Generating Dynamic SQL in Oracle - oracle

I have a problem with my plsql code and try almost everything. Now i'm loosing my mind and power to solve my problem :)
The case is that I want to search all tables schema for specific string assigned to variable v_ss and print it to DBMS_OUTPUT. I know that there are ready-made solutions for that kind of cases, but I wanted to code it by myself. Below code gives me an error that "table does not exist" in my v_stmt. I assume that this select does not recognize rec.column_name, but why?
Here is my code:
DECLARE
v_stmt VARCHAR2(1000);
v_ss VARCHAR2(30) := 'Argentina';
v_own ALL_TAB_COLUMNS.OWNER%TYPE;
v_tab_nam ALL_TAB_COLUMNS.TABLE_NAME%TYPE;
v_col_nam ALL_TAB_COLUMNS.COLUMN_NAME%TYPE;
CURSOR cur_asc IS
SELECT t.owner, t.table_name, t.column_name
FROM SYS.ALL_TAB_COLUMNS t
WHERE t.OWNER LIKE 'HR'
AND t.DATA_TYPE LIKE 'VARCHAR2';
BEGIN
FOR rec IN cur_asc LOOP
v_stmt := 'SELECT rec.owner, rec.table_name, rec.column_name FROM rec.table_name WHERE rec.column_name LIKE :1';
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE v_stmt INTO v_own, v_tab_nam, v_col_nam USING v_ss;
DBMS_OUTPUT.put_line(v_own || ':' || v_tab_nam || ':' || v_col_nam);
END LOOP;
END;
/
Error report -
ORA-00942: table or view does not exist
ORA-06512: at line 19
00942. 00000 - "table or view does not exist"
*Cause:
*Action:
Could You give me an explanation for my bug and how to fix it? Thanks in advance

The dynamic statement is executed in a context that cannot see your PL/SQL variables, so when it runs rec.table_name etc. are interpreted as SQL-level objects - which don't exist.
You have to concatenate the variable values into the dynamic statement for the from and where clause; you can do the same in the select list (though they'd need to be wrapped in escaped single-quotes as they are strings), or use bind variables there:
v_stmt := 'SELECT :owner, :table_name, :column_name FROM '
|| rec.table_name || ' WHERE ' || rec.column_name || ' LIKE :ss';
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE v_stmt INTO v_own, v_tab_nam, v_col_nam
USING rec.owner, rec.table_name, rec.column_name, v_ss;
You can't use bind variables for object identifiers, hence needing the concatenation for those parts.
Unless you run this as the HR user, in which case you could be using user_tables instead of all_tables, you also need to specify the schema in the query (As Tony and Lalit mentioned); either hard-coding HR or using the queried owner:
v_stmt := 'SELECT :owner, :table_name, :column_name FROM '
|| rec.owner || '.' || rec.table_name
|| ' WHERE ' || rec.column_name || ' LIKE :ss';
This is going to error for all the tables that don't contain exactly one matching value though - if the dynamic select gets zero rows, or more than one row. But that's a separate issue.

v_stmt := 'SELECT rec.owner, rec.table_name, rec.column_name FROM rec.table_name WHERE rec.column_name LIKE :1';
Your dynamic sql statement is malformed. If you enclose the variables between single-quotation marks then they are treated as literals and not variables any more.
You must prefix the schema before the table_name else you must run the script while you are connected as HR user.
v_stmt := 'SELECT '''||rec.owner||''', '''|| rec.table_name||''', '
||rec.column_name||' FROM '||rec.owner||'.'
||rec.table_name||' WHERE '||rec.column_name||' LIKE :1';
Always remember, whenever working with dynamic statements, always use DBMS_OUTPUT to first verify the actual SQL being generated. This is the best way to debug dynamic queries.
You need to handle NO_DATA_FOUND exception because it will throw error for all those tables which do not have any match for the filter you are using.
