is returned.
- DB2_RETURNED_SQLCODE
- Returns the SQLCODE for the specified diagnostic.
- DB2_ROW_NUMBER
- If the previous SQL statement is a multiple row insert or a multiple row fetch, returns the number of the row where the condition was encountered, when such a value is available and applicable. Otherwise, the value zero is returned.
- DB2_SQLERRD_SET
- Returns Y to indicate that the DB2_SQLERRD1 through DB2_SQLERRD6 items may be set. Otherwise, a blank is returned.
- DB2_SQLERRD1
- Returns the value of SQLERRD(1) from the SQLCA returned by the server.
- DB2_SQLERRD2
- Returns the value of SQLERRD(2) from the SQLCA returned by the server.
- DB2_SQLERRD3
- Returns the value of SQLERRD(3) from the SQLCA returned by the server.
- DB2_SQLERRD4
- Returns the value of SQLERRD(4) from the SQLCA returned by the server.
- DB2_SQLERRD5
- Returns the value of SQLERRD(5) from the SQLCA returned by the server.
- DB2_SQLERRD6
- Returns the value of SQLERRD(6) from the SQLCA returned by the server.
- DB2_TOKEN_COUNT
- Returns the number of tokens available for the specified diagnostic.
- DB2_TOKEN_STRING
- Returns a X'FF' delimited string of the tokens for the specified diagnostic.
- MESSAGE_LENGTH
- Identifies the length (in characters) of the message text of the error, warning, or successful completion returned from the previous SQL statement that was executed.
- MESSAGE_OCTET_LENGTH
- Identifies the length (in bytes) of the message text of the error, warning, or successful completion returned from the previous SQL statement that was executed.
- MESSAGE_TEXT
- Identifies
the message text of the error, warning, or successful completion returned
from the previous SQL statement that was executed.
When the SQLCODE is 0, the empty string is returned, even if the RETURNED_SQLSTATE value indicates a warning condition.
- PARAMETER_MODE
- If
the returned SQLSTATE is:
- class 39 (External Routine Invocation Exception), or
- class 38 (External Routine Exception), or
- class 2F (SQL Routine Exception), or
- class 22 (Data Exception), or
- class 23 (Integrity Constraint Violation), or
- class 01 (Warning)
- PARAMETER_NAME
- If
the returned SQLSTATE is:
- class 39 (External Routine Invocation Exception), or
- class 38 (External Routine Exception), or
- class 2F (SQL Routine Exception), or
- class 22 (Data Exception), or
- class 23 (Integrity Constraint Violation), or
- class 01 (Warning)
- PARAMETER_ORDINAL_POSITION
- If the returned SQLSTATE is:
- class 39 (External Routine Invocation Exception), or
- class 38 (External Routine Exception), or
- class 2F (SQL Routine Exception), or
- class 22 (Data Exception), or
- class 23 (Integrity Constraint Violation), or
- class 01 (Warning)
- RETURNED_SQLSTATE
- Returns the SQLSTATE for the specified diagnostic.
- ROUTINE_CATALOG
- If
the returned SQLSTATE is:
- class 39 (External Routine Invocation Exception), or
- class 38 (External Routine Exception), or
- class 2F (SQL Routine Exception), or
- class 22 (Data Exception), or
- class 23 (Integrity Constraint Violation), or
- class 01 (Warning)
- ROUTINE_NAME
- If
the returned SQLSTATE is:
- class 39 (External Routine Invocation Exception), or
- class 38 (External Routine Exception), or
- class 2F (SQL Routine Exception), or
- class 22 (Data Exception), or
- class 23 (Integrity Constraint Violation), or
- class 01 (Warning)
- ROUTINE_SCHEMA
- If
the returned SQLSTATE is:
- class 39 (External Routine Invocation Exception), or
- class 38 (External Routine Exception), or
- class 2F (SQL Routine Exception), or
- class 22 (Data Exception), or
- class 23 (Integrity Constraint Violation), or
- class 01 (Warning)
- SCHEMA_NAME
- If
the returned SQLSTATE is:
- class 09 (Triggered Action Exception), or
- class 23 (Integrity Constraint Violation), or
- class 27 (Triggered Data Change Violation), or
- 40002 (Transaction Rollback - Integrity Constraint Violation),
If the returned SQLSTATE is class 42 (Syntax Error or Access Rule Violation), the schema name of the table that caused the error is returned.
