Version 4.2.5
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NDB - PARAMETER STYLE

The PARAMETER STYLE identifies the linkage convention used to pass parameters to a DB2 stored procedure or a DB2 UDF.

This section describes the PARAMETER STYLEs and the STCB NDB uses for processing Natural DB2 stored procedures or Natural UDFs. Note that PARAMETER STYLE GENERAL (or GENERAL WITH NULL) and STCB Layout only apply to Natural stored procedures.


GENERAL and GENERAL WITH NULL

Only applies to Natural stored procedures.

A Natural stored procedure defined with PARAMETER STYLE GENERAL only receives the user parameters specified.

A Natural stored procedure defined with PARAMETER STYLE GENERAL WITH NULL receives the user parameters specified and, additionally, a NULL indicator array that contains one NULL indicator for each user parameter.

Natural stored procedures defined with PARAMETER STYLE GENERAL/WITH NULL, require that the definition of the stored procedure within the DB2 catalog includes one additional parameter of the type VARCHAR in front of the user parameters of the stored procedure.

This parameter in front of the parameters is the STCB (Stored Procedure Control Block); see also STCB Layout below.

Below is information on:

STCB - Stored Procedure Control Block

The STCB contains information the NDB server stub uses to execute Natural stored procedures, such as the library and the subprogram to be invoked. It also contains the format descriptions of the parameters passed to the stored procedure.

The STCB is invisible to the Natural stored procedure called. The STCB is evaluated by the NDB server stub and stripped off the parameter list that is passed to the Natural stored procedure.

If the caller of a Natural stored procedure defined with PARAMETER STYLE GENERAL/WITH NULL is a Natural program, the program must use a CALLDBPROC statement with the keyword CALLMODE=NATURAL.

If the caller of the Natural stored procedure is not a Natural program, the caller has to set up the STCB for the DB2 CALL statement and pass the STCB as the first parameter.

If an error occurs during the execution of a Natural stored procedure defined with PARAMETER STYLE GENERAL/WITH NULL, the error message text is returned to the STCB.

If the caller is a Natural program that uses CALLDBPROC and CALLMODE=NATURAL, the NDB runtime will wrap up the error text in the NAT3286 error message.

Example of PARAMETER STYLE GENERAL

In the Natural stored procedure, define the parameters as shown in the example program below:

DEFINE DATA PARAMETER
01 P1 ...
01 P2 ...
...
...
01 Pn ...
LOCAL 
...
...
END-DEFINE

Example of GENERAL WITH NULL

In the Natural stored procedure, define the parameters as shown in the example program below:

DEFINE DATA PARAMETER
01 P1 ...
01 P2 ...
...
...
01 Pn ...
01 NULL-INDICATOR-ARRAY  (I2/1:n)
LOCAL 
...
...
END-DEFINE

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STCB Layout

Only applies to Natural stored procedures.

The following table describes the first parameter passed between the caller and the Natural stored procedure if CALLMODE = NATURAL (see also the relevant section in CALLDBPROC) is specified.

NAME FORMAT PROCESSING MODE SERVER
STCBL I2 Input (size of following information)
Procedure Information  
STCBLENG A4 Input  (printable STCBL)
STCBID A4 Input ('STCB')
STCBVERS A4 Input (version of STCB '310 ')
STCBUSER A8 Input (user ID)
STCBLIB A8 Input (library)
STCBPROG A8 Input (calling program)
STCBPSW A8 Unused (password)
STCBSTNR A4 Input (CALLDBPROC statement number )
STCBSTPC A8 Input (procedure called)
STCBPANR A4 Input (number of parameters)
Error Information  
STCBERNR A5 Output (Natural error number)
STCBSTAT A1 Unused (Natural error status)
STCBLIB A8 Unused (Natural error library)
STCBPRG A8 Unused (Natural error program)
STCBLVL A1 Unused (Natural error level)
STCBOTP A1 Unused (error object type)
STCBEDYL A2 Output (error text length)
STCBEDYT A88 Output (error text)
   A100 Reserved for future use
Parameter Information   
STCBPADE A variable Input. See also PARAMETER DESCRIPTION (STCBPADE) below.

Below is information on:

PARAMETER DESCRIPTION (STCBPADE)

PARAMETER DESCRIPTION contains a description for each parameter passed to the Natural stored procedure consisting of parameter type, format specification and length. Parameter type is the AD attribute of the CALLNAT statement as described in the Natural Statements documentation.

Each parameter has the following format description element in the STCBPADE string

atl, p[, d1]....

where

This descriptive/control parameter is invisible to the calling Natural program and to the called Natural stored procedure, but it has to be defined in the parameter definition of the stored procedure row with the CREATE PROCEDURE statement and the DB2 PARAMETER STYLE GENERAL/WITH NULL.

The following table shows the number of parameters which have to be defined with the CREATE PROCEDURE statement for a Natural stored procedure defined with PARAMETER STYLE GENERAL depending on the number of user parameters and whether the client (i.e. the caller of a stored procedure for DB2) and the server (i.e. the stored procedure for DB2) is written in Natural or in another standard programming host language. n denotes the number of user parameters.

Client\Server Natural not Natural
Natural n + 1 n (CALLMODE=NONE)
non-Natural n + 1 n

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DB2SQL

PARAMETER DB2SQL applies to Natural stored procedures and Natural UDFs.

A Natural stored procedure or Natural UDF with PARAMETER STYLE DB2SQL first receives the user parameters specified and then the parameters listed below, under Additional Parameters passed. For a Natural UDF, the input parameters are passed before the output parameters.

Additional Parameters passed:

The SQLSTATE, the qualified name, the specific name and the DIAGNOSE field are defined in the Natural parameter data area (PDA) DB2SQL_P which is supplied in the Natural system library SYSDB2.