SQL> DECLARE
2 v_stmt VARCHAR2(1000);
3 v_ss VARCHAR2(30) := 'Argentina';
4 v_own ALL_TAB_COLUMNS.OWNER%TYPE;
5 v_tab_nam ALL_TAB_COLUMNS.TABLE_NAME%TYPE;
6 v_col_nam ALL_TAB_COLUMNS.COLUMN_NAME%TYPE;
7 CURSOR cur_asc
8 IS
9 SELECT t.owner,
10 t.table_name,
11 t.column_name
12 FROM SYS.ALL_TAB_COLUMNS t
13 WHERE t.OWNER LIKE 'HR'
14 AND t.DATA_TYPE LIKE 'VARCHAR2';
15 BEGIN
16 FOR rec IN cur_asc
17 LOOP
18 v_stmt := 'SELECT '''||rec.owner||''', '''|| rec.table_name||''', '
19 || rec.column_name||' FROM '||rec.owner||'.'
20 || rec.table_name||' WHERE '||rec.column_name||' LIKE :1';
21 BEGIN
22 EXECUTE IMMEDIATE v_stmt INTO v_own,
23 v_tab_nam,
24 v_col_nam USING v_ss;
25 DBMS_OUTPUT.put_line(v_own || ':' || v_tab_nam || ':' || v_col_nam);
26 EXCEPTION
27 WHEN NO_DATA_FOUND THEN
28 NULL;
29 END;
30 END LOOP;
31 END;
32 /
HR:COUNTRIES:Argentina
PL/SQL procedure successfully completed.

There are 2 issues here:
You need to concatenate the table and column names into the dynamic SQL because 'SELECT rec.owner...' is trying to select a column called owner from a table with alias rec, it does not reference your for loop record.
Since there could be no matching rows or many matching rows in a table, you cannot use select into, you need to use a cursor.
try this:
DECLARE
v_stmt VARCHAR2(1000);
v_ss VARCHAR2(30) := 'Argentina';
v_own ALL_TAB_COLUMNS.OWNER%TYPE;
v_tab_nam ALL_TAB_COLUMNS.TABLE_NAME%TYPE;
v_col_nam ALL_TAB_COLUMNS.COLUMN_NAME%TYPE;
CURSOR cur_asc IS
SELECT t.owner, t.table_name, t.column_name
FROM ALL_TAB_COLUMNS t
WHERE t.DATA_TYPE LIKE 'VARCHAR2'
AND ROWNUM < 10;
c SYS_REFCURSOR;
BEGIN
FOR rec IN cur_asc LOOP
v_stmt := 'SELECT ''' || rec.owner || ''',''' || rec.table_name || ''', ''' || rec.column_name || ''' FROM ' || rec.table_name || ' WHERE ' || rec.column_name || ' LIKE :1';
OPEN c FOR v_stmt USING v_ss;
LOOP
FETCH c INTO v_own, v_tab_nam, v_col_nam;
EXIT WHEN c%NOTFOUND;
DBMS_OUTPUT.put_line(v_own || ':' || v_tab_nam || ':' || v_col_nam);
END LOOP;
CLOSE c;
END LOOP;
END;
/

Related

Why do I get no output from this query (searching database for string)?

I'm an Oracle/PL/SQL Developer newbie, and I'm struggling to figure out how to see the output of this query:
DECLARE
ncount NUMBER;
vwhere VARCHAR2(1000) := '';
vselect VARCHAR2(1000) := ' select count(1) from ';
vsearchstr VARCHAR2(1000) := '1301 250 Sage Valley Road NW';
vline VARCHAR2(1000) := '';
istatus INTEGER;
BEGIN
DBMS_OUTPUT.ENABLE;
FOR k IN (SELECT a.table_name, a.column_name FROM user_tab_cols a WHERE a.data_type LIKE '%VARCHAR%')
LOOP
vwhere := ' where ' || k.column_name || ' = :vsearchstr ';
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE vselect || k.table_name || vwhere
INTO ncount
USING vsearchstr;
IF (ncount > 0)
THEN
dbms_output.put_line(k.column_name || ' ' || k.table_name);
ELSE
dbms_output.put_line('no output');
END IF;
END LOOP;
dbms_output.get_line(vline, istatus);
END;
I got this script from https://community.oracle.com/tech/developers/discussion/2572717/how-to-search-a-particular-string-in-whole-schema. It's supposed to find a string (vsearchstr) in the entire database. When I run this in PL/SQL Developer 14.0.6, it spits out no errors, says it took 0.172 seconds, but I don't see any output. I'm expecting the output to show under the Output tab:
I know the string '1301 250 Sage Valley Road NW' exists in the database so it should be finding it. Even if it doesn't, the ELSE block should be outputting 'no output'.
