15 Using Continuous Query Notification (CQN)

Continuous Query Notification (CQN) lets an application register queries with the database for either object change notification (the default) or query result change notification. An object referenced by a registered query is a registered object.

If a query is registered for object change notification (OCN), the database notifies the application whenever a transaction changes an object that the query references and commits, regardless of whether the query result changed.

If a query is registered for query result change notification (QRCN), the database notifies the application whenever a transaction changes the result of the query and commits.

A CQN registration associates a list of one or more queries with a notification type (OCN or QRCN) and a notification handler. To create a CQN registration, you can use either the PL/SQL interface or Oracle Call Interface (OCI). If you use the PL/SQL interface, the notification handler is a server-side PL/SQL stored procedure; if you use OCI, the notification handler is a client-side C callback procedure.

This chapter explains general CQN concepts and explains how to use the PL/SQL CQN interface. For information about using OCI for CQN, see Oracle Call Interface Programmer's Guide.

Topics:

Note:

The terms OCN and QRCN refer to both the notification type and the notification itself: An application registers a query for OCN, and the database sends the application an OCN; an application registers a query for QRCN, and the database sends the application a QRCN.

15.1 About Object Change Notification (OCN)

If an application registers a query for object change notification (OCN), the database sends the application an OCN whenever a transaction changes an object associated with the query and commits, regardless of whether the result of the query changed.

For example, if an application registers the query in Example 15-1 for OCN, and a user commits a transaction that changes the EMPLOYEES table, the database sends the application an OCN, even if the changed row or rows did not satisfy the query predicate (for example, if DEPARTMENT_ID = 5).

Example 15-1 Query to be Registered for Change Notification

SELECT EMPLOYEE_ID, SALARY
FROM EMPLOYEES
WHERE DEPARTMENT_ID = 10;

15.2 About Query Result Change Notification (QRCN)

Note:

For QRCN support, the COMPATIBLE initialization parameter of the database must be at least 11.0.0, and Automatic Undo Management (AUM) must be enabled (as it is by default).

For information about the COMPATIBLE initialization parameter, see Oracle Database Administrator's Guide.

For information about AUM, see Oracle Database Administrator's Guide.

If an application registers a query for query result change notification (QRCN), the database sends the application a QRCN whenever a transaction changes the result of the query and commits.

For example, if an application registers the query in Example 15-1 for QRCN, the database sends the application a QRCN only if the query result set changes; that is, if one of these data manipulation language (DML) statements commits:

  • An INSERT or DELETE of a row that satisfies the query predicate (DEPARTMENT_ID = 10).

  • An UPDATE to the EMPLOYEE_ID or SALARY column of a row that satisfied the query predicate (DEPARTMENT_ID = 10).

  • An UPDATE to the DEPARTMENT_ID column of a row that changed its value from 10 to a value other than 10, causing the row to be deleted from the result set.

  • An UPDATE to the DEPARTMENT_ID column of a row that changed its value to 10 from a value other than 10, causing the row to be added to the result set.

The default notification type is OCN. For QRCN, specify QOS_QUERY in the QOSFLAGS attribute of the CQ_NOTIFICATION$_REG_INFO object.

With QRCN, you have a choice of guaranteed mode (the default) or best-effort mode.

Topics:

15.2.1 Guaranteed Mode

In guaranteed mode, there are no false positives: the database sends the application a QRCN only when the query result set is guaranteed to have changed.

For example, suppose that an application registered the query in Example 15-1 for QRCN, that employee 201 is in department 10, and that these statements are executed:

UPDATE EMPLOYEES
SET SALARY = SALARY + 10
WHERE EMPLOYEE_ID = 201;

UPDATE EMPLOYEES
SET SALARY = SALARY - 10
WHERE EMPLOYEE_ID = 201;

COMMIT;

Each UPDATE statement in the preceding transaction changes the query result set, but together they have no effect on the query result set; therefore, the database does not send the application a QRCN for the transaction.

For guaranteed mode, specify QOS_QUERY, but not QOS_BEST_EFFORT, in the QOSFLAGS attribute of the CQ_NOTIFICATION$_REG_INFO object.

Some queries are too complex for QRCN in guaranteed mode. For the characteristics of queries that can be registered in guaranteed mode, see Section 15.7.5.1.

15.2.2 Best-Effort Mode

Some queries that are too complex for guaranteed mode can be registered for QRCN in best-effort mode, in which CQN creates and registers simpler versions of them.

For example, the query in Example 15-2 is too complex for QRCN in guaranteed mode because it contains the aggregate function SUM.

Example 15-2 Query Too Complex for QRCN in Guaranteed Mode

SELECT SUM(SALARY)
FROM EMPLOYEES
WHERE DEPARTMENT_ID = 20;

In best-effort mode, CQN registers this simpler version of the query in Example 15-2:

SELECT SALARY
FROM EMPLOYEES
WHERE DEPARTMENT_ID = 20;

Whenever the result of the original query changes, the result of its simpler version also changes; therefore, no notifications are lost from the simplification. However, the simplification might cause false positives, because the result of the simpler version can change when the result of the original query does not.

In best-effort mode, the database:

  • Minimizes the OLTP response overhead that is from notification-related processing, as follows:

    • For a single-table query, the database determines whether the query result has changed by which columns changed and which predicates the changed rows satisfied.

    • For a multiple-table query (a join), the database uses the primary-key/foreign-key constraint relationships between the tables to determine whether the query result has changed.

  • Sends the application a QRCN whenever a DML statement changes the query result set, even if a subsequent DML statement nullifies the change made by the first DML statement.

The overhead minimization of best-effort mode infrequently causes false positives, even for queries that CQN does not simplify. For example, consider the query in Example 15-1 and the transaction in Section 15.2.1. In best-effort mode, CQN does not simplify the query, but the transaction generates a false positive.

Some types of queries are so simplified that invalidations are generated at object level; that is, whenever any object referenced in those queries changes. Examples of such queries are those that use unsupported column types or include subqueries. The solution to this problem is to rewrite the original queries.

For example, the query in Example 15-3 is too complex for QRCN in guaranteed mode because it includes a subquery.

Example 15-3 Query Whose Simplified Version Invalidates Objects

SELECT SALARY
FROM EMPLOYEES
WHERE DEPARTMENT_ID IN (
  SELECT DEPARTMENT_ID
  FROM DEPARTMENTS
  WHERE LOCATION_ID = 1700
);

In best-effort mode, CQN simplifies the query in Example 15-3 to this:

SELECT * FROM EMPLOYEES, DEPARTMENTS;

The simplified query can cause objects to be invalidated. However, if you rewrite the original query as follows, you can register it in either guaranteed mode or best-effort mode:

SELECT SALARY
FROM EMPLOYEES, DEPARTMENTS
WHERE EMPLOYEES.DEPARTMENT_ID = DEPARTMENTS.DEPARTMENT_ID
  AND DEPARTMENTS.LOCATION_ID = 1700;

Queries that can be registered only in best-effort mode are described in Section 15.7.5.2.

The default for QRCN mode is guaranteed mode. For best-effort mode, specify QOS_BEST_EFFORT in the QOSFLAGS attribute of the CQ_NOTIFICATION$_REG_INFO object.

15.3 Events that Generate Notifications

These events generate notifications:

15.3.1 Committed DML Transactions

When the notification type is OCN, any DML transaction that changes one or more registered objects generates one notification for each object when it commits.

When the notification type is QRCN, any DML transaction that changes the result of one or more registered queries generates a notification when it commits. The notification includes the query IDs of the queries whose results changed.

For either notification type, the notification includes:

  • Name of each changed table

  • Operation type (INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE)

  • ROWID of each changed row, if the registration was created with the ROWID option and the number of modified rows was not too large. For more information, see Section 15.7.2.3.

15.3.2 Committed DDL Statements

For both OCN and QRCN, these data definition language (DDL) statements, when committed, generate notifications:

  • ALTER TABLE

  • TRUNCATE TABLE

  • FLASHBACK TABLE

  • DROP TABLE

Note:

When the notification type is OCN, a committed DROP TABLE statement generates a DROP NOTIFICATION.

Any OCN registrations of queries on the dropped table become disassociated from that table (which no longer exists), but the registrations themselves continue to exist. If any of these registrations are associated with objects other than the dropped table, committed changes to those other objects continue to generate notifications. Registrations associated only with the dropped table also continue to exist, and their creator can add queries (and their referenced objects) to them.

An OCN registration is based on the version and definition of an object at the time the query was registered. If an object is dropped, registrations on that object are disassociated from it forever. If an object is created with the same name, and in the same schema, as the dropped object, the created object is not associated with OCN registrations that were associated with the dropped object.

When the notification type is QRCN:

  • The notification includes:

    • Query IDs of the queries whose results have changed

    • Name of the modified table

    • Type of DDL operation

  • Some DDL operations that invalidate registered queries can cause those queries to be deregistered.

    For example, suppose that this query is registered for QRCN:

    SELECT COL1 FROM TEST_TABLE
      WHERE COL2 = 1;
    

    Suppose that TEST_TABLE has this schema:

    (COL1 NUMBER, COL2 NUMBER, COL3 NUMBER)
    

    This DDL statement, when committed, invalidates the query and causes it to be removed from the registration:

    ALTER TABLE DROP COLUMN COL2;
    

15.3.3 Deregistration

For both OCN and QRCN, deregistration—removal of a registration from the database—generates a notification. The reasons that the database removes a registration are:

  • Timeout

    If TIMEOUT is specified with a nonzero value when the queries are registered, the database purges the registration after the specified time interval.

    If QOS_DEREG_NFY is specified when the queries are registered, the database purges the registration after it generates its first notification.

  • Loss of privileges

    If privileges are lost on an object associated with a registered query, and the notification type is OCN, the database purges the registration. (When the notification type is QRCN, the database removes that query from the registration, but does not purge the registration.)

    For privileges needed to register queries, see Section 15.7.3.

A notification is not generated when a client application performs an explicit deregistration.

15.3.4 Global Events

The global events EVENT_STARTUP and EVENT_SHUTDOWN generate notifications.

In an Oracle RAC environment, these events generate notifications:

  • EVENT_STARTUP when the first instance of the database starts

  • EVENT_SHUTDOWN when the last instance of the database shuts down

  • EVENT_SHUTDOWN_ANY when any instance of the database shuts down

The preceding global events are constants defined in the DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION package.

See Also:

Oracle Database PL/SQL Packages and Types Reference for more information about the DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION package

15.4 Notification Contents

A notification contains some or all of this information:

  • Type of event, which is one of:

    • Startup

    • Object change

    • Query result change

    • Deregistration

    • Shutdown

  • Registration ID of affected registration

  • Names of changed objects

  • If ROWID option was specified, ROWIDs of changed rows

  • If the notification type is QRCN: Query IDs of queries whose results changed

  • If notification resulted from a DML or DDL statement:

    • Array of names of modified tables

    • Operation type (for example, INSERT or UPDATE)

A notification does not contain the changed data itself. For example, the notification does not say that a monthly salary increased from 5000 to 6000. To obtain more recent values for the changed objects or rows or query results, the application must query the database.

15.5 Good Candidates for CQN

Good candidates for CQN are applications that cache the result sets of queries on infrequently changed objects in the middle tier, to avoid network round trips to the database. These applications can use CQN to register the queries to be cached. When such an application receives a notification, it can refresh its cache by rerunning the registered queries.

An example of such an application is a web forum. Because its users need not view content as soon as it is inserted into the database, this application can cache information in the middle tier and have CQN tell it when it when to refresh the cache.

Figure 15-1 illustrates a typical scenario in which the database serves data that is cached in the middle tier and then accessed over the Internet.

Figure 15-1 Middle-Tier Caching

Description of Figure 15-1 follows
Description of "Figure 15-1 Middle-Tier Caching"

Applications in the middle tier require rapid access to cached copies of database objects while keeping the cache as current as possible in relation to the database. Cached data becomes obsolete when a transaction modifies the data and commits, thereby putting the application at risk of accessing incorrect results. If the application uses CQN, the database can publish a notification when a change occurs to registered objects with details on what changed. In response to the notification, the application can refresh cached data by fetching it from the back-end database.

