Several preprocessor directives are available that modify how the ecpg
preprocessor parses and processes a file.
To include an external file into your embedded SQL program, use:
EXEC SQL INCLUDEfilename
; EXEC SQL INCLUDE <filename
>; EXEC SQL INCLUDE "filename
";
The embedded SQL preprocessor will look for a file named
, preprocess it, and include it in the resulting C output. Thus, embedded SQL statements in the included file are handled correctly.filename
.h
The ecpg
preprocessor will search a file at several directories in following order:
/usr/local/include
/usr/local/pgsql/include
)/usr/include
But when EXEC SQL INCLUDE "
is used, only the current directory is searched.filename
"
In each directory, the preprocessor will first look for the file name as given, and if not found will append .h
to the file name and try again (unless the specified file name already has that suffix).
Note that EXEC SQL INCLUDE
is not the same as:
#include <filename
.h>
because this file would not be subject to SQL command preprocessing. Naturally, you can continue to use the C #include
directive to include other header files.
The include file name is case-sensitive, even though the rest of the EXEC SQL INCLUDE
command follows the normal SQL case-sensitivity rules.
Similar to the directive #define
that is known from C, embedded SQL has a similar concept:
EXEC SQL DEFINEname
; EXEC SQL DEFINEname
value
;
So you can define a name:
EXEC SQL DEFINE HAVE_FEATURE;
And you can also define constants:
EXEC SQL DEFINE MYNUMBER 12; EXEC SQL DEFINE MYSTRING 'abc';
Use undef
to remove a previous definition:
EXEC SQL UNDEF MYNUMBER;
Of course you can continue to use the C versions #define
and #undef
in your embedded SQL program. The difference is where your defined values get evaluated. If you use EXEC SQL DEFINE
then the ecpg
preprocessor evaluates the defines and substitutes the values. For example if you write:
EXEC SQL DEFINE MYNUMBER 12; ... EXEC SQL UPDATE Tbl SET col = MYNUMBER;
then ecpg
will already do the substitution and your C compiler will never see any name or identifier MYNUMBER
. Note that you cannot use #define
for a constant that you are going to use in an embedded SQL query because in this case the embedded SQL precompiler is not able to see this declaration.
If multiple input files are named on the ecpg
preprocessor's command line, the effects of EXEC SQL DEFINE
and EXEC SQL UNDEF
do not carry across files: each file starts with only the symbols defined by -D
switches on the command line.
You can use the following directives to compile code sections conditionally:
EXEC SQL ifdef name
;
#Checks a name
and processes subsequent lines if name
has been defined via EXEC SQL define
.name
EXEC SQL ifndef name
;
#Checks a name
and processes subsequent lines if name
has not been defined via EXEC SQL define
.name
EXEC SQL elif name
;
#Begins an optional alternative section after an EXEC SQL ifdef
or name
EXEC SQL ifndef
directive. Any number of name
elif
sections can appear. Lines following an elif
will be processed if name
has been defined and no previous section of the same ifdef
/ifndef
...endif
construct has been processed.
EXEC SQL else;
#Begins an optional, final alternative section after an EXEC SQL ifdef
or name
EXEC SQL ifndef
directive. Subsequent lines will be processed if no previous section of the same name
ifdef
/ifndef
...endif
construct has been processed.
EXEC SQL endif;
#Ends an ifdef
/ifndef
...endif
construct. Subsequent lines are processed normally.
ifdef
/ifndef
...endif
constructs can be nested, up to 127 levels deep.
This example will compile exactly one of the three SET TIMEZONE
commands:
EXEC SQL ifdef TZVAR; EXEC SQL SET TIMEZONE TO TZVAR; EXEC SQL elif TZNAME; EXEC SQL SET TIMEZONE TO TZNAME; EXEC SQL else; EXEC SQL SET TIMEZONE TO 'GMT'; EXEC SQL endif;
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