From what I understand, dbms_output.put_line() adds the given string to a buffer, and dbms_output.get_line() prints it to the output target (whatever it's set to). I understand that dbms_output needs to be enabled (hence the line DBMS_OUTPUT.ENABLE) and dbms_output.get_line() will only run after the BEGIN/END block it's in completes (I don't know if this means it has to be put outside the BEGIN/END block, but I couldn't avoid certain errors every time I did).
I've read through various stackoverflow posts about this issue, as well as a few external site:
https://docs.oracle.com/cd/F49540_01/DOC/server.815/a68001/dbms_out.htm#1000449
https://www.tutorialspoint.com/plsql/plsql_dbms_output.htm
...but nothing seems to be working.
How can I see the output, or if there's something wrong in the query above, can you tell what it is?
Thanks.
To enable output from DBMS_OUTPUT in PL/SQL Developer see this answer.
I'm looking for an alternative keyword to user_tab_cols for all schemas in the DB
Use ALL_TAB_COLS and catch the exceptions when you do not have enough privileges to read the table (and use quoted identifiers to match the case of user/table/column names):
DECLARE
found_row PLS_INTEGER;
vsearchstr VARCHAR2(1000) := '1301 250 Sage Valley Road NW';
BEGIN
FOR k IN (SELECT owner,
table_name,
column_name
FROM all_tab_cols t
WHERE data_type LIKE '%VARCHAR%'
-- Ignore columns that are too small
AND data_length >= LENGTH(vsearchstr)
-- Ignore all oracle maintained tables
-- Not supported on earlier Oracle versions
AND NOT EXISTS (
SELECT 1
FROM all_users u
WHERE t.owner = u.username
AND u.oracle_maintained = 'Y'
)
)
LOOP
DECLARE
invalid_privileges EXCEPTION;
PRAGMA EXCEPTION_INIT(invalid_privileges, -1031);
BEGIN
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'SELECT 1 FROM "' || k.owner || '"."' || k.table_name || '" WHERE "' || k.column_name || '" = :1 AND ROWNUM = 1'
INTO found_row
USING vsearchstr;
dbms_output.put_line('Found: ' || k.table_name || '.' || k.column_name);
EXCEPTION
WHEN invalid_privileges THEN
NULL;
WHEN NO_DATA_FOUND THEN
dbms_output.put_line('Not found: ' || k.table_name || '.' || k.column_name);
END;
END LOOP;
END;
/

Dynamic SQL Hangs [duplicate]

Is it possible to search every field of every table for a particular value in Oracle?
There are hundreds of tables with thousands of rows in some tables so I know this could take a very long time to query. But the only thing I know is that a value for the field I would like to query against is 1/22/2008P09RR8.
<
I've tried using this statement below to find an appropriate column based on what I think it should be named but it returned no results.
SELECT * from dba_objects
WHERE object_name like '%DTN%'
There is absolutely no documentation on this database and I have no idea where this field is being pulled from.
Any thoughts?
Quote:
I've tried using this statement below
to find an appropriate column based on
what I think it should be named but it
returned no results.*
SELECT * from dba_objects WHERE
object_name like '%DTN%'
A column isn't an object. If you mean that you expect the column name to be like '%DTN%', the query you want is:
SELECT owner, table_name, column_name FROM all_tab_columns WHERE column_name LIKE '%DTN%';
But if the 'DTN' string is just a guess on your part, that probably won't help.
