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CREATE TABLE T1(c1 varchar(10));

CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE FOO()
BEGIN
FOR C AS WITH TT (C1) AS (VALUES (1) , (2) , (3)) SELECT C1 FROM TT
DO
INSERT INTO T1 VALUES ('aaa');
COMMIT;
END FOR;
END
@

When I execute this stored procedure, I get this error:

db2 "call foo()"
SQL0501N The cursor specified in a FETCH statement or CLOSE statement is not open or a cursor variable in a cursor scalar function reference is not open.

How can I do commit for each insert?

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  • Side note: you need to be careful about using COMMIT/ROLLBACK inside a procedure, because it can make composition difficult - if another procedure call this one, you may end up committing/rolling back changes you weren't aware of. If you must COMMIT here, it's probably better to use an autonomous transaction. Otherwise, let the caller handle the scope. Also, that statement can be written without the use of a loop, but it's unclear if your real one can. Dec 7, 2018 at 22:23

1 Answer 1

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COMMIT closes all open cursors that were declared without the HOLD option, including the cursor implicitly created by the FOR statement.

Here's the change you need to make:

FOR C AS cur1 CURSOR WITH HOLD FOR
WITH TT (C1) AS (VALUES (1) , (2) , (3)) SELECT C1 FROM TT
DO
  INSERT INTO T1 VALUES ('aaa');
  COMMIT;
END FOR;

Documentation reference.

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