If the returned SQLSTATE is class 44 (WITH CHECK OPTION Violation), the schema name of the view that caused the error is returned. Otherwise, the empty string is returned.
- SERVER_NAME
- If the previous SQL statement is a CONNECT, DISCONNECT, or SET CONNECTION, the name of the server specified in the previous statement is returned. Otherwise, the name of the server where the statement executed is returned.
- SPECIFIC_NAME
- If
the returned SQLSTATE is:
- class 39 (External Routine Invocation Exception), or
- class 38 (External Routine Exception), or
- class 2F (SQL Routine Exception), or
- class 22 (Data Exception), or
- class 23 (Integrity Constraint Violation), or
- class 01 (Warning)
- SUBCLASS_ORIGIN
- Returns 'ISO 9075' for those SQLSTATEs whose subclass is defined by ISO 9075. Returns 'ISO/IEC 9579' for those SQLSTATEs whose subclass is defined by RDA. Returns 'ISO/IEC 13249-1', 'ISO/IEC 13249-2', 'ISO/IEC 13249-3', 'ISO/IEC 13249-4', or 'ISO/IEC 13249-5' for those SQLSTATEs whose subclass is defined SQL/MM. Returns 'DB2 SQL' for those SQLSTATEs whose subclass is defined by IBM DB2 SQL. Returns the value set by user written code if available. Otherwise, the empty string is returned.
- TABLE_NAME
- If
the returned SQLSTATE is:
- class 09 (Triggered Action Exception), or
- class 23 (Integrity Constraint Violation), or
- class 27 (Triggered Data Change Violation), or
- 40002 (Transaction Rollback - Integrity Constraint Violation),
If the returned SQLSTATE is class 42 (Syntax Error or Access Rule Violation), the table name that caused the error is returned.
If the returned SQLSTATE is class 44 (WITH CHECK OPTION Violation), the table name that caused the error is returned. Otherwise, the empty string is returned.
- TRIGGER_CATALOG
- If
the returned SQLSTATE is:
- class 09 (Triggered Action Exception), or
- class 27 (Triggered Data Change Violation),
- TRIGGER_NAME
- If
the returned SQLSTATE is:
- class 09 (Triggered Action Exception), or
- class 27 (Triggered Data Change Violation),
- TRIGGER_SCHEMA
- If
the returned SQLSTATE is:
- class 09 (Triggered Action Exception), or
- class 27 (Triggered Data Change Violation),
Notes
Considerations for the diagnostics area: The GET DIAGNOSTICS statement does not change the contents of the diagnostics area except for DB2_GET_DIAGNOSTICS_DIAGNOSTICS.
- If information is desired about an error, the GET DIAGNOSTICS statement must be the first executable statement specified in the handler that will handle the error.
- If information is wanted about a warning:
- If a handler will get control for the warning condition, the GET DIAGNOSTICS statement must be the first statement specified in that handler.
- If a handler will not get control for the warning condition, the GET DIAGNOSTICS statement must be the next statement executed after that previous statement.
Otherwise, GET DIAGNOSTICS statement returns information about the last executed statement.
Considerations for the SQLCODE and SQLSTATE SQL variables: The GET DIAGNOSTICS statement does not change the value of the SQLSTATE and SQLCODE SQL variables.
Case of return values: Values for identifiers in returned diagnostic items are not delimited and are case sensitive. For example, a table name of "abc" would be returned, simply as abc.
Variable assignment: If an assignment error occurs, the values in the variables are unpredictable.