By the way, how certain are you that '1/22/2008P09RR8' is a value selected directly from a single column? If you don't know at all where it is coming from, it could be a concatenation of several columns, or the result of some function, or a value sitting in a nested table object. So you might be on a wild goose chase trying to check every column for that value. Can you not start with whatever client application is displaying this value and try to figure out what query it is using to obtain it?
Anyway, diciu's answer gives one method of generating SQL queries to check every column of every table for the value. You can also do similar stuff entirely in one SQL session using a PL/SQL block and dynamic SQL. Here's some hastily-written code for that:
SET SERVEROUTPUT ON SIZE 100000
DECLARE
match_count INTEGER;
BEGIN
FOR t IN (SELECT owner, table_name, column_name
FROM all_tab_columns
WHERE owner <> 'SYS' and data_type LIKE '%CHAR%') LOOP
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE
'SELECT COUNT(*) FROM ' || t.owner || '.' || t.table_name ||
' WHERE '||t.column_name||' = :1'
INTO match_count
USING '1/22/2008P09RR8';
IF match_count > 0 THEN
dbms_output.put_line( t.table_name ||' '||t.column_name||' '||match_count );
END IF;
END LOOP;
END;
/
There are some ways you could make it more efficient too.
In this case, given the value you are looking for, you can clearly eliminate any column that is of NUMBER or DATE type, which would reduce the number of queries. Maybe even restrict it to columns where type is like '%CHAR%'.
Instead of one query per column, you could build one query per table like this:
SELECT * FROM table1
WHERE column1 = 'value'
OR column2 = 'value'
OR column3 = 'value'
...
;
I did some modification to the above code to make it work faster if you are searching in only one owner.
You just have to change the 3 variables v_owner, v_data_type and v_search_string to fit what you are searching for.
SET SERVEROUTPUT ON SIZE 100000
DECLARE
match_count INTEGER;
-- Type the owner of the tables you are looking at
v_owner VARCHAR2(255) :='ENTER_USERNAME_HERE';
-- Type the data type you are look at (in CAPITAL)
-- VARCHAR2, NUMBER, etc.
v_data_type VARCHAR2(255) :='VARCHAR2';
-- Type the string you are looking at
v_search_string VARCHAR2(4000) :='string to search here...';
BEGIN
FOR t IN (SELECT table_name, column_name FROM all_tab_cols where owner=v_owner and data_type = v_data_type) LOOP
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE
'SELECT COUNT(*) FROM '||t.table_name||' WHERE '||t.column_name||' = :1'
INTO match_count
USING v_search_string;
IF match_count > 0 THEN
dbms_output.put_line( t.table_name ||' '||t.column_name||' '||match_count );
END IF;
END LOOP;
END;
/
I know this is an old topic. But I see a comment to the question asking if it could be done in SQL rather than using PL/SQL. So thought to post a solution.
The below demonstration is to Search for a VALUE in all COLUMNS of all TABLES in an entire SCHEMA:
Search a CHARACTER type
Let's look for the value KING in SCOTT schema.
SQL> variable val varchar2(10)
SQL> exec :val := 'KING'
PL/SQL procedure successfully completed.
SQL> SELECT DISTINCT SUBSTR (:val, 1, 11) "Searchword",
2 SUBSTR (table_name, 1, 14) "Table",
3 SUBSTR (column_name, 1, 14) "Column"
4 FROM cols,
5 TABLE (xmlsequence (dbms_xmlgen.getxmltype ('select '
6 || column_name
7 || ' from '
8 || table_name
9 || ' where upper('
10 || column_name
11 || ') like upper(''%'
12 || :val
13 || '%'')' ).extract ('ROWSET/ROW/*') ) ) t
14 ORDER BY "Table"
15 /
Searchword Table Column
----------- -------------- --------------
KING EMP ENAME
SQL>
Search a NUMERIC type
Let's look for the value 20 in SCOTT schema.
SQL> variable val NUMBER
SQL> exec :val := 20
PL/SQL procedure successfully completed.