Figure 15-2 illustrates the process by which middle-tier web clients receive and process notifications.

Figure 15-2 Basic Process of Continuous Query Notification (CQN)

Description of Figure 15-2 follows
Description of "Figure 15-2 Basic Process of Continuous Query Notification (CQN)"

Explanation of steps in Figure 15-2 (if registrations are created using PL/SQL and that the application has cached the result set of a query on HR.EMPLOYEES):

  1. The developer uses PL/SQL to create a CQN registration for the query, which consists of creating a stored PL/SQL procedure to process notifications and then using the PL/SQL CQN interface to create a registration for the query, specifying the PL/SQL procedure as the notification handler.

  2. The database populates the registration information in the data dictionary.

  3. A user updates a row in the HR.EMPLOYEES table in the back-end database and commits the update, causing the query result to change. The data for HR.EMPLOYEES cached in the middle tier is now outdated.

  4. The database adds a message that describes the change to an internal queue.

  5. The database notifies a JOBQ background process of a notification message.

  6. The JOBQ process runs the stored procedure specified by the client application. In this example, JOBQ passes the data to a server-side PL/SQL procedure. The implementation of the PL/SQL notification handler determines how the notification is handled.

  7. Inside the server-side PL/SQL procedure, the developer can implement logic to notify the middle-tier client application of the changes to the registered objects. For example, it notifies the application of the ROWID of the changed row in HR.EMPLOYEES.

  8. The client application in the middle tier queries the back-end database to retrieve the data in the changed row.

  9. The client application updates the cache with the data.

15.6 Creating CQN Registrations

A CQN registration associates a list of one or more queries with a notification type and a notification handler.

The notification type is either OCN or QRCN. For information about these types, see Section 15.1 and Section 15.2.

To create a CQN registration, you can use one of two interfaces:

  • PL/SQL interface

    If you use the PL/SQL interface, the notification handler is a server-side PL/SQL stored procedure. See Section 15.7.

  • Oracle Call Interface (OCI)

    If you use OCI, the notification handler is a client-side C callback procedure. See Section 15.8.

After being created, a registration is stored in the database. In an Oracle RAC environment, it is visible to all database instances. Transactions that change the query results in any database instance generate notifications.

By default, a registration survives until the application that created it explicitly deregisters it or until the database implicitly purges it (from loss of privileges, for example).

15.7 Using PL/SQL to Create CQN Registrations

This section describes using PL/SQL to create CQN registrations. When you use the PL/SQL interface, the notification handler is a server-side PL/SQL stored procedure.

Topics:

15.7.1 PL/SQL CQN Registration Interface

The PL/SQL CQN registration interface is implemented with the DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION package. You use the DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.NEW_REG_START function to open a registration block. You specify the registration details, including the notification type and notification handler, as part of the CQ_NOTIFICATION$_REG_INFO object, which is passed as an argument to the NEW_REG_START procedure. Every query that you run while the registration block is open is registered with CQN. If you specified notification type QRCN, the database assigns a query ID to each query. You can retrieve these query IDs with the DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.CQ_NOTIFICATION_QUERYID function. To close the registration block, you use the DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.REG_END function.

For step-by-step instructions, see Section 15.7.6.

See Also:

Oracle Database PL/SQL Packages and Types Reference for more information about the DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION package

15.7.2 CQN Registration Options

You can change the CQN registration defaults with the options summarized in Table 15-1.

Table 15-1 Continuous Query Notification Registration Options

Option Description

Notification Type

Specifies QRCN (the default is OCN).

QRCN ModeFoot 1 

Specifies best-effort mode (the default is guaranteed mode).

ROWID

Includes the value of the ROWID pseudocolumn for each changed row in the notification.

Operations FilterFoot 2 

Publishes the notification only if the operation type matches the specified filter condition.

Transaction LagFootref 2

Deprecated. Use Notification Grouping instead.

Notification Grouping

Specifies how notifications are grouped.

Reliable

Stores notifications in a persistent database queue (instead of in shared memory, the default).

Purge on Notify

Purges the registration after the first notification.

Timeout

Purges the registration after a specified time interval.


Footnote 1 Applies only when notification type is QRCN.

Footnote 2 Applies only when notification type is OCN.

Topics:

15.7.2.1 Notification Type Option

The notification types are OCN (described in Section 15.1) and QRCN (described in Section 15.2).

15.7.2.2 QRCN Mode (QRCN Notification Type Only)

The QRCN mode option applies only when the notification type is QRCN. Instructions for setting the notification type to QRCN are in Section 15.7.2.1.

The QRCN modes are guaranteed (described in Section 15.2.1) and best-effort (described in Section 15.2.2).

The default is guaranteed mode. For best-effort mode, specify QOS_BEST_EFFORT in the QOSFLAGS attribute of the CQ_NOTIFICATION$_REG_INFO object.

15.7.2.3 ROWID Option

The ROWID option includes the value of the ROWID pseudocolumn (the rowid of the row) for each changed row in the notification. To include the ROWID option of each changed row in the notification, specify QOS_ROWIDS in the QOSFLAGS attribute of the CQ_NOTIFICATION$_REG_INFO object.

Note:

When you update a row in a table compressed with Hybrid Columnar Compression (HCC), the ROWID of the row changes. HCC, a feature of certain Oracle storage systems, is described in Oracle Database Concepts.

From the ROWID information in the notification, the application can retrieve the contents of the changed rows by performing queries of this form:

SELECT * FROM table_name_from_notification
WHERE ROWID = rowid_from_notification;

ROWIDs are published in the external string format. For a regular heap table, the length of a ROWID is 18 character bytes. For an Index Organized Table (IOT), the length of the ROWID depends on the size of the primary key, and might exceed 18 bytes.

If the server does not have enough memory for the ROWIDs, the notification might be "rolled up" into a FULL-TABLE-NOTIFICATION, indicated by a special flag in the notification descriptor. Possible reasons for a FULL-TABLE-NOTIFICATION are:

  • Total shared memory consumption from ROWIDs exceeds 1% of the dynamic shared pool size.

  • Too many rows were changed in a single registered object within a transaction (the upper limit is approximately 80).

  • Total length of the logical ROWIDs of modified rows for an IOT is too large (the upper limit is approximately 1800 bytes).

  • You specified the Notification Grouping option NTFN_GROUPING_TYPE with the value DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.NTFN_GROUPING_TYPE_SUMMARY, described in Section 15.7.2.6.

Because a FULL-TABLE-NOTIFICATION does not include ROWIDs, the application that receives it must assume that the entire table (that is, all rows) might have changed.

15.7.2.4 Operations Filter Option (OCN Notification Type Only)

The Operations Filter option applies only when the notification type is OCN.

The Operations Filter option enables you to specify the types of operations that generate notifications.

The default is all operations. To specify that only some operations generate notifications, use the OPERATIONS_FILTER attribute of the CQ_NOTIFICATION$_REG_INFO object. With the OPERATIONS_FILTER attribute, specify the type of operation with the constant that represents it, which is defined in the DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION package, as follows:

Operation Constant
INSERT DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.INSERTOP
UPDATE DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.UPDATEOP
DELETE DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.DELETEOP
ALTEROP DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.ALTEROP
DROPOP DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.DROPOP
UNKNOWNOP DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.UNKNOWNOP
All (default) DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.ALL_OPERATIONS

To specify multiple operations, use bitwise OR. For example:

DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.INSERTOP + DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.DELETEOP

OPERATIONS_FILTER has no effect if you also specify QOS_QUERY in the QOSFLAGS attribute, because QOS_QUERY specifies notification type QRCN.

See Also:

Oracle Database PL/SQL Packages and Types Reference for more information about the DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION package

15.7.2.5 Transaction Lag Option (OCN Notification Type Only)

The Transaction Lag option applies only when the notification type is OCN.

Note:

This option is deprecated. To implement flow-of-control notifications, use Section 15.7.2.6.

The Transaction Lag option specifies the number of transactions by which the client application can lag behind the database. If the number is 0, every transaction that changes a registered object results in a notification. If the number is 5, every fifth transaction that changes a registered object results in a notification. The database tracks intervening changes at object granularity and includes them in the notification, so that the client does not lose them.

A transaction lag greater than 0 is useful only if an application implements flow-of-control notifications. Ensure that the application generates notifications frequently enough to satisfy the lag, so that they are not deferred indefinitely.

If you specify TRANSACTION_LAG, then notifications do not include ROWIDs, even if you also specified QOS_ROWIDS.

15.7.2.6 Notification Grouping Options

By default, notifications are generated immediately after the event that causes them.

Notification Grouping options, which are attributes of the CQ_NOTIFICATION$_REG_INFO object, are:

Attribute Description
NTFN_GROUPING_CLASS Specifies the class by which to group notifications. The only allowed values are DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.NTFN_GROUPING_CLASS_TIME, which groups notifications by time, and zero, which is the default (notifications are generated immediately after the event that causes them).
NTFN_GROUPING_VALUE Specifies the time interval that defines the group, in seconds. For example, if this value is 900, notifications generated in the same 15-minute interval are grouped.
NTFN_GROUPING_TYPE Specifies the type of grouping, which is either of:
  • DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.NTFN_GROUPING_TYPE_SUMMARY: All notifications in the group are summarized into a single notification.

    Note: The single notification does not include ROWIDs, even if you specified the ROWID option.

  • DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.NTFN_GROUPING_TYPE_LAST: Only the last notification in the group is published and the earlier ones discarded.

NTFN_GROUPING_START_TIME Specifies when to start generating notifications. If specified as NULL, it defaults to the current system-generated time.
NTFN_GROUPING_REPEAT_COUNT Specifies how many times to repeat the notification. Set to DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.NTFN_GROUPING_FOREVER to receive notifications for the life of the registration. To receive at most n notifications during the life of the registration, set to n.

Note:

Notifications generated by timeouts, loss of privileges, and global events might be published before the specified grouping interval expires. If they are, any pending grouped notifications are also published before the interval expires.

15.7.2.7 Reliable Option

By default, a CQN registration is stored in shared memory. To store it in a persistent database queue instead—that is, to generate reliable notifications—specify QOS_RELIABLE in the QOSFLAGS attribute of the CQ_NOTIFICATION$_REG_INFO object.

The advantage of reliable notifications is that if the database fails after generating them, it can still deliver them after it restarts. In an Oracle RAC environment, a surviving database instance can deliver them.

The disadvantage of reliable notifications is that they have higher CPU and I/O costs than default notifications do.

15.7.2.8 Purge-on-Notify and Timeout Options

By default, a CQN registration survives until the application that created it explicitly deregisters it or until the database implicitly purges it (from loss of privileges, for example).

To purge the registration after it generates its first notification, specify QOS_DEREG_NFY in the QOSFLAGS attribute of the CQ_NOTIFICATION$_REG_INFO object.

To purge the registration after n seconds, specify n in the TIMEOUT attribute of the CQ_NOTIFICATION$_REG_INFO object.

You can use the Purge-on-Notify and Timeout options together.

15.7.3 Prerequisites for Creating CQN Registrations

These are prerequisites for creating CQN registrations:

  • You must have these privileges:

    • EXECUTE privilege on the DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION package, whose subprograms you use to create a registration

    • CHANGE NOTIFICATION system privilege

    • READ or SELECT privilege on each object to be registered

    Loss of privileges on an object associated with a registered query generates a notification—see Section 15.3.3.

  • You must be connected as a non-SYS user.

  • You must not be in the middle of an uncommitted transaction.

  • The dml_locks init.ora parameter must have a nonzero value (as its default value does).

    (This is also a prerequisite for receiving notifications.)

Note:

For QRCN support, the COMPATIBLE setting of the database must be at least 11.0.0.

15.7.4 Queries that Can Be Registered for Object Change Notification (OCN)

Most queries can be registered for OCN, including those executed as part of stored procedures and REF cursors.

Queries that cannot be registered for OCN are:

  • Queries on fixed tables or fixed views

  • Queries on user views

  • Queries that contain database links (dblinks)

  • Queries over materialized views

Note:

You can use synonyms in OCN registrations, but not in QRCN registrations.