Data types for items: The following table shows, the SQL data type for each diagnostic item. When a diagnostic item is assigned to a variable, the variable must be compatible with the data type of the diagnostic item.
Item Name | Data Type |
---|---|
Statement Information Item | |
COMMAND_FUNCTION | VARCHAR(128) |
COMMAND_FUNCTION_CODE | INTEGER |
DB2_DIAGNOSTIC_CONVERSION_ERROR | INTEGER |
DB2_GET_DIAGNOSTICS_DIAGNOSTICS | VARCHAR(32740) |
DB2_LAST_ROW | INTEGER |
DB2_NUMBER_CONNECTIONS | INTEGER |
DB2_NUMBER_PARAMETER_MARKERS | INTEGER |
DB2_NUMBER_RESULT_SETS | INTEGER |
DB2_NUMBER_ROWS | DECIMAL(31,0) |
DB2_NUMBER_SUCCESSFUL_SUBSTMTS | INTEGER |
DB2_RELATIVE_COST_ESTIMATE | INTEGER |
DB2_RETURN_STATUS | INTEGER |
DB2_ROW_COUNT_SECONDARY | DECIMAL(31,0) |
DB2_ROW_LENGTH | INTEGER |
DB2_SQL_ATTR_CONCURRENCY | CHAR(1) |
DB2_SQL_ATTR_CURSOR_CAPABILITY | CHAR(1) |
DB2_SQL_ATTR_CURSOR_HOLD | CHAR(1) |
DB2_SQL_ATTR_CURSOR_ROWSET | CHAR(1) |
DB2_SQL_ATTR_CURSOR_SCROLLABLE | CHAR(1) |
DB2_SQL_ATTR_CURSOR_SENSITIVITY | CHAR(1) |
DB2_SQL_ATTR_CURSOR_TYPE | CHAR(1) |
DB2_SQL_NESTING_LEVEL | INTEGER |
DYNAMIC_FUNCTION | VARCHAR(128) |
DYNAMIC_FUNCTION_CODE | INTEGER |
MORE | CHAR(1) |
NUMBER | INTEGER |
ROW_COUNT | DECIMAL(31,0) |
TRANSACTION_ACTIVE | INTEGER |
TRANSACTIONS_COMMITTED | INTEGER |
TRANSACTIONS_ROLLED_BACK | INTEGER |
Connection Information Item | |
CONNECTION_NAME | VARCHAR(128) |
DB2_AUTHENTICATION_TYPE | CHAR(1) |
DB2_AUTHORIZATION_ID | VARCHAR(128) |
DB2_CONNECTION_METHOD | CHAR(1) |
DB2_CONNECTION_NUMBER | INTEGER |
DB2_CONNECTION_STATE | INTEGER |
DB2_CONNECTION_STATUS | INTEGER |
DB2_CONNECTION_TYPE | SMALLINT |
DB2_DYN_QUERY_MGMT | INTEGER |
DB2_ENCRYPTION_TYPE | CHAR(1) |
DB2_PRODUCT_ID | VARCHAR(8) |
DB2_SERVER_CLASS_NAME | VARCHAR(128) |
DB2_SERVER_NAME | VARCHAR(128) |
Condition Information Item | |
CATALOG_NAME | VARCHAR(128) |
CLASS_ORIGIN | VARCHAR(128) |
COLUMN_NAME | VARCHAR(128) |
CONDITION_IDENTIFIER | VARCHAR(128) |