SQL> SELECT DISTINCT SUBSTR (:val, 1, 11) "Searchword",
2 SUBSTR (table_name, 1, 14) "Table",
3 SUBSTR (column_name, 1, 14) "Column"
4 FROM cols,
5 TABLE (xmlsequence (dbms_xmlgen.getxmltype ('select '
6 || column_name
7 || ' from '
8 || table_name
9 || ' where upper('
10 || column_name
11 || ') like upper(''%'
12 || :val
13 || '%'')' ).extract ('ROWSET/ROW/*') ) ) t
14 ORDER BY "Table"
15 /
Searchword Table Column
----------- -------------- --------------
20 DEPT DEPTNO
20 EMP DEPTNO
20 EMP HIREDATE
20 SALGRADE HISAL
20 SALGRADE LOSAL
SQL>
Yes you can and your DBA will hate you and will find you to nail your shoes to the floor because that will cause lots of I/O and bring the database performance really down as the cache purges.
select column_name from all_tab_columns c, user_all_tables u where c.table_name = u.table_name;
for a start.
I would start with the running queries, using the v$session and the v$sqlarea. This changes based on oracle version. This will narrow down the space and not hit everything.
Here is another modified version that will compare a lower substring match. This works in Oracle 11g.
DECLARE
match_count INTEGER;
-- Type the owner of the tables you are looking at
v_owner VARCHAR2(255) :='OWNER_NAME';
-- Type the data type you are look at (in CAPITAL)
-- VARCHAR2, NUMBER, etc.
v_data_type VARCHAR2(255) :='VARCHAR2';
-- Type the string you are looking at
v_search_string VARCHAR2(4000) :='%lower-search-sub-string%';
BEGIN
FOR t IN (SELECT table_name, column_name FROM all_tab_cols where owner=v_owner and data_type = v_data_type) LOOP
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE
'SELECT COUNT(*) FROM '||t.table_name||' WHERE lower('||t.column_name||') like :1'
INTO match_count
USING v_search_string;
IF match_count > 0 THEN
dbms_output.put_line( t.table_name ||' '||t.column_name||' '||match_count );
END IF;
END LOOP;
END;
/
I modified Flood's script to execute once for each table rather than for every column of each table for faster execution. It requires Oracle 11g or greater.
set serveroutput on size 100000
declare
v_match_count integer;
v_counter integer;
-- The owner of the tables to search through (case-sensitive)
v_owner varchar2(255) := 'OWNER_NAME';
-- A string that is part of the data type(s) of the columns to search through (case-insensitive)
v_data_type varchar2(255) := 'CHAR';
-- The string to be searched for (case-insensitive)
v_search_string varchar2(4000) := 'FIND_ME';
-- Store the SQL to execute for each table in a CLOB to get around the 32767 byte max size for a VARCHAR2 in PL/SQL
v_sql clob := '';
begin
for cur_tables in (select owner, table_name from all_tables where owner = v_owner and table_name in
(select table_name from all_tab_columns where owner = all_tables.owner and data_type like '%' || upper(v_data_type) || '%')
order by table_name) loop
v_counter := 0;
v_sql := '';
for cur_columns in (select column_name from all_tab_columns where
owner = v_owner and table_name = cur_tables.table_name and data_type like '%' || upper(v_data_type) || '%') loop
if v_counter > 0 then
v_sql := v_sql || ' or ';
end if;
v_sql := v_sql || 'upper(' || cur_columns.column_name || ') like ''%' || upper(v_search_string) || '%''';
v_counter := v_counter + 1;
end loop;
v_sql := 'select count(*) from ' || cur_tables.table_name || ' where ' || v_sql;
execute immediate v_sql
into v_match_count;
if v_match_count > 0 then
dbms_output.put_line('Match in ' || cur_tables.owner || ': ' || cur_tables.table_name || ' - ' || v_match_count || ' records');
end if;
end loop;
exception
when others then
dbms_output.put_line('Error when executing the following: ' || dbms_lob.substr(v_sql, 32600));
end;
/
I was having following issues for #Lalit Kumars answer,
ORA-19202: Error occurred in XML processing
ORA-00904: "SUCCESS": invalid identifier
ORA-06512: at "SYS.DBMS_XMLGEN", line 288
ORA-06512: at line 1
19202. 00000 - "Error occurred in XML processing%s"
*Cause: An error occurred when processing the XML function
*Action: Check the given error message and fix the appropriate problem
Solution is:
WITH char_cols AS
(SELECT /*+materialize */ table_name, column_name
FROM cols
WHERE data_type IN ('CHAR', 'VARCHAR2'))
SELECT DISTINCT SUBSTR (:val, 1, 11) "Searchword",
SUBSTR (table_name, 1, 14) "Table",
SUBSTR (column_name, 1, 14) "Column"
FROM char_cols,
TABLE (xmlsequence (dbms_xmlgen.getxmltype ('select "'
|| column_name
|| '" from "'
|| table_name
|| '" where upper("'
|| column_name
|| '") like upper(''%'
|| :val
|| '%'')' ).extract ('ROWSET/ROW/*') ) ) t
ORDER BY "Table"
/
I would do something like this (generates all the selects you need).