15.7.5 Queries that Can Be Registered for Query Result Change Notification (QRCN)

Some queries can be registered for QRCN in guaranteed mode, some can be registered for QRCN only in best-effort mode, and some cannot be registered for QRCN in either mode. (For information about modes, see Section 15.2.1 and Section 15.2.2.)

Topics:

15.7.5.1 Queries that Can Be Registered for QRCN in Guaranteed Mode

To be registered for QRCN in guaranteed mode, a query must conform to these rules:

  • Every column that it references is either a NUMBER data type or a VARCHAR2 data type.

  • Arithmetic operators in column expressions are limited to these binary operators, and their operands are columns with numeric data types:

    • + (addition)

    • - (subtraction, not unary minus)

    • * (multiplication)

    • / (division)

  • Comparison operators in the predicate are limited to:

    • < (less than)

    • <= (less than or equal to)

    • = (equal to)

    • >= (greater than or equal to)

    • > (greater than)

    • <> or != (not equal to)

    • IS NULL

    • IS NOT NULL

  • Boolean operators in the predicate are limited to AND, OR, and NOT.

  • The query contains no aggregate functions (such as SUM, COUNT, AVERAGE, MIN, and MAX).

    For a list of SQL aggregate functions, see Oracle Database SQL Language Reference.

Guaranteed mode supports most queries on single tables and some inner equijoins, such as:

SELECT SALARY FROM EMPLOYEES, DEPARTMENTS
  WHERE EMPLOYEES.DEPARTMENT_ID = DEPARTMENTS.DEPARTMENT_ID
    AND DEPARTMENTS.LOCATION_ID = 1700;

Notes:

  • Sometimes the query optimizer uses an execution plan that makes a query incompatible for guaranteed mode (for example, OR-expansion). For information about the query optimizer, see Oracle Database SQL Tuning Guide.

  • Queries that can be registered in guaranteed mode can also be registered in best-effort mode, but results might differ, because best-effort mode can cause false positives even for queries that CQN does not simplify. For details, see Section 15.2.2.

15.7.5.2 Queries that Can Be Registered for QRCN Only in Best-Effort Mode

A query that does any of the following can be registered for QRCN only in best-effort mode, and its simplified version generates notifications at object granularity:

  • Refers to columns that have encryption enabled

  • Has more than 10 items of the same type in the SELECT list

  • Has expressions that include any of these:

    • String functions (such as SUBSTR, LTRIM, and RTRIM)

    • Arithmetic functions (such as TRUNC, ABS, and SQRT)

      For a list of SQL functions, see Oracle Database SQL Language Reference.

    • Pattern-matching conditions LIKE and REGEXP_LIKE

    • EXISTS or NOT EXISTS condition

  • Has disjunctions involving predicates defined on columns from different tables. For example:

    SELECT EMPLOYEE_ID, DEPARTMENT_ID
      FROM EMPLOYEES, DEPARTMENTS
        WHERE EMPLOYEES.EMPLOYEE_ID = 10
          OR DEPARTMENTS.DEPARTMENT_ID = 'IT';
    
  • Has user rowid access. For example:

    SELECT DEPARTMENT_ID
      FROM DEPARTMENTS
        WHERE ROWID = 'AAANkdAABAAALinAAF';
    
  • Has any join other than an inner join

  • Has an execution plan that involves any of these:

    • Bitmap join, domain, or function-based indexes

    • UNION ALL or CONCATENATION

      (Either in the query itself, or as the result of an OR-expansion execution plan chosen by the query optimizer.)

    • ORDER BY or GROUP BY

      (Either in the query itself, or as the result of a SORT operation with an ORDER BY option in the execution plan chosen by the query optimizer.)

    • Partitioned index-organized table (IOT) with overflow segment

    • Clustered objects

    • Parallel execution

15.7.5.3 Queries that Cannot Be Registered for QRCN in Either Mode

A query that refers to any of the following cannot be registered for QRCN in either guaranteed or best-effort mode:

  • Views

  • Tables that are fixed, remote, or have Virtual Private Database (VPD) policies enabled

  • DUAL (in the SELECT list)

  • Synonyms

  • Calls to user-defined PL/SQL subprograms

  • Operators not listed in Section 15.7.5.1

  • The aggregate function COUNT

    (Other aggregate functions are allowed in best-effort mode, but not in guaranteed mode.)

  • Application contexts; for example:

    SELECT SALARY FROM EMPLOYEES
    WHERE USER = SYS_CONTEXT('USERENV', 'SESSION_USER');
    
  • SYSDATE, SYSTIMESTAMP, or CURRENT TIMESTAMP

Also, a query that the query optimizer has rewritten using a materialized view cannot be registered for QRCN. For information about the query optimizer, see Oracle Database SQL Tuning Guide.

15.7.6 Using PL/SQL to Register Queries for CQN

To use PL/SQL to create a CQN registration, follow these steps:

  1. Create a stored PL/SQL procedure to serve as the notification handler.

  2. Create a CQ_NOTIFICATION$_REG_INFO object that specifies the name of the notification handler, the notification type, and other attributes of the registration.

  3. In your client application, use the DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.NEW_REG_START function to open a registration block.

  4. Run the queries to register. (Do not run DML or DDL operations.)

  5. Close the registration block, using the DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.REG_END function.

Topics:

See Also:

Oracle Database PL/SQL Packages and Types Reference for more information about the CQ_NOTIFICATION$_REG_INFO object and the functions NEW_REG_START and REG_END, all of which are defined in the DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION package

15.7.6.1 Creating a PL/SQL Notification Handler

The PL/SQL stored procedure that you create to serve as the notification handler must have this signature:

PROCEDURE schema_name.proc_name(ntfnds IN CQ_NOTIFICATION$_DESCRIPTOR)

In the preceding signature, schema_name is the name of the database schema, proc_name is the name of the stored procedure, and ntfnds is the notification descriptor.

The notification descriptor is a CQ_NOTIFICATION$_DESCRIPTOR object, whose attributes describe the details of the change (transaction ID, type of change, queries affected, tables modified, and so on).

The JOBQ process passes the notification descriptor, ntfnds, to the notification handler, proc_name, which handles the notification according to its application requirements. (This is step 6 in Figure 15-2.)

Note:

The notification handler runs inside a job queue process. The JOB_QUEUE_PROCESSES initialization parameter specifies the maximum number of processes that can be created for the execution of jobs. You must set JOB_QUEUE_PROCESSES to a nonzero value to receive PL/SQL notifications.

15.7.6.2 Creating a CQ_NOTIFICATION$_REG_INFO Object

An object of type CQ_NOTIFICATION$_REG_INFO specifies the notification handler that the database runs when a registered objects changes. In SQL*Plus, you can view its type attributes by running this statement:

DESC CQ_NOTIFICATION$_REG_INFO

Table 15-2 describes the attributes of SYS.CQ_NOTIFICATION$_REG_INFO.

Table 15-2 Attributes of CQ_NOTIFICATION$_REG_INFO

Attribute Description

CALLBACK

Specifies the name of the PL/SQL procedure to be executed when a notification is generated (a notification handler). You must specify the name in the form schema_name.procedure_name, for example, hr.dcn_callback.

QOSFLAGS

Specifies one or more quality-of-service flags, which are constants in the DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION package. For their names and descriptions, see Table 15-3.

To specify multiple quality-of-service flags, use bitwise OR. For example: DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.QOS_RELIABLE + DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.QOS_ROWIDS

TIMEOUT

Specifies the timeout period for registrations. If set to a nonzero value, it specifies the time in seconds after which the database purges the registration. If 0 or NULL, then the registration persists until the client explicitly deregisters it.

Can be combined with the QOSFLAGS attribute with its QOS_DEREG_NFY flag.

OPERATIONS_FILTER

Applies only to OCN (described in Section 15.1). Has no effect if you specify the QOS_FLAGS attribute with its QOS_QUERY flag.

Filters messages based on types of SQL statement. You can specify these constants in the DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION package:

  • ALL_OPERATIONS notifies on all changes

  • INSERTOP notifies on inserts

  • UPDATEOP notifies on updates

  • DELETEOP notifies on deletes

  • ALTEROP notifies on ALTER TABLE operations

  • DROPOP notifies on DROP TABLE operations

  • UNKNOWNOP notifies on unknown operations

You can specify a combination of operations with a bitwise OR. For example: DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.INSERTOP + DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.DELETEOP.

TRANSACTION_LAG

Deprecated. To implement flow-of-control notifications, use the NTFN_GROUPING_* attributes.

Applies only to OCN (described in Section 15.1). Has no effect if you specify the QOS_FLAGS attribute with its QOS_QUERY flag.

Specifies the number of transactions or database changes by which the client can lag behind the database. If 0, then the client receives an invalidation message as soon as it is generated. If 5, then every fifth transaction that changes a registered object results in a notification. The database tracks intervening changes at an object granularity and bundles the changes along with the notification. Thus, the client does not lose intervening changes.

Most applications that must be notified of changes to an object on transaction commit without further deferral are expected to chose 0 transaction lag. A nonzero transaction lag is useful only if an application implements flow control on notifications. When using nonzero transaction lag, Oracle recommends that the application workload has the property that notifications are generated at a reasonable frequency. Otherwise, notifications might be deferred indefinitely till the lag is satisfied.

If you specify TRANSACTION_LAG, then the ROWID level granularity is unavailable in the notification messages even if you specified QOS_ROWIDS during registration.

NTFN_GROUPING_CLASS

Specifies the class by which to group notifications. The only allowed value is DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.NTFN_GROUPING_CLASS_TIME, which groups notifications by time.

NTFN_GROUPING_VALUE

Specifies the time interval that defines the group, in seconds. For example, if this value is 900, notifications generated in the same 15-minute interval are grouped.

NTFN_GROUPING_TYPE

Specifies either of these types of grouping:

  • DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.NTFN_GROUPING_TYPE_SUMMARY: All notifications in the group are summarized into a single notification.

  • DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.NTFN_GROUPING_TYPE_LAST: Only the last notification in the group is published and the earlier ones discarded.

NTFN_GROUPING_START_TIME

Specifies when to start generating notifications. If specified as NULL, it defaults to the current system-generated time.

NTFN_GROUPING_REPEAT_COUNT

Specifies how many times to repeat the notification. Set to DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.NTFN_GROUPING_FOREVER to receive notifications for the life of the registration. To receive at most n notifications during the life of the registration, set to n.


The quality-of-service flags in Table 15-3 are constants in the DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION package. You can specify them with the QOS_FLAGS attribute of CQ_NOTIFICATION$_REG_INFO (see Table 15-2).

Table 15-3 Quality-of-Service Flags

Flag Description

QOS_DEREG_NFY

Purges the registration after the first notification.

QOS_RELIABLE

Stores notifications in a persistent database queue.

In an Oracle RAC environment, if a database instance fails, surviving database instances can deliver any queued notification messages.

Default: Notifications are stored in shared memory, which performs more efficiently.

QOS_ROWIDS

Includes the ROWID of each changed row in the notification.

QOS_QUERY

Registers queries for QRCN, described in Section 15.2.

If a query cannot be registered for QRCN, an error is generated at registration time, unless you also specify QOS_BEST_EFFORT.

Default: Queries are registered for OCN, described in Section 15.1

QOS_BEST_EFFORT

Used with QOS_QUERY. Registers simplified versions of queries that are too complex for query result change evaluation; in other words, registers queries for QRCN in best-effort mode, described in Section 15.2.2.

To see which queries were simplified, query the static data dictionary view DBA_CQ_NOTIFICATION_QUERIES or USER_CQ_NOTIFICATION_QUERIES. These views give the QUERYID and the text of each registered query.

Default: Queries are registered for QRCN in guaranteed mode, described in Section 15.2.1


Suppose that you must invoke the procedure HR.dcn_callback whenever a registered object changes. In Example 15-4, you create a CQ_NOTIFICATION$_REG_INFO object that specifies that HR.dcn_callback receives notifications. To create the object you must have EXECUTE privileges on the DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION package.

