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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Capture rows for a column in file from delete sql -Oracle Post 302698031 by jakSun8 on Friday 7th of September 2012 09:35:01 PM
Old 09-07-2012
Capture rows for a column in file from delete sql -Oracle

Hi,
This may not be the right forum but i am hoping someone knows an answer to this.

I have to capture rows for a column that was deleted. How can i do that without having to write a select query?

delete from myschema.mytable where currentdatetimestamp > columnDate

this should delete 5 rows for example

I want to capture rows of columnID (not all the columns of the table) in a text file that was affected by the above file should have
1234
1235
1236
1237
1238

Thanks - jak
 

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DBLINK(3)						  PostgreSQL 9.2.7 Documentation						 DBLINK(3)

NAME
dblink - executes a query in a remote database SYNOPSIS
dblink(text connname, text sql [, bool fail_on_error]) returns setof record dblink(text connstr, text sql [, bool fail_on_error]) returns setof record dblink(text sql [, bool fail_on_error]) returns setof record DESCRIPTION
dblink executes a query (usually a SELECT, but it can be any SQL statement that returns rows) in a remote database. When two text arguments are given, the first one is first looked up as a persistent connection's name; if found, the command is executed on that connection. If not found, the first argument is treated as a connection info string as for dblink_connect, and the indicated connection is made just for the duration of this command. ARGUMENTS
conname Name of the connection to use; omit this parameter to use the unnamed connection. connstr A connection info string, as previously described for dblink_connect. sql The SQL query that you wish to execute in the remote database, for example select * from foo. fail_on_error If true (the default when omitted) then an error thrown on the remote side of the connection causes an error to also be thrown locally. If false, the remote error is locally reported as a NOTICE, and the function returns no rows. RETURN VALUE
The function returns the row(s) produced by the query. Since dblink can be used with any query, it is declared to return record, rather than specifying any particular set of columns. This means that you must specify the expected set of columns in the calling query -- otherwise PostgreSQL would not know what to expect. Here is an example: SELECT * FROM dblink('dbname=mydb', 'select proname, prosrc from pg_proc') AS t1(proname name, prosrc text) WHERE proname LIKE 'bytea%'; The "alias" part of the FROM clause must specify the column names and types that the function will return. (Specifying column names in an alias is actually standard SQL syntax, but specifying column types is a PostgreSQL extension.) This allows the system to understand what * should expand to, and what proname in the WHERE clause refers to, in advance of trying to execute the function. At run time, an error will be thrown if the actual query result from the remote database does not have the same number of columns shown in the FROM clause. The column names need not match, however, and dblink does not insist on exact type matches either. It will succeed so long as the returned data strings are valid input for the column type declared in the FROM clause. NOTES
A convenient way to use dblink with predetermined queries is to create a view. This allows the column type information to be buried in the view, instead of having to spell it out in every query. For example, CREATE VIEW myremote_pg_proc AS SELECT * FROM dblink('dbname=postgres', 'select proname, prosrc from pg_proc') AS t1(proname name, prosrc text); SELECT * FROM myremote_pg_proc WHERE proname LIKE 'bytea%'; EXAMPLES
SELECT * FROM dblink('dbname=postgres', 'select proname, prosrc from pg_proc') AS t1(proname name, prosrc text) WHERE proname LIKE 'bytea%'; proname | prosrc ------------+------------ byteacat | byteacat byteaeq | byteaeq bytealt | bytealt byteale | byteale byteagt | byteagt byteage | byteage byteane | byteane byteacmp | byteacmp bytealike | bytealike byteanlike | byteanlike byteain | byteain byteaout | byteaout (12 rows) SELECT dblink_connect('dbname=postgres'); dblink_connect ---------------- OK (1 row) SELECT * FROM dblink('select proname, prosrc from pg_proc') AS t1(proname name, prosrc text) WHERE proname LIKE 'bytea%'; proname | prosrc ------------+------------ byteacat | byteacat byteaeq | byteaeq bytealt | bytealt byteale | byteale byteagt | byteagt byteage | byteage byteane | byteane byteacmp | byteacmp bytealike | bytealike byteanlike | byteanlike byteain | byteain byteaout | byteaout (12 rows) SELECT dblink_connect('myconn', 'dbname=regression'); dblink_connect ---------------- OK (1 row) SELECT * FROM dblink('myconn', 'select proname, prosrc from pg_proc') AS t1(proname name, prosrc text) WHERE proname LIKE 'bytea%'; proname | prosrc ------------+------------ bytearecv | bytearecv byteasend | byteasend byteale | byteale byteagt | byteagt byteage | byteage byteane | byteane byteacmp | byteacmp bytealike | bytealike byteanlike | byteanlike byteacat | byteacat byteaeq | byteaeq bytealt | bytealt byteain | byteain byteaout | byteaout (14 rows) PostgreSQL 9.2.7 2014-02-17 DBLINK(3)
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