You can later on feed them to sqlplus:
echo "select table_name from user_tables;" | sqlplus -S user/pwd | grep -v "^--" | grep -v "TABLE_NAME" | grep "^[A-Z]" | while read sw;
do echo "desc $sw" | sqlplus -S user/pwd | grep -v "\-\-\-\-\-\-" | awk -F' ' '{print $1}' | while read nw;
do echo "select * from $sw where $nw='val'";
done;
done;
It yields:
select * from TBL1 where DESCRIPTION='val'
select * from TBL1 where ='val'
select * from TBL2 where Name='val'
select * from TBL2 where LNG_ID='val'
And what it does is - for each table_name from user_tables get each field (from desc) and create a select * from table where field equals 'val'.
if we know the table and colum names but want to find out the number of times string is appearing for each schema:
Declare
owner VARCHAR2(1000);
tbl VARCHAR2(1000);
cnt number;
ct number;
str_sql varchar2(1000);
reason varchar2(1000);
x varchar2(1000):='%string_to_be_searched%';
cursor csr is select owner,table_name
from all_tables where table_name ='table_name';
type rec1 is record (
ct VARCHAR2(1000));
type rec is record (
owner VARCHAR2(1000):='',
table_name VARCHAR2(1000):='');
rec2 rec;
rec3 rec1;
begin
for rec2 in csr loop
--str_sql:= 'select count(*) from '||rec.owner||'.'||rec.table_name||' where CTV_REMARKS like '||chr(39)||x||chr(39);
--dbms_output.put_line(str_sql);
--execute immediate str_sql
execute immediate 'select count(*) from '||rec2.owner||'.'||rec2.table_name||' where column_name like '||chr(39)||x||chr(39)
into rec3;
if rec3.ct <> 0 then
dbms_output.put_line(rec2.owner||','||rec3.ct);
else null;
end if;
end loop;
end;
Procedure to Search Entire Database:
CREATE or REPLACE PROCEDURE SEARCH_DB(SEARCH_STR IN VARCHAR2, TAB_COL_RECS OUT VARCHAR2) IS
match_count integer;
qry_str varchar2(1000);
CURSOR TAB_COL_CURSOR IS
SELECT TABLE_NAME,COLUMN_NAME,OWNER,DATA_TYPE FROM ALL_TAB_COLUMNS WHERE DATA_TYPE in ('NUMBER','VARCHAR2') AND OWNER='SCOTT';
BEGIN
FOR TAB_COL_REC IN TAB_COL_CURSOR
LOOP
qry_str := 'SELECT COUNT(*) FROM '||TAB_COL_REC.OWNER||'.'||TAB_COL_REC.TABLE_NAME||
' WHERE '||TAB_COL_REC.COLUMN_NAME;
IF TAB_COL_REC.DATA_TYPE = 'NUMBER' THEN
qry_str := qry_str||'='||SEARCH_STR;
ELSE
qry_str := qry_str||' like '||SEARCH_STR;
END IF;
--dbms_output.put_line( qry_str );
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE qry_str INTO match_count;
IF match_count > 0 THEN
dbms_output.put_line( qry_str );
--dbms_output.put_line( TAB_COL_REC.TABLE_NAME ||' '||TAB_COL_REC.COLUMN_NAME ||' '||match_count);
TAB_COL_RECS := TAB_COL_RECS||'##'||TAB_COL_REC.TABLE_NAME||'##'||TAB_COL_REC.COLUMN_NAME;
END IF;
END LOOP;
END SEARCH_DB;
Execute Statement
DECLARE
SEARCH_STR VARCHAR2(200);
TAB_COL_RECS VARCHAR2(200);
BEGIN
SEARCH_STR := 10;
SEARCH_DB(
SEARCH_STR => SEARCH_STR,
TAB_COL_RECS => TAB_COL_RECS
);
DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('TAB_COL_RECS = ' || TAB_COL_RECS);
END;
Sample Results
Connecting to the database test.