Example 15-4 Creating a CQ_NOTIFICATION$_REG_INFO Object

DECLARE
  v_cn_addr CQ_NOTIFICATION$_REG_INFO;

BEGIN
  -- Create object:

  v_cn_addr := CQ_NOTIFICATION$_REG_INFO (
    'HR.dcn_callback',                 -- PL/SQL notification handler
    DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.QOS_QUERY     -- notification type QRCN
    + DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.QOS_ROWIDS, -- include rowids of changed objects
    0,                          -- registration persists until unregistered
    0,                          -- notify on all operations
    0                           -- notify immediately
    );

  -- Register queries: ...
END;
/

15.7.6.3 Identifying Individual Queries in a Notification

Any query in a registered list of queries can cause a continuous query notification. To know when a certain query causes a notification, use the DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.CQ_NOTIFICATION_QUERYID function in the SELECT list of that query. For example:

SELECT EMPLOYEE_ID, SALARY, DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.CQ_NOTIFICATION_QUERYID
FROM EMPLOYEES
WHERE DEPARTMENT_ID = 10;

Result:

EMPLOYEE_ID     SALARY CQ_NOTIFICATION_QUERYID
----------- ---------- -----------------------
        200       2800                       0
 
1 row selected.

When that query causes a notification, the notification includes the query ID.

15.7.6.4 Adding Queries to an Existing Registration

To add queries to an existing registration, follow these steps:

  1. Retrieve the registration ID of the existing registration.

    You can retrieve it from either saved output or a query of *_CHANGE_NOTIFICATION_REGS.

  2. Open the existing registration by calling the procedure DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.ENABLE_REG with the registration ID as the parameter.

  3. Run the queries to register. (Do not run DML or DDL operations.)

  4. Close the registration, using the DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.REG_END function.

Example 15-5 adds a query to an existing registration whose registration ID is 21.

Example 15-5 Adding a Query to an Existing Registration

DECLARE
  v_cursor SYS_REFCURSOR;

BEGIN
  -- Open existing registration
  DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.ENABLE_REG(21);
  OPEN v_cursor FOR
    -- Run query to be registered
    SELECT DEPARTMENT_ID
      FROM HR.DEPARTMENTS;  -- register this query
  CLOSE v_cursor;
  -- Close registration
  DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.REG_END;
END;
/

15.7.7 Best Practices for CQN Registrations

For best CQN performance, follow these registration guidelines:

  • Register few queries—preferably those that reference objects that rarely change.

    Extremely volatile registered objects cause numerous notifications, whose overhead slows OLTP throughput.

  • Minimize the number of duplicate registrations of any given object, to avoid replicating a notification message for multiple recipients.

15.7.8 Troubleshooting CQN Registrations

If you are unable to create a registration, or if you have created a registration but are not receiving the notifications that you expected, the problem might be one of these:

  • The JOB_QUEUE_PROCESSES parameter is not set to a nonzero value.

    This prevents you from receiving PL/SQL notifications through the notification handler.

  • You were connected as a SYS user when you created the registrations.

    You must be connected as a non-SYS user to create CQN registrations.

  • You changed a registered object, but did not commit the transaction.

    Notifications are generated only when the transaction commits.

  • The registrations were not successfully created in the database.

    To check, query the static data dictionary view *_CHANGE_NOTIFICATION_REGS. For example, this statement displays all registrations and registered objects for the current user:

    SELECT REGID, TABLE_NAME FROM USER_CHANGE_NOTIFICATION_REGS;
    
  • Runtime errors occurred during the execution of the notification handler.

    If so, they were logged to the trace file of the JOBQ process that tried to run the procedure. The name of the trace file usually has this form:

    ORACLE_SID_jnumber_PID.trc
    

    For example, if the ORACLE_SID is dbs1 and the process ID (PID) of the JOBQ process is 12483, the name of the trace file is usually dbs1_j000_12483.trc.

    Suppose that a registration is created with 'chnf_callback' as the notification handler and registration ID 100. Suppose that 'chnf_callback' was not defined in the database. Then the JOBQ trace file might contain a message of the form:

    ****************************************************************************
       Runtime error during execution of PL/SQL cbk chnf_callback for reg CHNF100.
       Error in PLSQL notification of msgid:
       Queue :
       Consumer Name :
       PLSQL function :chnf_callback
       Exception Occured, Error msg:
       ORA-00604: error occurred at recursive SQL level 2
       ORA-06550: line 1, column 7: 
       PLS-00201: identifier 'CHNF_CALLBACK' must be declared
       ORA-06550: line 1, column 7:
       PL/SQL: Statement ignored
    ****************************************************************************
    

    If runtime errors occurred during the execution of the notification handler, create a very simple version of the notification handler to verify that you are receiving notifications, and then gradually add application logic.

    An example of a very simple notification handler is:

    REM Create table in HR schema to hold count of notifications received.
    CREATE TABLE nfcount(cnt NUMBER);
    INSERT INTO nfcount (cnt) VALUES(0);
    COMMIT;
    CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE chnf_callback
      (ntfnds IN CQ_NOTIFICATION$_DESCRIPTOR)
    IS
    BEGIN
      UPDATE nfcount SET cnt = cnt+1;
      COMMIT;
    END;
    /
    
  • There is a time lag between the commit of a transaction and the notification received by the end user.

15.7.9 Deleting Registrations

To delete a registration, call the procedure DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.DEREGISTER with the registration ID as the parameter. For example, this statement deregisters the registration whose registration ID is 21:

DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.DEREGISTER(21);

Only the user who created the registration or the SYS user can deregister it.

15.7.10 Configuring CQN: Scenario

In this scenario, you are a developer who manages a web application that provides employee data: name, location, phone number, and so on. The application, which runs on Oracle Application Server, is heavily used and processes frequent queries of the HR.EMPLOYEES and HR.DEPARTMENTS tables in the back-end database. Because these tables change relatively infrequently, the application can improve performance by caching the query results. Caching avoids a round trip to the back-end database and server-side execution latency.

You can use the DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION package to register queries based on HR.EMPLOYEES and HR.DEPARTMENTS tables. To configure CQN, you follow these steps:

  1. Create a server-side PL/SQL stored procedure to process the notifications, as instructed in Section 15.7.10.1.

  2. Register the queries on the HR.EMPLOYEES and HR.DEPARTMENTS tables for QRCN, as instructed in Section 15.7.10.2.

After you complete these steps, any committed change to the result of a query registered in step 2 causes the notification handler created in step 1 to notify the web application of the change, whereupon the web application refreshes the cache by querying the back-end database.

Topics:

15.7.10.1 Creating a PL/SQL Notification Handler

Create a server-side stored PL/SQL procedure to process notifications as follows:

  1. Connect to the database AS SYSDBA.

  2. Grant the required privileges to HR:

    GRANT EXECUTE ON DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION TO HR;
    GRANT CHANGE NOTIFICATION TO HR;
    
  3. Enable the JOB_QUEUE_PROCESSES parameter to receive notifications:

    ALTER SYSTEM SET "JOB_QUEUE_PROCESSES"=4;
    
  4. Connect to the database as a non-SYS user (such as HR).

  5. Create database tables to hold records of notification events received:

    -- Create table to record notification events.
    DROP TABLE nfevents;
    CREATE TABLE nfevents (
      regid      NUMBER,
      event_type NUMBER
    );
    
    -- Create table to record notification queries:
    DROP TABLE nfqueries;
    CREATE TABLE nfqueries (
      qid NUMBER,
      qop NUMBER
    );
    
    -- Create table to record changes to registered tables:
    DROP TABLE nftablechanges;
    CREATE TABLE nftablechanges (
      qid             NUMBER,
      table_name      VARCHAR2(100),
      table_operation NUMBER
    );
    
    -- Create table to record ROWIDs of changed rows:
    DROP TABLE nfrowchanges;
    CREATE TABLE nfrowchanges (
      qid        NUMBER,
      table_name VARCHAR2(100),
      row_id     VARCHAR2(2000)
    );
    
  6. Create the procedure HR.chnf_callback, as shown in Example 15-6.

Example 15-6 Creating Server-Side PL/SQL Notification Handler

CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE chnf_callback (
  ntfnds IN CQ_NOTIFICATION$_DESCRIPTOR
)
IS
  regid           NUMBER;
  tbname          VARCHAR2(60);
  event_type      NUMBER;
  numtables       NUMBER;
  operation_type  NUMBER;
  numrows         NUMBER;
  row_id          VARCHAR2(2000);
  numqueries      NUMBER;
  qid             NUMBER;
  qop             NUMBER;

BEGIN
  regid := ntfnds.registration_id;
  event_type := ntfnds.event_type;

  INSERT INTO nfevents (regid, event_type)
  VALUES (chnf_callback.regid, chnf_callback.event_type);

  numqueries :=0;

  IF (event_type = DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.EVENT_QUERYCHANGE) THEN
    numqueries := ntfnds.query_desc_array.count;

    FOR i IN 1..numqueries LOOP  -- loop over queries
      qid := ntfnds.query_desc_array(i).queryid;
      qop := ntfnds.query_desc_array(i).queryop;

      INSERT INTO nfqueries (qid, qop)
      VALUES(chnf_callback.qid, chnf_callback.qop);

      numtables := 0;
      numtables := ntfnds.query_desc_array(i).table_desc_array.count;

      FOR j IN 1..numtables LOOP  -- loop over tables
        tbname :=
          ntfnds.query_desc_array(i).table_desc_array(j).table_name;
        operation_type :=
          ntfnds.query_desc_array(i).table_desc_array(j).Opflags;

        INSERT INTO nftablechanges (qid, table_name, table_operation) 
        VALUES (
          chnf_callback.qid,
          tbname,
          operation_type
        );

        IF (bitand(operation_type, DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.ALL_ROWS) = 0) THEN
          numrows := ntfnds.query_desc_array(i).table_desc_array(j).numrows;
        ELSE
          numrows :=0;  -- ROWID info not available
        END IF;

        -- Body of loop does not run when numrows is zero.
        FOR k IN 1..numrows LOOP  -- loop over rows
          Row_id :=
 ntfnds.query_desc_array(i).table_desc_array(j).row_desc_array(k).row_id;

          INSERT INTO nfrowchanges (qid, table_name, row_id)
          VALUES (chnf_callback.qid, tbname, chnf_callback.Row_id);

        END LOOP;  -- loop over rows
      END LOOP;  -- loop over tables
    END LOOP;  -- loop over queries
  END IF;
  COMMIT;
END;
/

15.7.10.2 Registering the Queries

After creating the notification handler, you register the queries for which you want to receive notifications, specifying HR.chnf_callback as the notification handler, as in Example 15-7.

Example 15-7 Registering a Query

DECLARE
  reginfo   CQ_NOTIFICATION$_REG_INFO;
  mgr_id    NUMBER;
  dept_id   NUMBER;
  v_cursor  SYS_REFCURSOR;
  regid     NUMBER;

BEGIN
  /* Register two queries for QRNC: */
  /* 1. Construct registration information.
        chnf_callback is name of notification handler.
        QOS_QUERY specifies result-set-change notifications. */

  reginfo := cq_notification$_reg_info (
    'chnf_callback',
    DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.QOS_QUERY,
    0, 0, 0
  );

  /* 2. Create registration. */

  regid := DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.new_reg_start(reginfo);

  OPEN v_cursor FOR
    SELECT dbms_cq_notification.CQ_NOTIFICATION_QUERYID, manager_id
    FROM HR.EMPLOYEES
    WHERE employee_id = 7902;
  CLOSE v_cursor;

  OPEN v_cursor FOR
    SELECT dbms_cq_notification.CQ_NOTIFICATION_QUERYID, department_id
    FROM HR.departments
    WHERE department_name = 'IT';
  CLOSE v_cursor;

  DBMS_CQ_NOTIFICATION.reg_end;
END;
/

View the newly created registration:

SELECT queryid, regid, TO_CHAR(querytext)
FROM user_cq_notification_queries;

Result is similar to:

QUERYID REGID                               TO_CHAR(QUERYTEXT)
------- ----- ------------------------------------------------
     22    41 SELECT HR.DEPARTMENTS.DEPARTMENT_ID
                FROM HR.DEPARTMENTS
                  WHERE HR.DEPARTMENTS.DEPARTMENT_NAME  = 'IT'

     21    41 SELECT HR.EMPLOYEES.MANAGER_ID
                FROM HR.EMPLOYEES
                  WHERE HR.EMPLOYEES.EMPLOYEE_ID  = 7902

Run this transaction, which changes the result of the query with QUERYID 22:

UPDATE DEPARTMENTS
SET DEPARTMENT_NAME = 'FINANCE'
WHERE department_name = 'IT';

The notification procedure chnf_callback (which you created in Example 15-6) runs.