If the optional feature SCRATCHPAD nnn is specified additionally in the CREATE FUNCTION statement for the Natural UDF, the SCRATCHPAD storage parameter is passed to the Natural UDF.

Use the following definitions:

01 SCRATCHPAD A(4+nnn) 
01 REDEFINE SCRATCHPAD
02 SCRATCHPAD_LENGTH(I4)
02 ...

Redefine the SCRATCHPAD in the Natural UDF according to your requirements.

The first four bytes of the SCRATCHPAD area contain an integer length field. Before initially invoking the Natural UDF with an SQL statement, DB2 resets the SCRATCHPAD area to x'00' and sets the size nnn specified for the SCRATCHPAD into the first four bytes as an integer value.

Thereafter, DB2 does not reinitialize the SCRATCHPAD between the invocations of the Natural UDF for the invoking SQL statement. Instead, after returning from the Natural UDF, the contents of the SCRATCHPAD is preserved and restored at the next invocation of the Natural UDF.

Below is information on:

Parameter CALL TYPE

This parameter is optional and only applies to Natural UDFs.

The CALL TYPE parameter is passed if the FINAL CALL option is specified for a Natural scalar UDF, or if the Natural UDF is a table UDF. The CALL TYPE parameter is an integer indicating the type of call DB2 performs on the Natural UDF. See the DB2 SQL GUIDE for details on the parameter values provided in the CALL_TYPE parameter.

Parameter DBINFO

This parameter is optional.

If the option DBINFO is used, the DBINFO structure is passed to the Natural stored procedure or UDF. The DBINFO structure is described in the Natural PDA DBINFO_P supplied in the Natural system library SYSDB2.

Determining Library, Subprogram and Parameter Formats

The NDB server stub determines the subprogram and the library from the qualified and specific name of the Natural stored procedure or UDF. The SCHEMA name is used as library name, and the procedure or function name is used as subprogram name.

The ROUTINEN subprogram is supplied in the Natural system library SYSDB2. This subprogram is used to access the DB2 catalog to determine the formats of the user parameters defined for the Natural stored procedure or UDF. After the formats have been determined, they are stored in the Natural buffer pool. During subsequent invocations of the Natural stored procedure, the formats are then retrieved from the Natural buffer pool. This requires that at least READS SQL DATA is specified for Natural stored procedures or UDFs with PARAMETER STYLE DB2SQL.

The ROUTINEN subprogram is generated statically. The DBRM of ROUTINEN is bound as package in the COLLECTION SAGNDBROUTINENPACK. Before starting to access the DB2 catalog, the subprogram will save the CURRENT PACKAGESET and set SAGNDBROUTINENPACK to CURRENT PACKAGESET. After processing, the ROUTINEN subprogram will restore the CURRENT PACKAGESET saved.

Invoking a Natural Stored Procedure

If the caller of the Natural stored procedure with PARAMETER STYLE DB2SQL is a Natural program, the caller must use the CALLDBPROC statement with the specification CALLMODE=NONE, which is the default.

Error Handling

If a Natural runtime error occurs during the execution of a Natural stored procedure or UDF with PARAMETER STYLE DB2SQL, SQLSTATE is set to 38N99 and the diagnostic string contains the text of the Natural error message.

If an error occurs in the NDB server stub during the execution of the Natural stored procedure or UDF with PARAMETER STYLE DB2SQL, the SQLSTATE is set to 38S99 and the diagnostic string contains the text of the error message.

If the application wants to raise an error condition during the execution of a Natural stored procedure or UDF, the SQLSTATE parameter must be set to a value other than '00000'. See the DB2 SQL Guide for specifications of user errors in the SQLSTATE parameter.

Additionally, a text describing the errors can be placed in the DIAGNOSE parameter.

If a Natural table UDF wants to signal to DB2 that it has found no row to return, '02000' must be returned in the SQLSTATE parameter.

Lifetime of Natural Session

For a Natural UDF that contains the attributes DISALLOW PARALLEL and FINAL CALL, the NDB server stub retains the Natural session allocated earlier. This Natural session will then be reused by all subsequent UDF invocations until Natural encounters the final call.

Example of DB2SQL - Natural Stored Procedure

In a Natural stored procedure, define the parameters as shown in the example program below:

DEFINE DATA PARAMETER
01 P1 ...
01 P2 ...
...
...
01 PN ...
01 N1 (I2)
01 N2 (I2)
...
...
01 N
n (I2)
PARAMETER USING DB2SQL_P
[ PARAMETER USING DBINFO_P ]   /*  only if DBINFO is defined
LOCAL 
...
...
END-DEFINE

Example of DB2SQL - Natural UDF

In a Natural UDF, define the parameters as shown in the example program below:

DEFINE DATA PARAMETER
01 PI1 ...  /* first input parameter 
01 PI2 ...
...
...
01 PIn ...  /*  last input parameter  
01 RS1...  /* first result parameter  
...
...
01 RSn ...  /* last result parameter   
01 N_PI1 (I2)  /* first NULL indicator 
01 N_PI2 (I2)
...
...
01 N_Pin (I2)                     
01 N_RS1 (I2)
...
...
01 N_RSn (I2) /* last NULL indicator
PARAMETER USING DB2SQL_P /* function, specific, sqlstate, diagnose
PARAMETER
01 SCRATCHPAD A(4+nnn)  /* only if SCRATCHPAD nnn is specified
  01 REDEFINES SCRATCHPAD
02 SCRATCHPAD_LENGTH (I4) 
02 ... 
01 CALL_TYPE (I4) /* --- only if FINAL CALL is specified or table UDF
 
 
PARAMETER USING DBINFO_P   /* ---- only if DBINFO is specified
LOCAL 
...
...
END-DEFINE

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