SELECT COUNT(*) FROM SCOTT.EMP WHERE DEPTNO=10
SELECT COUNT(*) FROM SCOTT.DEPT WHERE DEPTNO=10
TAB_COL_RECS = ##EMP##DEPTNO##DEPT##DEPTNO
Process exited.
Disconnecting from the database test.
I don't of a simple solution on the SQL promprt. Howeve there are quite a few tools like toad and PL/SQL Developer that have a GUI where a user can input the string to be searched and it will return the table/procedure/object where this is found.
There are some free tools that make these kind of search, for example, this one works fine and source code is available:
https://sites.google.com/site/freejansoft/dbsearch
You'll need the Oracle ODBC driver and a DSN to use this tool.
Modifying the code to search case-insensitively using a LIKE query instead of finding exact matches...
DECLARE
match_count INTEGER;
-- Type the owner of the tables you want to search.
v_owner VARCHAR2(255) :='USER';
-- Type the data type you're looking for (in CAPS). Examples include: VARCHAR2, NUMBER, etc.
v_data_type VARCHAR2(255) :='VARCHAR2';
-- Type the string you are looking for.
v_search_string VARCHAR2(4000) :='Test';
BEGIN
dbms_output.put_line( 'Starting the search...' );
FOR t IN (SELECT table_name, column_name FROM all_tab_cols where owner=v_owner and data_type = v_data_type) LOOP
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE
'SELECT COUNT(*) FROM '||t.table_name||' WHERE LOWER('||t.column_name||') LIKE :1'
INTO match_count
USING LOWER('%'||v_search_string||'%');
IF match_count > 0 THEN
dbms_output.put_line( t.table_name ||' '||t.column_name||' '||match_count );
END IF;
END LOOP;
END;
I found the best solution but it's a little slow. (It will work perfectly with all SQL IDE's.)
SELECT DISTINCT table_name, column_name, data_type
FROM user_tab_cols,
TABLE (xmlsequence (dbms_xmlgen.getxmltype ('select '
|| column_name
|| ' from '
|| table_name
|| ' where lower('
|| column_name
|| ') like lower(''%'
|| 'your_text_here'
|| '%'')' ).extract ('ROWSET/ROW/*') ) ) a
where table_name not in (
select distinct table_name
from user_tab_cols where data_type like 'SDO%'
or data_type like '%LOB') AND DATA_TYPE = 'VARCHAR2'
order by table_name, column_name;
--it run completed -- no error
SET SERVEROUTPUT ON SIZE 100000
DECLARE
v_match_count INTEGER;
v_counter INTEGER;
v_owner VARCHAR2 (255) := 'VASOA';
v_search_string VARCHAR2 (4000) := '99999';
v_data_type VARCHAR2 (255) := 'CHAR';
v_sql CLOB := '';
BEGIN
FOR cur_tables
IN ( SELECT owner, table_name
FROM all_tables
WHERE owner = v_owner
AND table_name IN (SELECT table_name
FROM all_tab_columns
WHERE owner = all_tables.owner
AND data_type LIKE
'%'
|| UPPER (v_data_type)
|| '%')
ORDER BY table_name)
LOOP
v_counter := 0;
v_sql := '';
FOR cur_columns
IN (SELECT column_name, table_name
FROM all_tab_columns
WHERE owner = v_owner
AND table_name = cur_tables.table_name
AND data_type LIKE '%' || UPPER (v_data_type) || '%')
LOOP
IF v_counter > 0
THEN
v_sql := v_sql || ' or ';
END IF;
IF cur_columns.column_name is not null
THEN
v_sql :=
v_sql
|| 'upper('
|| cur_columns.column_name
|| ') ='''
|| UPPER (v_search_string)||'''';
v_counter := v_counter + 1;
END IF;
END LOOP;
IF v_sql is null
THEN
v_sql :=
'select count(*) from '
|| v_owner
|| '.'
