CALL — invoke a procedure
CALLname
( [argument
] [, ...] )
CALL
executes a procedure.
If the procedure has any output parameters, then a result row will be returned, containing the values of those parameters.
name
The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the procedure.
argument
An argument expression for the procedure call.
Arguments can include parameter names, using the syntax
.
This works the same as in ordinary function calls; see
Section 4.3 for details.
name
=> value
Arguments must be supplied for all procedure parameters that lack
defaults, including OUT
parameters. However,
arguments matching OUT
parameters are not evaluated,
so it's customary to just write NULL
for them.
(Writing something else for an OUT
parameter
might cause compatibility problems with
future PostgreSQL versions.)
The user must have EXECUTE
privilege on the procedure in
order to be allowed to invoke it.
To call a function (not a procedure), use SELECT
instead.
If CALL
is executed in a transaction block, then the
called procedure cannot execute transaction control statements.
Transaction control statements are only allowed if CALL
is executed in its own transaction.
PL/pgSQL handles output parameters
in CALL
commands differently;
see Section 43.6.3.
CALL do_db_maintenance();
CALL
conforms to the SQL standard,
except for the handling of output parameters. The standard
says that users should write variables to receive the values
of output parameters.