CONDITION_NUMBER | INTEGER |
CONSTRAINT_CATALOG | VARCHAR(128) |
CONSTRAINT_NAME | VARCHAR(128) |
CONSTRAINT_SCHEMA | VARCHAR(128) |
CURSOR_NAME | VARCHAR(128) |
DB2_ERROR_CODE1 | INTEGER |
DB2_ERROR_CODE2 | INTEGER |
DB2_ERROR_CODE3 | INTEGER |
DB2_ERROR_CODE4 | INTEGER |
DB2_INTERNAL_ERROR_POINTER | INTEGER |
DB2_LINE_NUMBER | INTEGER |
DB2_MESSAGE_ID | CHAR(10) |
DB2_MESSAGE_ID1 | VARCHAR(7) |
DB2_MESSAGE_ID2 | VARCHAR(7) |
DB2_MESSAGE_KEY | INTEGER |
DB2_MODULE_DETECTING_ERROR | VARCHAR(128) |
DB2_NUMBER_FAILING_STATEMENTS | INTEGER |
DB2_OFFSET | INTEGER |
DB2_ORDINAL_TOKEN_n | VARCHAR(32740) |
DB2_PARTITION_NUMBER | INTEGER |
DB2_REASON_CODE | INTEGER |
DB2_RETURNED_SQLCODE | INTEGER |
DB2_ROW_NUMBER | INTEGER |
DB2_SQLERRD_SET | CHAR(1) |
DB2_SQLERRD1 | INTEGER |
DB2_SQLERRD2 | INTEGER |
DB2_SQLERRD3 | INTEGER |
DB2_SQLERRD4 | INTEGER |
DB2_SQLERRD5 | INTEGER |
DB2_SQLERRD6 | INTEGER |
DB2_TOKEN_COUNT | INTEGER |
DB2_TOKEN_STRING | VARCHAR(1000) |
MESSAGE_LENGTH | INTEGER |
MESSAGE_OCTET_LENGTH | INTEGER |
MESSAGE_TEXT | VARCHAR(32740) |
PARAMETER_MODE | VARCHAR(5) |
PARAMETER_NAME | VARCHAR(128) |
PARAMETER_ORDINAL_POSITION | INTEGER |
RETURNED_SQLSTATE | CHAR(5) |
ROUTINE_CATALOG | VARCHAR(128) |
ROUTINE_NAME | VARCHAR(128) |
ROUTINE_SCHEMA | VARCHAR(128) |
SCHEMA_NAME | VARCHAR(128) |
SERVER_NAME | VARCHAR(128) |
SPECIFIC_NAME | VARCHAR(128) |
SUBCLASS_ORIGIN | VARCHAR(128) |
TABLE_NAME | VARCHAR(128) |
TRIGGER_CATALOG | VARCHAR(128) |
TRIGGER_NAME | VARCHAR(128) |
TRIGGER_SCHEMA | VARCHAR(128) |
SQL statement codes and strings: The following table represents the possible values for COMMAND_FUNCTION, COMMAND_FUNCTION_CODE, DYNAMIC_FUNCTION, and DYNAMIC_FUNCTION_CODE diagnostic items.
The values in the following table are assigned by the ISO and ANSI SQL Standard and may change as the standard evolves. Include sqlscds in the include source files in library QSYSINC should be used when referencing these values.
