Hidden data dependencies are bad idea. There is a reason why programmers see "pure function" as a good thing to pursue. Perhaps not in all situations and not at all costs, but when other factors are not affected it better be so.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pure_function
So, Mark is correct that if there is something that affects your procedure logic - then it better be explicitly documented by becoming an explicit function parameter. Unless your explicit goal was exactly to create a hidden backdoor.
This, however, mean that all the "clients" of that procedure, all the places where it can be called from, should be changed as well, and this should be done in concert, both during development and during upgrades at client deployment sites. Which can be complicated.
So I rather would propose creating a new procedure and moving all the actual logic into it.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adapter_pattern
Assuming you have some
create procedure old_proc(param1 type1, param2 type2, param3 type3) as
begin
....some real work and logic here....
end;
transform it into something like
create procedure new_proc(param1 type1, param2 type2, param3 type3,
new_param smallint not null = 0) as
begin
....some real work and logic here....
....using new parameter for behavior fine-tuning...
end;
create procedure old_proc(param1 type1, param2 type2, param3 type3) as
begin
execute procedure new_proc(param1, param2, param3)
end;
...and then you explicitly make "one specific procedure" call new_proc(...., 1)
. Then gradually, one place after another, you would move ALL you programs from calling old_proc
to calling new_proc
and eventually you would retire the old_proc
when all dependencies are moved to new API.
There is one more option to pass "hidden backdoor parameter" - that is context variables, introduced in Firebird 2.0
https://www.firebirdsql.org/rlsnotesh/rlsnotes20.html#dml-dsql-context
and then your callee would check like that
.....normal execution
if ( rdb$get_context('USER_TRANSACTION','my_caller') is not null) THEN BEGIN
....new behavior...
end;
However, you would have to make that "one specific procedure" to properly set this variable before calling (which is tedious but not hard) AND properly delete it after the call (and this should be properly framed to properly happen even in case of any errors/exceptions, and this also is tedious and is not easy).