Query the table in which notification events are recorded:

SELECT * FROM nfevents;

Result is similar to:

REGID EVENT_TYPE
----- ----------
   61          7

EVENT_TYPE 7 corresponds to EVENT_QUERYCHANGE (query result change).

Query the table in which changes to registered tables are recorded:

SELECT * FROM nftablechanges;

Result is similar to:

REGID     TABLE_NAME TABLE_OPERATION
----- -------------- ---------------
   42 HR.DEPARTMENTS               4

TABLE_OPERATION 4 corresponds to UPDATEOP (update operation).

Query the table in which ROWIDs of changed rows are recorded:

SELECT * FROM nfrowchanges;

Result is similar to:

REGID     TABLE_NAME              ROWID
----- -------------- ------------------
   61 HR.DEPARTMENTS AAANkdAABAAALinAAF

15.8 Using OCI to Create CQN Registrations

This section describes using OCI to create CQN registrations. When you use OCI, the notification handler is a client-side C callback procedure.

Topics

See Also:

Oracle Call Interface Programmer's Guide for more information about publish-subscribe notification in OCI

15.8.1 Using OCI for Query Result Set Notifications

To record QOS (quality of service flags) specific to continuous query (CQ) notifications, set the attribute OCI_ATTR_SUBSCR_CQ_QOSFLAGS on the subscription handle OCI_HTYPE_SUBSCR. To request that the registration is at query granularity, as opposed to object granularity, set the OCI_SUBSCR_CQ_QOS_QUERY flag bit on the attribute OCI_ATTR_SUBSCR_CQ_QOSFLAGS.

The pseudocolumn CQ_NOTIFICATION_QUERY_ID can be optionally specified to retrieve the query ID of a registered query. This does not automatically convert the granularity to query level. The value of the pseudocolumn on return is set to the unique query ID assigned to the query. The query ID pseudocolumn can be omitted for OCI-based registrations, in which case the query ID is returned as a READ attribute of the statement handle. (This attribute is called OCI_ATTR_CQ_QUERYID).

During notifications, the client-specified callback is invoked and the top-level notification descriptor is passed as an argument.

Information about the query IDs of the changed queries is conveyed through a special descriptor type called OCI_DTYPE_CQDES. A collection (OCIColl) of query descriptors is embedded inside the top-level notification descriptor. Each descriptor is of type OCI_DTYPE_CQDES. The query descriptor has the following attributes:

  • OCI_ATTR_CQDES_OPERATION - can be one of OCI_EVENT_QUERYCHANGE or OCI_EVENT_DEREG.

  • OCI_ATTR_CQDES_QUERYID - query ID of the changed query.

  • OCI_ATTR_CQDES_TABLE_CHANGES - array of table descriptors describing DML operations on tables that led to the query result set change. Each table descriptor is of the type OCI_DTYPE_TABLE_CHDES.

15.8.2 Using OCI to Register a Continuous Query Notification

The calling session must have the CHANGE NOTIFICATION system privilege and SELECT privileges on all objects that it attempts to register. A registration is a persistent entity that is recorded in the database, and is visible to all instances of Oracle RAC. If the registration was at query granularity, transactions that cause the query result set to change and commit in any instance of Oracle RAC generate notification.If the registration was at object granularity, transactions that modify registered objects in any instance of Oracle RAC generate notification.

Queries involving materialized views or nonmaterialized views are not supported.

The registration interface employs a callback to respond to changes in underlying objects of a query and uses a namespace extension (DBCHANGE) to AQ.

The steps in writing the registration are:

  1. Create the environment in OCI_EVENTS and OCI_OBJECT mode.

  2. Set the subscription handle attribute OCI_ATTR_SUBSCR_NAMESPACE to namespace OCI_SUBSCR_NAMESPACE_DBCHANGE.

  3. Set the subscription handle attribute OCI_ATTR_SUBSCR_CALLBACK to store the OCI callback associated with the query handle. The callback has the following prototype:

    void notification_callback (void *ctx, OCISubscription *subscrhp, 
                                void *payload, ub4 paylen, void *desc, ub4 mode);
    

    The parameters are described in "Notification Callback in OCI" in Oracle Call Interface Programmer's Guide.

  4. Optionally associate a client-specific context using OCI_ATTR_SUBSCR_CTX attribute.

  5. Set the OCI_ATTR_SUBSCR_TIMEOUT attribute to specify a ub4 timeout interval in seconds. If it is not set, there is no timeout.

  6. Set the OCI_ATTR_SUBSCR_QOSFLAGS attribute, the QOS (quality of service) levels, with the following values:

    • The OCI_SUBSCR_QOS_PURGE_ON_NTFN flag allows the registration to be purged on the first notification.

    • The OCI_SUBSCR_QOS_RELIABLE flag allows notifications to be persistent. You can use surviving instances of Oracle RAC to send and retrieve continuous query notification messages, even after a node failure, because invalidations associated with this registration are queued persistently into the database. If FALSE, then invalidations are enqueued into a fast in-memory queue. This option describes the persistence of notifications and not the persistence of registrations. Registrations are automatically persistent by default.

  7. Call OCISubscriptionRegister() to create a new registration in the DBCHANGE namespace.

  8. Associate multiple query statements with the subscription handle by setting the attribute OCI_ATTR_CHNF_REGHANDLE of the statement handle, OCI_HTYPE_STMT. The registration is completed when the query is executed.

    See Also:

    Oracle Call Interface Programmer's Guide for more information about OCI_ATTR_CHNF_REGHANDLE
  9. Optionally unregister a subscription. The client can call the OCISubscriptionRegister() function with the subscription handle as a parameter.

A binding of a statement handle to a subscription handle is valid only for only the first execution of a query. If the application must use the same OCI statement handle for subsequent executions, it must repopulate the registration handle attribute of the statement handle. A binding of a subscription handle to a statement handle is permitted only when the statement is a query (determined at execute time). If a DML statement is executed as part of the execution, then an exception is issued.

15.8.3 Using OCI Subscription Handle Attributes for Continuous Query Notification

The subscription handle attributes for continuous query notification can be divided into generic attributes (common to all subscriptions) and namespace-specific attributes (particular to continuous query notification).

The WRITE attributes on the statement handle can be modified only before the registration is created.

Generic Attributes - Common to All Subscriptions

OCI_ATTR_SUBSCR_NAMESPACE (WRITE) - Set this attribute to OCI_SUBSCR_NAMESPACE_DBCHANGE for subscription handles.

OCI_ATTR_SUBSCR_CALLBACK (WRITE) - Use this attribute to store the callback associated with the subscription handle. The callback is executed when a notification is received.

When a new continuous query notification message becomes available, the callback is invoked in the listener thread with desc pointing to a descriptor of type OCI_DTYPE_CHDES that contains detailed information about the invalidation.

OCI_ATTR_SUBSCR_QOSFLAGS - This attribute is a generic flag with the following values:

#define OCI_SUBSCR_QOS_RELIABLE             0x01                 /* reliable */
#define OCI_SUBSCR_QOS_PURGE_ON_NTFN        0x10      /* purge on first ntfn */
  • OCI_SUBSCR_QOS_RELIABLE - Set this bit to allow notifications to be persistent. Therefore, you can use surviving instances of an Oracle RAC cluster to send and retrieve invalidation messages, even after a node failure, because invalidations associated with this registration ID are queued persistently into the database. If this bit is FALSE, then invalidations are enqueued in to a fast in-memory queue. This option describes the persistence of notifications and not the persistence of registrations. Registrations are automatically persistent by default.

  • OCI_SUBSCR_QOS_PURGE_ON_NTFN - Set this bit to allow the registration to be purged on the first notification.

A parallel example is presented in Oracle Call Interface Programmer's Guide in publish-subscribe registration functions in OCI.

OCI_ATTR_SUBSCR_CQ_QOSFLAGS - This attribute describes the continuous query notification-specific QOS flags (mode is WRITE, data type is ub4), which are:

  • 0x1 OCI_SUBSCR_CQ_QOS_QUERY - Set this flag to indicate that query-level granularity is required. Generate notification only if the query result set changes. By default, this level of QOS has no false positives.

  • 0x2 OCI_SUBSCR_CQ_QOS_BEST_EFFORT - Set this flag to indicate that best effort filtering is acceptable. It can be used by caching applications. The database can use heuristics based on cost of evaluation and avoid full pruning in some cases.

OCI_ATTR_SUBSCR_TIMEOUT - Use this attribute to specify a ub4 timeout value defined in seconds. If the timeout value is 0 or not specified, then the registration is active until explicitly unregistered.

Namespace- Specific or Feature-Specific Attributes

The following attributes are namespace-specific or feature-specific to the continuous query notification feature.

OCI_ATTR_CHNF_TABLENAMES (data type is (OCIColl *)) - These attributes are provided to retrieve the list of table names that were registered. These attributes are available from the subscription handle, after the query is executed.

OCI_ATTR_CHNF_ROWIDS - A Boolean attribute (default FALSE). If TRUE, then the continuous query notification message includes row-level details such as operation type and ROWID.

OCI_ATTR_CHNF_OPERATIONS - Use this ub4 flag to selectively filter notifications based on operation type. This option is ignored if the registration is of query-level granularity. Flags stored are:

  • OCI_OPCODE_ALL - All operations

  • OCI_OPCODE_INSERT - Insert operations on the table

  • OCI_OPCODE_UPDATE - Update operations on the table

  • OCI_OPCODE_DELETE - Delete operations on the table

OCI_ATTR_CHNF_CHANGELAG - The client can use this ub4 value to specify the number of transactions by which the client is willing to lag behind. The client can also use this option as a throttling mechanism for continuous query notification messages. When you choose this option, ROWID-level granularity of information is unavailable in the notifications, even if OCI_ATTR_CHNF_ROWIDS was TRUE. This option is ignored if the registration is of query-level granularity.

After the OCISubscriptionRegister() call is invoked, none of the preceding attributes (generic, name-specific, or feature-specific) can be modified on the registration already created. Any attempt to modify those attributes is not reflected on the registration already created, but it does take effect on newly created registrations that use the same registration handle.

See Also:

Oracle Call Interface Programmer's Guide for more information about continuous query notification descriptor attributes

Notifications can be spaced out by using the grouping NTFN option. The relevant generic notification attributes are:

OCI_ATTR_SUBSCR_NTFN_GROUPING_VALUE
OCI_ATTR_SUBSCR_NTFN_GROUPING_TYPE
OCI_ATTR_SUBSCR_NTFN_GROUPING_START_TIME
OCI_ATTR_SUBSCR_NTFN_GROUPING_REPEAT_COUNT

See Also:

Oracle Call Interface Programmer's Guide for more details about these attributes in publish-subscribe register directly to the database

15.8.4 Using OCI_ATTR_CQ_QUERYID Attribute

The attribute OCI_ATTR_CQ_QUERYID on the statement handle, OCI_HTYPE_STMT, obtains the query ID of a registered query after registration is made by the call to OCIStmtExecute().

See Also:

Oracle Call Interface Programmer's Guide for more information about OCI_ATTR_CQ_QUERYID

15.8.5 Using OCI Continuous Query Notification Descriptors

The continuous query notification descriptor is passed into the desc parameter of the notification callback specified by the application. The following attributes are specific to continuous query notification. The OCI type constant of the continuous query notification descriptor is OCI_DTYPE_CHDES.

The notification callback receives the top-level notification descriptor, OCI_DTYPE_CHDES, as an argument. This descriptor in turn includes either a collection of OCI_DTYPE_CQDES or OCI_DTYPE_TABLE_CHDES descriptors based on whether the event type was OCI_EVENT_QUERYCHANGE or OCI_EVENT_OBJCHANGE. An array of table continuous query descriptors is embedded inside the continuous query descriptor for notifications of type OCI_EVENT_QUERYCHANGE. If ROWID level granularity of information was requested, each OCI_DTYPE_TABLE_CHDES contains an array of row-level continuous query descriptors (OCI_DTYPE_ROW_CHDES) corresponding to each modified ROWID.

