PostgreSQL 9.0.23 Documentation | ||||
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The catalog pg_pltemplate stores "template" information for procedural languages. A template for a language allows the language to be created in a particular database by a simple CREATE LANGUAGE command, with no need to specify implementation details.
Unlike most system catalogs, pg_pltemplate is shared across all databases of a cluster: there is only one copy of pg_pltemplate per cluster, not one per database. This allows the information to be accessible in each database as it is needed.
Table 45-31. pg_pltemplate Columns
Name | Type | Description |
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tmplname | name | Name of the language this template is for |
tmpltrusted | boolean | True if language is considered trusted |
tmpldbacreate | boolean | True if language may be created by a database owner |
tmplhandler | text | Name of call handler function |
tmplinline | text | Name of anonymous-block handler function, or null if none |
tmplvalidator | text | Name of validator function, or null if none |
tmpllibrary | text | Path of shared library that implements language |
tmplacl | aclitem[] | Access privileges for template (not yet used) |
There are not currently any commands that manipulate procedural language templates; to change the built-in information, a superuser must modify the table using ordinary INSERT, DELETE, or UPDATE commands. It is likely that a future release of PostgreSQL will offer commands to change the entries in a cleaner fashion.
When implemented, the tmplacl field will provide access control for the template itself (i.e., the right to create a language using it), not for the languages created from the template.