Type of statement | Statement string | Statement code |
---|---|---|
ALLOCATE CURSOR | ALLOCATE CURSOR | 1 |
ALLOCATE DESCRIPTOR | ALLOCATE DESCRIPTOR | 2 |
ALTER FUNCTION | ALTER ROUTINE | 17 |
ALTER PROCEDURE | ALTER ROUTINE | 17 |
ALTER SEQUENCE | ALTER SEQUENCE | 134 |
ALTER TABLE | ALTER TABLE | 4 |
assignment-statement | ASSIGNMENT | 5 |
ASSOCIATE LOCATORS | ASSOCIATE LOCATORS | –6 |
CALL | CALL | 7 |
CASE | CASE | 86 |
CLOSE (static SQL) | CLOSE CURSOR | 9 |
CLOSE (dynamic SQL) | DYNAMIC CLOSE CURSOR | 37 |
COMMENT | COMMENT | –7 |
COMMIT | COMMIT WORK | 11 |
compound-statement | BEGIN END | 12 |
CONNECT | CONNECT | 13 |
CREATE ALIAS | CREATE ALIAS | –8 |
CREATE FUNCTION | CREATE ROUTINE | 14 |
CREATE INDEX | CREATE INDEX | –14 |
CREATE PROCEDURE | CREATE ROUTINE | 14 |
CREATE SCHEMA | CREATE SCHEMA | 64 |
CREATE SEQUENCE | CREATE SEQUENCE | 133 |
CREATE TABLE | CREATE TABLE | 77 |
CREATE TRIGGER | CREATE TRIGGER | 80 |
CREATE TYPE | CREATE TYPE | 83 |
CREATE VARIABLE | CREATE VARIABLE | –83 |
CREATE VIEW | CREATE VIEW | 84 |
DEALLOCATE DESCRIPTOR | DEALLOCATE DESCRIPTOR | 15 |
DECLARE GLOBAL TEMPORARY TABLE | DECLARE GLOBAL TEMPORARY TABLE | –21 |
DELETE Positioned (static SQL) | DELETE CURSOR | 18 |
DELETE Positioned (dynamic SQL) | DYNAMIC DELETE CURSOR | 38 |
DELETE Searched | DELETE WHERE | 19 |
DESCRIBE | DESCRIBE | 20 |
DESCRIBE CURSOR | DESCRIBE CURSOR RESULT SET | –72 |
DESCRIBE PROCEDURE | DESCRIBE PROCEDURE | –23 |
DESCRIBE TABLE | DESCRIBE TABLE | –24 |
DISCONNECT | DISCONNECT | 22 |
DROP ALIAS | DROP ALIAS | –25 |
DROP FUNCTION | DROP ROUTINE | 30 |
DROP INDEX | DROP INDEX | –30 |
DROP PACKAGE | DROP PACKAGE | –32 |
DROP PROCEDURE | DROP ROUTINE | 30 |
DROP SCHEMA | DROP SCHEMA | 31 |
DROP SEQUENCE | DROP SEQUENCE | 135 |
DROP TABLE | DROP TABLE | 32 |
DROP TRIGGER | DROP TRIGGER | 34 |
DROP TYPE | DROP TYPE | 35 |
DROP VARIABLE | DROP VARIABLE | –84 |
DROP XSROBJECT | DROP XSROBJECT | –95 |
DROP VIEW | DROP VIEW | 36 |
EXECUTE | EXECUTE | 44 |
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE | EXECUTE IMMEDIATE | 43 |
FETCH (static SQL) | FETCH | 45 |
FETCH (dynamic SQL) | DYNAMIC FETCH | 39 |
FOR | FOR | 46 |
FREE LOCATOR | FREE LOCATOR | 98 |
GET DESCRIPTOR | GET DESCRIPTOR | 47 |
GOTO | GOTO | –37 |
GRANT (any type) | GRANT | 48 |
HOLD LOCATOR | HOLD LOCATOR | 99 |
IF | IF | 88 |
INSERT | INSERT | 50 |
ITERATE | ITERATE | 102 |
LABEL | LABEL | –39 |
LEAVE | LEAVE | 89 |
LOCK TABLE | LOCK TABLE | –40 |
LOOP | LOOP | 90 |
MERGE | MERGE | 128 |
OPEN (static SQL) | OPEN | 53 |
OPEN (dynamic SQL) | DYNAMIC OPEN | 40 |
PREPARE | PREPARE | 56 |
Prepared DELETE Positioned (dynamic SQL) | PREPARABLE DYNAMIC DELETE CURSOR | 54 |
Prepared UPDATE Positioned (dynamic SQL) | PREPARABLE DYNAMIC UPDATE CURSOR | 55 |
REFRESH TABLE | REFRESH TABLE | –41 |
RELEASE (connection) | RELEASE CONNECTION | –42 |
RELEASE SAVEPOINT | RELEASE SAVEPOINT | 57 |
RENAME INDEX | RENAME INDEX | –43 |
RENAME TABLE | RENAME TABLE | –44 |