15.8.5.1 OCI_DTYPE_CHDES

This is the top-level continuous query notification descriptor type.

OCI_ATTR_CHDES_DBNAME (oratext *) - Name of the database (source of the continuous query notification)

OCI_ATTR_CHDES_XID (RAW(8)) - Message ID of the message

OCI_ATTR_CHDES_NFYTYPE - Flags describing the notification type:

  • 0x0 OCI_EVENT_NONE - No further information about the continuous query notification

  • 0x1 OCI_EVENT_STARTUP - Instance startup

  • 0x2 OCI_EVENT_SHUTDOWN - Instance shutdown

  • 0x3 OCI_EVENT_SHUTDOWN_ANY - Any instance shutdown - Oracle Real Application Clusters (Oracle RAC)

  • 0x5 OCI_EVENT_DEREG - Unregistered or timed out

  • 0x6 OCI_EVENT_OBJCHANGE - Object change notification

  • 0x7 OCI_EVENT_QUERYCHANGE - Query change notification

OCI_ATTR_CHDES_TABLE_CHANGES - A collection type describing operations on tables of data type (OCIColl *). This attribute is present only if the OCI_ATTR_CHDES_NFTYPE attribute was of type OCI_EVENT_OBJCHANGE; otherwise, it is NULL. Each element of the collection is a table of continuous query descriptors of type OCI_DTYPE_TABLE_CHDES.

OCI_ATTR_CHDES_QUERIES - A collection type describing the queries that were invalidated. Each member of the collection is of type OCI_DTYPE_CQDES. This attribute is present only if the attribute OCI_ATTR_CHDES_NFTYPE was of type OCI_EVENT_QUERYCHANGE; otherwise, it is NULL.

15.8.5.1.1 OCI_DTYPE_CQDES

This notification descriptor describes a query that was invalidated, usually in response to the commit of a DML or a DDL transaction. It has the following attributes:

  • OCI_ATTR_CQDES_OPERATION (ub4, READ) - Operation that occurred on the query. It can be one of these values:

    • OCI_EVENT_QUERYCHANGE - Query result set change

    • OCI_EVENT_DEREG - Query unregistered

  • OCI_ATTR_CQDES_TABLE_CHANGES (OCIColl *, READ) - A collection of table continuous query descriptors describing DML or DDL operations on tables that caused the query result set change. Each element of the collection is of type OCI_DTYPE_TABLE_CHDES.

  • OCI_ATTR_CQDES_QUERYID (ub8, READ) - Query ID of the query that was invalidated.

15.8.5.1.2 OCI_DTYPE_TABLE_CHDES

This notification descriptor conveys information about changes to a table involved in a registered query. It has the following attributes:

  • OCI_ATTR_CHDES_TABLE_NAME (oratext *) - Schema annotated table name.

  • OCI_ATTR_CHDES_TABLE_OPFLAGS (ub4) - Flag field describing the operations on the table. Each of the following flag fields is in a separate bit position in the attribute:

    • 0x1 OCI_OPCODE_ALLROWS - The table is completely invalidated.

    • 0x2 OCI_OPCODE_INSERT - Insert operations on the table.

    • 0x4 OCI_OPCODE_UPDATE - Update operations on the table.

    • 0x8 OCI_OPCODE_DELETE - Delete operations on the table.

    • 0x10 OCI_OPCODE_ALTER - Table altered (schema change). This includes DDL statements and internal operations that cause row migration.

    • 0x20 OCI_OPCODE_DROP - Table dropped.

  • OCI_ATTR_CHDES_TABLE_ROW_CHANGES - This is an embedded collection describing the changes to the rows within the table. Each element of the collection is a row continuous query descriptor of type OCI_DTYPE_ROW_CHDES that has the following attributes:

    • OCI_ATTR_CHDES_ROW_ROWID (OraText *) - String representation of a ROWID.

    • OCI_ATTR_CHDES_ROW_OPFLAGS - Reflects the operation type: INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, or OTHER.

See Also:

Oracle Call Interface Programmer's Guide for more information about continuous query notification descriptor attributes

15.8.6 Demonstrating Continuous Query Notification in an OCI Sample Program

Example 15-8 is a simple OCI program, demoquery.c. See the comments in the listing. The calling session must have the CHANGE NOTIFICATION system privilege and SELECT privileges on all objects that it attempts to register.

Example 15-8 Program Listing That Demonstrates Continuous Query Notification

/* Copyright (c) 2010, Oracle. All rights reserved.  */
 
#ifndef S_ORACLE
# include <oratypes.h>
#endif
 
/**************************************************************************
 *This is a DEMO program. To test, compile the file to generate the executable
 *demoquery. Then demoquery can be invoked from a command prompt.
 *It will have the following output:
 
Initializing OCI Process
Registering query : select last_name, employees.department_id, department_name 
                     from employees, departments 
                     where employee_id = 200 
                     and employees.department_id = departments.department_id
Query Id 23
Waiting for Notifications

*Then from another session, log in as HR/HR and perform the following
* DML transactions. It will cause two notifications to be generated.
 
update departments set department_name ='Global Admin' where department_id=10;
commit;
update departments set department_name ='Administration' where department_id=10;
commit;

*The demoquery program will now show the following output corresponding
*to the notifications received.
 
 
Query 23 is changed
Table changed is HR.DEPARTMENTS table_op 4
Row changed is AAAMBoAABAAAKX2AAA row_op 4
Query 23 is changed
Table changed is HR.DEPARTMENTS table_op 4
Row changed is AAAMBoAABAAAKX2AAA row_op 4
 
 
*The demo program waits for exactly 10 notifications to be received before
*logging off and unregistering the subscription.
 
***************************************************************************/
 
/*---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                     PRIVATE TYPES AND CONSTANTS
  ---------------------------------------------------------------------------*/

/*---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                     STATIC FUNCTION DECLARATIONS 
  ---------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
 
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <oci.h>
 
#define MAXSTRLENGTH 1024
#define bit(a,b) ((a)&(b))
 
static int notifications_processed = 0;
static OCISubscription *subhandle1 = (OCISubscription *)0;
static OCISubscription *subhandle2 = (OCISubscription *)0;
static void checker(/*_ OCIError *errhp, sword status _*/);
static void registerQuery(/*_ OCISvcCtx *svchp, OCIError *errhp, OCIStmt *stmthp,
                           OCIEnv *envhp _*/);
static void myCallback (/*_  dvoid *ctx, OCISubscription *subscrhp, 
                        dvoid *payload, ub4 *payl, dvoid *descriptor, 
                        ub4 mode _*/);
static int NotificationDriver(/*_ int argc, char *argv[]  _*/);
static sword status;
static boolean logged_on = FALSE;
static void processRowChanges(OCIEnv *envhp, OCIError *errhp, OCIStmt *stmthp, 
                               OCIColl *row_changes);
static void processTableChanges(OCIEnv *envhp, OCIError *errhp,
                 OCIStmt *stmthp, OCIColl *table_changes);
static void processQueryChanges(OCIEnv *envhp, OCIError *errhp, OCIStmt *stmthp,
                 OCIColl *query_changes);
static int nonractests2(/*_ int argc, char *argv[] _*/);
 
 
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
 
  NotificationDriver(argc, argv);
  return 0;
}
 
 
int NotificationDriver(argc, argv)
int argc;
char *argv[];
{
  OCIEnv *envhp;
  OCISvcCtx *svchp, *svchp2;
  OCIError *errhp, *errhp2;
  OCISession *authp, *authp2;
  OCIStmt *stmthp, *stmthp2;
  OCIDuration dur, dur2;
  int i;
  dvoid *tmp;
  OCISession *usrhp;
  OCIServer *srvhp;
 
  printf("Initializing OCI Process\n");
/* Initialize the environment. The environment must be initialized
     with OCI_EVENTS and OCI_OBJECT to create a continuous query notification
     registration and receive notifications.
  */
  OCIEnvCreate( (OCIEnv **) &envhp, OCI_EVENTS|OCI_OBJECT, (dvoid *)0,
                    (dvoid * (*)(dvoid *, size_t)) 0,
                    (dvoid * (*)(dvoid *, dvoid *, size_t))0,
                    (void (*)(dvoid *, dvoid *)) 0,
                    (size_t) 0, (dvoid **) 0 );
 
  OCIHandleAlloc( (dvoid *) envhp, (dvoid **) &errhp, OCI_HTYPE_ERROR,
                         (size_t) 0, (dvoid **) 0);
   /* server contexts */
  OCIHandleAlloc((dvoid *) envhp, (dvoid **) &srvhp, OCI_HTYPE_SERVER, 
                 (size_t) 0, (dvoid **) 0);
  OCIHandleAlloc((dvoid *) envhp, (dvoid **) &svchp, OCI_HTYPE_SVCCTX,
                 (size_t) 0, (dvoid **) 0);
   checker(errhp,OCIServerAttach(srvhp, errhp, (text *) 0, (sb4) 0, 
                                 (ub4) OCI_DEFAULT));
  /* set attribute server context in the service context */
  OCIAttrSet( (dvoid *) svchp, (ub4) OCI_HTYPE_SVCCTX, (dvoid *)srvhp,
              (ub4) 0, (ub4) OCI_ATTR_SERVER, (OCIError *) errhp);
 
   /* allocate a user context handle */
  OCIHandleAlloc((dvoid *)envhp, (dvoid **)&usrhp, (ub4) OCI_HTYPE_SESSION,
                               (size_t) 0, (dvoid **) 0);
 
  OCIAttrSet((dvoid *)usrhp, (ub4)OCI_HTYPE_SESSION,
             (dvoid *)((text *)"HR"), (ub4)strlen((char *)"HR"), 
              OCI_ATTR_USERNAME, errhp);
 
 OCIAttrSet((dvoid *)usrhp, (ub4)OCI_HTYPE_SESSION,
            (dvoid *)((text *)"HR"), (ub4)strlen((char *)"HR"),  
             OCI_ATTR_PASSWORD, errhp);
   checker(errhp,OCISessionBegin (svchp, errhp, usrhp, OCI_CRED_RDBMS,
           OCI_DEFAULT));
   /* Allocate a statement handle */
  OCIHandleAlloc( (dvoid *) envhp, (dvoid **) &stmthp,
                                (ub4) OCI_HTYPE_STMT, 52, (dvoid **) &tmp);
 
  OCIAttrSet((dvoid *)svchp, (ub4)OCI_HTYPE_SVCCTX, (dvoid *)usrhp, (ub4)0,
                       OCI_ATTR_SESSION, errhp);
 
  registerQuery(svchp, errhp, stmthp, envhp);
  printf("Waiting for Notifications\n");
  while (notifications_processed !=10)
  {
    sleep(1);
  }
  printf ("Going to unregister HR\n");
  fflush(stdout);
  /* Unregister HR */
  checker(errhp,
           OCISubscriptionUnRegister(svchp, subhandle1, errhp, OCI_DEFAULT));
  checker(errhp, OCISessionEnd(svchp, errhp, usrhp, (ub4) 0));
   printf("HR Logged off.\n");
 
  if (subhandle1)
     OCIHandleFree((dvoid *)subhandle1, OCI_HTYPE_SUBSCRIPTION);
  if (stmthp)
     OCIHandleFree((dvoid *)stmthp, OCI_HTYPE_STMT);
  if (srvhp)
     OCIHandleFree((dvoid *) srvhp, (ub4) OCI_HTYPE_SERVER);
  if (svchp)
     OCIHandleFree((dvoid *) svchp, (ub4) OCI_HTYPE_SVCCTX);
  if (authp)
     OCIHandleFree((dvoid *) usrhp, (ub4) OCI_HTYPE_SESSION);
  if (errhp)
     OCIHandleFree((dvoid *) errhp, (ub4) OCI_HTYPE_ERROR);
  if (envhp)
     OCIHandleFree((dvoid *) envhp, (ub4) OCI_HTYPE_ENV);
 
 
  return 0;
 
