3

I have a function with RETURNS TABLE, and I want to return certain columns from my source table. When I execute the function, it gives no error but also returns no rows although it should.

What's wrong with my function?

CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION ccdb.fn_email_details_auto()
  RETURNS TABLE (code integer, area smallint, action smallint
               , flag smallint, ucount  integer, view_cnt integer) AS
$BODY$
DECLARE 
   sec_col refcursor;
   cnt integer;
   sec_code ccdb.update_qtable%ROWTYPE;
BEGIN
   SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT section_code)  INTO cnt
   FROM ccdb.update_qtable
   WHERE entry_time::date = now()::date - interval '1 day';

   OPEN sec_col FOR
   SELECT * FROM ccdb.update_qtable
   WHERE entry_time::date = now()::date - interval '1 day';

   FOR i IN 1..cnt
   LOOP
      FETCH sec_col INTO sec_code;

      PERFORM section_code, ddu_area, ddu_action, status_flag
            , ccdb_ucount, ccdb_view_cnt
      FROM ccdb.update_qtable
      WHERE entry_time::date = now()::date - interval '1 day'
      AND section_code =  sec_code.section_code
      ORDER BY ddu_area, ddu_action;
   END LOOP;

   CLOSE sec_col;
END;
$BODY$
  LANGUAGE plpgsql VOLATILE COST 100;
1
  • You will need to provide the table definitions and data that correspond to this, otherwise we'd need psychic powers to help. Also, why are you using an explicit cursor, not FOR ... SELECT ...? Jul 1, 2014 at 6:41

2 Answers 2

3

Your function is doing a lot of empty work.

You could replace the tedious and expensive explicit cursor with a FOR loop using a cursor implicitly. But don't bother, and radically simplify with a single query instead. Optionally wrapped into an SQL function:

CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION ccdb.fn_email_details_auto()
  RETURNS TABLE (code integer, area smallint, action smallint, flag smallint
               , ucount integer, view_cnt integer)
  LANGUAGE sql AS
$func$
   SELECT u.section_code, u.ddu_area, u.ddu_action, u.status_flag
        , u.ccdb_ucount, u.ccdb_view_cnt
   FROM   ccdb.update_qtable u
   WHERE  u.entry_time >= now()::date - 1
   AND    u.entry_time <  now()::date        -- sargable!
   ORDER  BY u.section_code, u.ddu_area, u.ddu_action;
$func$;

Should be much faster while returning the same.
Also, use this:

WHERE  u.entry_time >= now()::date - 1
AND    u.entry_time <  now()::date

instead of:

WHERE entry_time::date = now()::date - interval '1 day'

The alternative is "sargable" and can use a plain index on (entry_time), which is crucial for performance.

2
  • One question I have, when should we go for interval for calculating the time difference and when not? Jul 2, 2014 at 3:46
  • @YousufIbnAkhtarSultan: Not sure I understand the question. Either way, I suggest you post another question with all necessary details. Comments are not the place for new questions. You can always link to this one for context. Jul 2, 2014 at 16:07
3

I was able to solve this issue by using a RETURN QUERY for the SELECT statement where I was using PERFORM. The below mentioned query helped me achieve my requirement.

CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION ccdb.fn_email_details_auto()
  RETURNS TABLE (code integer, area smallint, action smallint, flag smallint, ucount integer, view_cnt integer) AS
$BODY$

DECLARE 
sec_col refcursor;
cnt integer;
sec_code ccdb.update_qtable%ROWTYPE;

BEGIN

SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT section_code)
INTO cnt
FROM ccdb.update_qtable
WHERE entry_time::date = now()::date - interval '1 day';

OPEN sec_col FOR
SELECT DISTINCT ON (section_code)* FROM ccdb.update_qtable WHERE entry_time::date = now()::date - interval '1 day';

FOR i IN 1..cnt
LOOP

FETCH sec_col INTO sec_code;

RETURN QUERY 
SELECT section_code, ddu_area, ddu_action, status_flag, ccdb_ucount, ccdb_view_cnt
FROM ccdb.update_qtable
WHERE entry_time::date = now()::date - interval '1 day' AND section_code = sec_code.section_code
ORDER BY ddu_area, ddu_action;

END LOOP;

CLOSE sec_col;

END;
$BODY$
  LANGUAGE plpgsql VOLATILE
  COST 100;
1
  • Don't use this. Most of the work in this function is for nothing. Jul 1, 2014 at 14:31

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