REPEAT | REPEAT | 95 |
RESIGNAL | RESIGNAL | 91 |
RETURN | RETURN | 58 |
REVOKE (any type) | REVOKE | 59 |
ROLLBACK | ROLLBACK WORK | 62 |
SAVEPOINT | SAVEPOINT | 63 |
SELECT INTO | SELECT | 65 |
select-statement (dynamic SQL) | SELECT CURSOR | 85 |
SET CONNECTION | SET CONNECTION | 67 |
SET CURRENT DEBUG MODE | SET CURRENT DEBUG MODE | –75 |
SET CURRENT DECFLOAT ROUNDING MODE | SET CURRENT DECFLOAT ROUNDING MODE | –82 |
SET CURRENT DEGREE | SET CURRENT DEGREE | –47 |
SET CURRENT IMPLICIT XMLPARSE OPTION | SET CURRENT IMPLICIT XMLPARSE OPT | –90 |
SET DESCRIPTOR | SET DESCRIPTOR | 70 |
SET ENCRYPTION PASSWORD | SET ENCRYPTION PASSWORD | –48 |
SET PATH | SET PATH | 69 |
SET RESULT SETS | SET RESULT SETS | –64 |
SET SCHEMA | SET SCHEMA | 74 |
SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION | SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION | 76 |
SET TRANSACTION | SET TRANSACTION | 75 |
SET transition-variable | ASSIGNMENT | 5 |
SET variable | ASSIGNMENT | 5 |
SIGNAL | SIGNAL | 92 |
UPDATE Positioned (static SQL) | UPDATE CURSOR | 81 |
UPDATE Positioned (dynamic SQL) | DYNAMIC UPDATE CURSOR | 42 |
UPDATE Searched | UPDATE WHERE | 82 |
VALUES | STANDALONE FULLSELECT | –69 |
VALUES INTO | VALUES INTO | –66 |
WHILE | WHILE | 97 |
Unrecognized statement | a zero length string | 0 |
Syntax alternatives: The following keywords are synonyms supported for compatibility to prior releases. These keywords are non-standard and should not be used:
- The keyword EXCEPTION can be used as a synonym for CONDITION.
- The keyword RETURN_STATUS can be used as a synonym for DB2_RETURN_STATUS.
Example
In an SQL procedure, execute a GET DIAGNOSTICS statement to determine how many rows were updated.
CREATE PROCEDURE sqlprocg (IN deptnbr VARCHAR(3))
LANGUAGE SQL
BEGIN
DECLARE SQLSTATE CHAR(5);
DECLARE rcount INTEGER;
UPDATE CORPDATA.PROJECT
SET PRSTAFF = PRSTAFF + 1.5
WHERE DEPTNO = deptnbr;
GET DIAGNOSTICS rcount = ROW_COUNT;
/* At this point, rcount contains the number of rows that were updated. */
END
Within an SQL procedure, handle the returned status value from the invocation of a stored procedure called TRYIT. TRYIT could use the RETURN statement to explicitly return a status value or a status value could be implicitly returned by the database manager. If the procedure is successful, it returns a value of zero.
CREATE PROCEDURE TESTIT ()
LANGUAGE SQL
A1: BEGIN
DECLARE RETVAL INTEGER DEFAULT 0;
...
CALL TRYIT
GET DIAGNOSTICS RETVAL = RETURN_STATUS;
IF RETVAL <> 0 THEN
...
LEAVE A1;
ELSE
...
END IF;
END A1
In an SQL procedure, execute a GET DIAGNOSTICS statement to retrieve the message text for an error.
CREATE PROCEDURE divide2 ( IN numerator INTEGER,
IN denominator INTEGER,
OUT divide_result INTEGER,
OUT divide_error VARCHAR(70) )
LANGUAGE SQL
BEGIN
DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR SQLEXCEPTION
GET DIAGNOSTICS CONDITION 1
divide_error = MESSAGE_TEXT;
SET divide_result = numerator / denominator;
END;