}
 
void checker(errhp, status)
OCIError *errhp;
sword status;
{
  text errbuf[512];
  sb4 errcode = 0;
  int retval = 1;
 
  switch (status)
  {
  case OCI_SUCCESS:
    retval = 0;
    break;
  case OCI_SUCCESS_WITH_INFO:
    (void) printf("Error - OCI_SUCCESS_WITH_INFO\n");
    break;
 case OCI_NEED_DATA:
    (void) printf("Error - OCI_NEED_DATA\n");
    break;
  case OCI_NO_DATA:
    (void) printf("Error - OCI_NODATA\n");
    break;
  case OCI_ERROR:
    (void) OCIErrorGet((dvoid *)errhp, (ub4) 1, (text *) NULL, &errcode,
                        errbuf, (ub4) sizeof(errbuf), OCI_HTYPE_ERROR);
    (void) printf("Error - %.*s\n", 512, errbuf);
    break;
  case OCI_INVALID_HANDLE:
    (void) printf("Error - OCI_INVALID_HANDLE\n");
    break;
  case OCI_STILL_EXECUTING:
    (void) printf("Error - OCI_STILL_EXECUTE\n");
    break; 
  case OCI_CONTINUE:
    (void) printf("Error - OCI_CONTINUE\n");
    break; 
  default:
    break;
 }
  if (retval)
  {
    exit(1);
  }
}
 
 
void processRowChanges(OCIEnv *envhp, OCIError *errhp, OCIStmt *stmthp,
                         OCIColl *row_changes)
{
  dvoid **row_descp;
  dvoid *row_desc;
  boolean exist; 
  ub2 i, j;
  dvoid *elemind = (dvoid *)0;
  oratext *row_id;
  ub4 row_op;
 
 
   sb4 num_rows;
   if (!row_changes) return;
    checker(errhp, OCICollSize(envhp, errhp,
                    (CONST OCIColl *) row_changes, &num_rows));
    for (i=0; i<num_rows; i++)
    {
      checker(errhp, OCICollGetElem(envhp,
                     errhp, (OCIColl *) row_changes,
                     i, &exist, &row_descp, &elemind));
 
      row_desc = *row_descp;
      checker(errhp, OCIAttrGet (row_desc, 
                  OCI_DTYPE_ROW_CHDES, (dvoid *)&row_id,
                  NULL, OCI_ATTR_CHDES_ROW_ROWID, errhp));
      checker(errhp, OCIAttrGet (row_desc, 
                  OCI_DTYPE_ROW_CHDES, (dvoid *)&row_op, 
                  NULL, OCI_ATTR_CHDES_ROW_OPFLAGS, errhp));
 
      printf ("Row changed is %s row_op %d\n", row_id, row_op);
      fflush(stdout); 
    }  
}
 
void processTableChanges(OCIEnv *envhp, OCIError *errhp, OCIStmt *stmthp,
                         OCIColl *table_changes)
{
  dvoid **table_descp;
  dvoid *table_desc;
  dvoid **row_descp;
  dvoid *row_desc;
  OCIColl *row_changes = (OCIColl *)0;
  boolean exist; 
  ub2 i, j;
  dvoid *elemind = (dvoid *)0;
  oratext *table_name;
  ub4 table_op;
 
 
   sb4 num_tables;
   if (!table_changes) return;
    checker(errhp, OCICollSize(envhp, errhp,
                    (CONST OCIColl *) table_changes, &num_tables));
    for (i=0; i<num_tables; i++)
    {
      checker(errhp, OCICollGetElem(envhp,
                     errhp, (OCIColl *) table_changes,
                     i, &exist, &table_descp, &elemind));
 
      table_desc = *table_descp;
      checker(errhp, OCIAttrGet (table_desc, 
                  OCI_DTYPE_TABLE_CHDES, (dvoid *)&table_name,
                  NULL, OCI_ATTR_CHDES_TABLE_NAME, errhp));
      checker(errhp, OCIAttrGet (table_desc, 
                  OCI_DTYPE_TABLE_CHDES, (dvoid *)&table_op, 
                  NULL, OCI_ATTR_CHDES_TABLE_OPFLAGS, errhp));
      checker(errhp, OCIAttrGet (table_desc, 
                  OCI_DTYPE_TABLE_CHDES, (dvoid *)&row_changes, 
                  NULL, OCI_ATTR_CHDES_TABLE_ROW_CHANGES, errhp));
 
      printf ("Table changed is %s table_op %d\n", table_name,table_op);
      fflush(stdout); 
     if (!bit(table_op, OCI_OPCODE_ALLROWS))
       processRowChanges(envhp, errhp, stmthp, row_changes);
    }  
}
 
void processQueryChanges(OCIEnv *envhp, OCIError *errhp, OCIStmt *stmthp,
                         OCIColl *query_changes)
{
  sb4 num_queries;
  ub8 queryid;
  OCINumber qidnum;
  ub4 queryop;
  dvoid *elemind = (dvoid *)0;
  dvoid *query_desc;
  dvoid **query_descp;
  ub2 i;
  boolean exist;
  OCIColl *table_changes = (OCIColl *)0;
  
  if (!query_changes) return;
  checker(errhp, OCICollSize(envhp, errhp,
                     (CONST OCIColl *) query_changes, &num_queries));
  for (i=0; i < num_queries; i++)
  {
    checker(errhp, OCICollGetElem(envhp,
                     errhp, (OCIColl *) query_changes,
                     i, &exist, &query_descp, &elemind));
 
    query_desc = *query_descp;
    checker(errhp, OCIAttrGet (query_desc,
                  OCI_DTYPE_CQDES, (dvoid *)&queryid,
                  NULL, OCI_ATTR_CQDES_QUERYID, errhp));
    checker(errhp, OCIAttrGet (query_desc,
                  OCI_DTYPE_CQDES, (dvoid *)&queryop,
                  NULL, OCI_ATTR_CQDES_OPERATION, errhp));
    printf(" Query %d is changed\n", queryid);
    if (queryop == OCI_EVENT_DEREG)
      printf("Query Deregistered\n");
      checker(errhp, OCIAttrGet (query_desc,
                  OCI_DTYPE_CQDES, (dvoid *)&table_changes,
                  NULL, OCI_ATTR_CQDES_TABLE_CHANGES, errhp));
      processTableChanges(envhp, errhp, stmthp, table_changes);
 
 
   }
}
 
   
void myCallback (ctx, subscrhp, payload, payl, descriptor, mode)
dvoid *ctx;
OCISubscription *subscrhp;
dvoid *payload;
ub4 *payl; 
dvoid *descriptor;
ub4 mode;
{
  OCIColl *table_changes = (OCIColl *)0;
  OCIColl *row_changes = (OCIColl *)0;
  dvoid *change_descriptor = descriptor;
  ub4 notify_type;
  ub2 i, j;
  OCIEnv *envhp;
  OCIError *errhp;
  OCIColl *query_changes = (OCIColl *)0;
  OCIServer *srvhp;
  OCISvcCtx *svchp;
  OCISession *usrhp;
  dvoid     *tmp; 
  OCIStmt *stmthp;
 
 (void)OCIEnvInit( (OCIEnv **) &envhp, OCI_DEFAULT, (size_t)0, (dvoid **)0 );
  
  (void) OCIHandleAlloc( (dvoid *) envhp, (dvoid **) &errhp, OCI_HTYPE_ERROR,
                   (size_t) 0, (dvoid **) 0);
   /* server contexts */
  (void) OCIHandleAlloc( (dvoid *) envhp, (dvoid **) &srvhp, OCI_HTYPE_SERVER,
                   (size_t) 0, (dvoid **) 0);
 
  (void) OCIHandleAlloc( (dvoid *) envhp, (dvoid **) &svchp, OCI_HTYPE_SVCCTX,
                   (size_t) 0, (dvoid **) 0);
 
  OCIAttrGet (change_descriptor, OCI_DTYPE_CHDES, (dvoid *) &notify_type,
              NULL, OCI_ATTR_CHDES_NFYTYPE, errhp);
  fflush(stdout);
  if (notify_type == OCI_EVENT_SHUTDOWN ||
      notify_type == OCI_EVENT_SHUTDOWN_ANY)
  {
     printf("SHUTDOWN NOTIFICATION RECEIVED\n");
     fflush(stdout);
     notifications_processed++;
     return;
  }
 if (notify_type == OCI_EVENT_STARTUP)
  {
     printf("STARTUP NOTIFICATION RECEIVED\n");
     fflush(stdout);
     notifications_processed++; 
     return;
  }
  
  notifications_processed++;
  checker(errhp, OCIServerAttach( srvhp, errhp, (text *) 0, (sb4) 0,
                                  (ub4) OCI_DEFAULT));
 
  OCIHandleAlloc( (dvoid *) envhp, (dvoid **) &svchp, (ub4) OCI_HTYPE_SVCCTX,
                  52, (dvoid **) &tmp);
  /* set attribute server context in the service context */
  OCIAttrSet( (dvoid *) svchp, (ub4) OCI_HTYPE_SVCCTX, (dvoid *)srvhp,
              (ub4) 0, (ub4) OCI_ATTR_SERVER, (OCIError *) errhp);
 
  /* allocate a user context handle */
  OCIHandleAlloc((dvoid *)envhp, (dvoid **)&usrhp, (ub4) OCI_HTYPE_SESSION,
           (size_t) 0, (dvoid **) 0);
 
  OCIAttrSet((dvoid *)usrhp, (ub4)OCI_HTYPE_SESSION,
           (dvoid *)"HR", (ub4)strlen("HR"), OCI_ATTR_USERNAME, errhp);
 
  OCIAttrSet((dvoid *)usrhp, (ub4)OCI_HTYPE_SESSION,
           (dvoid *)"HR", (ub4)strlen("HR"),
           OCI_ATTR_PASSWORD, errhp);
 
  checker(errhp, OCISessionBegin (svchp, errhp, usrhp, OCI_CRED_RDBMS,
                                   OCI_DEFAULT));
 
  OCIAttrSet((dvoid *)svchp, (ub4)OCI_HTYPE_SVCCTX,
           (dvoid *)usrhp, (ub4)0, OCI_ATTR_SESSION, errhp);
 
  /* Allocate a statement handle */
  OCIHandleAlloc( (dvoid *) envhp, (dvoid **) &stmthp,
                  (ub4) OCI_HTYPE_STMT, 52, (dvoid **) &tmp);
 
  if (notify_type == OCI_EVENT_OBJCHANGE)
  {
    checker(errhp, OCIAttrGet (change_descriptor,
                OCI_DTYPE_CHDES, &table_changes, NULL,
                OCI_ATTR_CHDES_TABLE_CHANGES, errhp));
    processTableChanges(envhp, errhp, stmthp, table_changes);
  }
  else if (notify_type == OCI_EVENT_QUERYCHANGE)
  {
     checker(errhp, OCIAttrGet (change_descriptor,
                OCI_DTYPE_CHDES, &query_changes, NULL,
                OCI_ATTR_CHDES_QUERIES, errhp));
      processQueryChanges(envhp, errhp, stmthp, query_changes);
  }
   checker(errhp, OCISessionEnd(svchp, errhp, usrhp, OCI_DEFAULT));
  checker(errhp, OCIServerDetach(srvhp, errhp, OCI_DEFAULT));
 if (stmthp)
    OCIHandleFree((dvoid *)stmthp, OCI_HTYPE_STMT);
  if (errhp)
    OCIHandleFree((dvoid *)errhp, OCI_HTYPE_ERROR);
  if (srvhp)
    OCIHandleFree((dvoid *)srvhp, OCI_HTYPE_SERVER);
  if (svchp)
    OCIHandleFree((dvoid *)svchp, OCI_HTYPE_SVCCTX);
  if (usrhp)
    OCIHandleFree((dvoid *)usrhp, OCI_HTYPE_SESSION);
  if (envhp)
    OCIHandleFree((dvoid *)envhp, OCI_HTYPE_ENV);
 
}
 
void registerQuery(svchp, errhp, stmthp, envhp)
OCISvcCtx *svchp; 
OCIError *errhp; 
OCIStmt *stmthp;
OCIEnv *envhp;
{
  OCISubscription *subscrhp;
  ub4 namespace = OCI_SUBSCR_NAMESPACE_DBCHANGE;
  ub4 timeout = 60;
  OCIDefine *defnp1 = (OCIDefine *)0;
  OCIDefine *defnp2 = (OCIDefine *)0;
  OCIDefine *defnp3 = (OCIDefine *)0;
  OCIDefine *defnp4 = (OCIDefine *)0;
  OCIDefine *defnp5 = (OCIDefine *)0;
  int mgr_id =0;
text query_text1[] = "select last_name, employees.department_id, department_name \
 from employees,departments where employee_id = 200 and employees.department_id =\
  departments.department_id";
 
  ub4 num_prefetch_rows = 0;
  ub4 num_reg_tables;
  OCIColl *table_names;
  ub2 i;
  boolean rowids = TRUE;
  ub4 qosflags = OCI_SUBSCR_CQ_QOS_QUERY  ;
  int empno=0;
  OCINumber qidnum;
  ub8 qid;
  char outstr[MAXSTRLENGTH], dname[MAXSTRLENGTH];
  int q3out;
 
    fflush(stdout);
  /* allocate subscription handle */
  OCIHandleAlloc ((dvoid *) envhp, (dvoid **) &subscrhp,
                  OCI_HTYPE_SUBSCRIPTION, (size_t) 0, (dvoid **) 0);
  
  /* set the namespace to DBCHANGE */
  checker(errhp, OCIAttrSet (subscrhp, OCI_HTYPE_SUBSCRIPTION,
                  (dvoid *) &namespace, sizeof(ub4),
                  OCI_ATTR_SUBSCR_NAMESPACE, errhp));
  
  /* Associate a notification callback with the subscription */
  checker(errhp, OCIAttrSet (subscrhp, OCI_HTYPE_SUBSCRIPTION,
                  (void *)myCallback, 0, OCI_ATTR_SUBSCR_CALLBACK, errhp));
 /* Allow extraction of rowid information */
  checker(errhp, OCIAttrSet (subscrhp, OCI_HTYPE_SUBSCRIPTION,
                  (dvoid *)&rowids, sizeof(ub4), 
                  OCI_ATTR_CHNF_ROWIDS, errhp));
   
     checker(errhp, OCIAttrSet (subscrhp, OCI_HTYPE_SUBSCRIPTION,
                  (dvoid *)&qosflags, sizeof(ub4),
                  OCI_ATTR_SUBSCR_CQ_QOSFLAGS, errhp));
 
  /* Create a new registration in the DBCHANGE namespace */
  checker(errhp,
           OCISubscriptionRegister(svchp, &subscrhp, 1, errhp, OCI_DEFAULT));
 
  /* Multiple queries can now be associated with the subscription */
 
    subhandle1 = subscrhp;
 
 
    printf("Registering query : %s\n", (const signed char *)query_text1);
    /* Prepare the statement */
    checker(errhp, OCIStmtPrepare (stmthp, errhp, query_text1, 
            (ub4)strlen((const signed char *)query_text1), OCI_V7_SYNTAX,
            OCI_DEFAULT));
 
    checker(errhp,
           OCIDefineByPos(stmthp, &defnp1,
                  errhp, 1, (dvoid *)outstr, MAXSTRLENGTH * sizeof(char),
                  SQLT_STR, (dvoid *)0, (ub2 *)0, (ub2 *)0, OCI_DEFAULT));
    checker(errhp,
           OCIDefineByPos(stmthp, &defnp2,
                     errhp, 2, (dvoid *)&empno, sizeof(empno),
                     SQLT_INT, (dvoid *)0, (ub2 *)0, (ub2 *)0, OCI_DEFAULT));
    checker(errhp,
           OCIDefineByPos(stmthp, &defnp3,
                      errhp, 3, (dvoid *)&dname, sizeof(dname),
                     SQLT_STR, (dvoid *)0, (ub2 *)0, (ub2 *)0, OCI_DEFAULT));
 
    /* Associate the statement with the subscription handle */
    OCIAttrSet (stmthp, OCI_HTYPE_STMT, subscrhp, 0,
              OCI_ATTR_CHNF_REGHANDLE, errhp);
 
    /* Execute the statement, the execution performs object registration */
    checker(errhp, OCIStmtExecute (svchp, stmthp, errhp, (ub4) 1, (ub4) 0,
                 (CONST OCISnapshot *) NULL, (OCISnapshot *) NULL ,
                 OCI_DEFAULT));
    fflush(stdout);
 
    OCIAttrGet(stmthp, OCI_HTYPE_STMT, &qid, (ub4 *)0,
                OCI_ATTR_CQ_QUERYID, errhp);
    printf("Query Id %d\n", qid);
 
  /* commit */
  checker(errhp, OCITransCommit(svchp, errhp, (ub4) 0));
 
}
 
static void cleanup(envhp, svchp, srvhp, errhp, usrhp)
OCIEnv *envhp;
OCISvcCtx *svchp;
OCIServer *srvhp;
OCIError *errhp;
OCISession *usrhp;
{
  /* detach from the server */
  checker(errhp, OCISessionEnd(svchp, errhp, usrhp, OCI_DEFAULT));
  checker(errhp, OCIServerDetach(srvhp, errhp, (ub4)OCI_DEFAULT));
 
  if (usrhp)
    (void) OCIHandleFree((dvoid *) usrhp, (ub4) OCI_HTYPE_SESSION);
  if (svchp)
    (void) OCIHandleFree((dvoid *) svchp, (ub4) OCI_HTYPE_SVCCTX);
  if (srvhp)
    (void) OCIHandleFree((dvoid *) srvhp, (ub4) OCI_HTYPE_SERVER);
  if (errhp)
    (void) OCIHandleFree((dvoid *) errhp, (ub4) OCI_HTYPE_ERROR);
  if (envhp)
    (void) OCIHandleFree((dvoid *) envhp, (ub4) OCI_HTYPE_ENV);
 
}

15.9 Querying CQN Registrations

To see top-level information about all registrations, including their QOS options, query the static data dictionary view *_CHANGE_NOTIFICATION_REGS.

For example, you can obtain the registration ID for a client and the list of objects for which it receives notifications. To view registration IDs and table names for HR, use this query:

SELECT regid, table_name FROM USER_CHANGE_NOTIFICATION_REGS;

To see which queries are registered for QRCN, query the static data dictionary view USER_CQ_NOTIFICATION_QUERIES or DBA_CQ_NOTIFICATION_QUERIES. These views include information about any bind values that the queries use. In these views, bind values in the original query are included in the query text as constants. The query text is equivalent, but maybe not identical, to the original query that was registered.

See Also:

Oracle Database Reference for more information about the static data dictionary views USER_CHANGE_NOTIFICATION_REGS and DBA_CQ_NOTIFICATION_QUERIES

15.10 Interpreting Notifications

When a transaction commits, the database determines whether registered objects were modified in the transaction. If so, it runs the notification handler specified in the registration.

Topics:

15.10.1 Interpreting a CQ_NOTIFICATION$_DESCRIPTOR Object

When a CQN registration generates a notification, the database passes a CQ_NOTIFICATION$_DESCRIPTOR object to the notification handler. The notification handler can find the details of the database change in the attributes of the CQ_NOTIFICATION$_DESCRIPTOR object.

In SQL*Plus, you can list these attributes by connecting as SYS and running this statement:

DESC CQ_NOTIFICATION$_DESCRIPTOR

Table 15-4 summarizes the attributes of CQ_NOTIFICATION$_DESCRIPTOR.

Table 15-4 Attributes of CQ_NOTIFICATION$_DESCRIPTOR

Attribute Description

REGISTRATION_ID

The registration ID that was returned during registration.

TRANSACTION_ID

The ID for the transaction that made the change.

DBNAME

The name of the database in which the notification was generated.

EVENT_TYPE

The database event that triggers a notification. For example, the attribute can contain these constants, which correspond to different database events:

  • EVENT_NONE

  • EVENT_STARTUP (Instance startup)

  • EVENT_SHUTDOWN (Instance shutdown - last instance shutdown for Oracle RAC)

  • EVENT_SHUTDOWN_ANY (Any instance shutdown for Oracle RAC)

  • EVENT_DEREG (Registration was removed)

  • EVENT_OBJCHANGE (Change to a registered table)

  • EVENT_QUERYCHANGE (Change to a registered result set)

NUMTABLES

The number of tables that were modified.

TABLE_DESC_ARRAY

This field is present only for OCN registrations. For QRCN registrations, it is NULL.

If EVENT_TYPE is EVENT_OBJCHANGE]: a VARRAY of table change descriptors of type CQ_NOTIFICATION$_TABLE, each of which corresponds to a changed table. For attributes of CQ_NOTIFICATION$_TABLE, see Table 15-5.

Otherwise: NULL.

QUERY_DESC_ARRAY

This field is present only for QRCN registrations. For OCN registrations, it is NULL.

If EVENT_TYPE is EVENT_QUERYCHANGE]: a VARRAY of result set change descriptors of type CQ_NOTIFICATION$_QUERY, each of which corresponds to a changed result set. For attributes of CQ_NOTIFICATION$_QUERY, see Table 15-6.

Otherwise: NULL.


15.10.2 Interpreting a CQ_NOTIFICATION$_TABLE Object

The CQ_NOTIFICATION$_DESCRIPTOR type contains an attribute called TABLE_DESC_ARRAY, which holds a VARRAY of table descriptors of type CQ_NOTIFICATION$_TABLE.

In SQL*Plus, you can list these attributes by connecting as SYS and running this statement:

DESC CQ_NOTIFICATION$_TABLE

Table 15-5 summarizes the attributes of CQ_NOTIFICATION$_TABLE.

Table 15-5 Attributes of CQ_NOTIFICATION$_TABLE

Attribute Specifies . . .

OPFLAGS

The type of operation performed on the modified table. For example, the attribute can contain these constants, which correspond to different database operations:

  • ALL_ROWS signifies that either the entire table is modified, as in a DELETE *, or row-level granularity of information is not requested or unavailable in the notification, and the recipient must assume that the entire table has changed

  • UPDATEOP signifies an update

  • DELETEOP signifies a deletion

  • ALTEROP signifies an ALTER TABLE

  • DROPOP signifies a DROP TABLE

  • UNKNOWNOP signifies an unknown operation

TABLE_NAME

The name of the modified table.

NUMROWS

The number of modified rows.

ROW_DESC_ARRAY

A VARRAY of row descriptors of type CQ_NOTIFICATION$_ROW, which Table 15-7 describes. If ALL_ROWS was set in the opflags, then the ROW_DESC_ARRAY member is NULL.


15.10.3 Interpreting a CQ_NOTIFICATION$_QUERY Object

The CQ_NOTIFICATION$_DESCRIPTOR type contains an attribute called QUERY_DESC_ARRAY, which holds a VARRAY of result set change descriptors of type CQ_NOTIFICATION$_QUERY.

In SQL*Plus, you can list these attributes by connecting as SYS and running this statement:

DESC CQ_NOTIFICATION$_QUERY

Table 15-6 summarizes the attributes of CQ_NOTIFICATION$_QUERY.

Table 15-6 Attributes of CQ_NOTIFICATION$_QUERY

Attribute Specifies . . .

QUERYID

Query ID of the changed query.

QUERYOP

Operation that changed the query (either EVENT_QUERYCHANGE or EVENT_DEREG).

TABLE_DESC_ARRAY

A VARRAY of table change descriptors of type CQ_NOTIFICATION$_TABLE, each of which corresponds to a changed table that caused a change in the result set. For attributes of CQ_NOTIFICATION$_TABLE, see Table 15-5.


15.10.4 Interpreting a CQ_NOTIFICATION$_ROW Object

If the ROWID option was specified during registration, the CQ_NOTIFICATION$_TABLE type has a ROW_DESC_ARRAY attribute, a VARRAY of type CQ_NOTIFICATION$_ROW that contains the ROWIDs for the changed rows. If ALL_ROWS was set in the OPFLAGS field of the CQ_NOTIFICATION$_TABLE object, then ROWID information is unavailable.

Table 15-7 summarizes the attributes of CQ_NOTIFICATION$_ROW.

Table 15-7 Attributes of CQ_NOTIFICATION$_ROW

Attribute Specifies . . .

OPFLAGS

The type of operation performed on the modified table. See the description of OPFLAGS in Table 15-5.

ROW_ID

The ROWID of the changed row.