|| cur_tables.table_name;
END IF;
IF v_sql is not null
THEN
v_sql :=
'select count(*) from '
|| v_owner
|| '.'
|| cur_tables.table_name
|| ' where '
|| v_sql;
END IF;
--v_sql := 'select count(*) from ' ||v_owner||'.'|| cur_tables.table_name ||' where '|| v_sql;
--dbms_output.put_line(v_sql);
--DBMS_OUTPUT.put_line (v_sql);
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE v_sql INTO v_match_count;
IF v_match_count > 0
THEN
DBMS_OUTPUT.put_line (v_sql);
dbms_output.put_line('Match in ' || cur_tables.owner || ': ' || cur_tables.table_name || ' - ' || v_match_count || ' records');
END IF;
END LOOP;
EXCEPTION
WHEN OTHERS
THEN
DBMS_OUTPUT.put_line (
'Error when executing the following: '
|| DBMS_LOB.SUBSTR (v_sql, 32600));
END;
/
Borrowing, slightly enhancing and simplifying from this Blog post the following simple SQL statement seems to do the job quite well:
SELECT DISTINCT (:val) "Search Value", TABLE_NAME "Table", COLUMN_NAME "Column"
FROM cols,
TABLE (XMLSEQUENCE (DBMS_XMLGEN.GETXMLTYPE(
'SELECT "' || COLUMN_NAME || '" FROM "' || TABLE_NAME || '" WHERE UPPER("'
|| COLUMN_NAME || '") LIKE UPPER(''%' || :val || '%'')' ).EXTRACT ('ROWSET/ROW/*')))
ORDER BY "Table";
The Oracle LIKE condition allows wildcards to be used in the WHERE clause of a SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE statement.
%: to match any string of any length
Eg-
SELECT last_name
FROM customer_tab
WHERE last_name LIKE '%A%';
-: to match on a single character
Eg-
SELECT last_name
FROM customer_tab
WHERE last_name LIKE 'A_t';

pl/sql block code issue with multiple records return

can't make this work... have a multiple tables names which i need to pass into select. Each select will return multiple records. Resultset should be printed to the user on a screen .
SQL> set serveroutput on;
SQL> DECLARE
vs_statement VARCHAR2 (1000);
my_var1 VARCHAR2(100);
my_var2 VARCHAR2(100);
CURSOR c1 IS
SELECT table_name
FROM all_tables
WHERE table_name LIKE Upper('redit_1%');
BEGIN
FOR table_rec IN c1 LOOP
vs_statement :=
'select a.userinfo, a.userstatus into my_var1, my_var12 from '
|| table_rec.table_name
|| ' A, FILES b where A.objectid = B.id order by 1';
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE vs_statement INTO my_var1,
my_var2;
dbms_output.Put_line(my_var1
||' '
|| my_var2);
END LOOP;
END;
/
This line should look like the following (i.e. remove INTO clause):
vs_statement :=
'select a.userinfo, a.userstatus from '
|| table_rec.table_name
|| ' A, FILES b where A.objectid = B.id order by 1';
Also, make sure that this SELECT returns only 1 row, otherwise you'll end up with the TOO-MANY-ROWS error.
Other than that, I guess it should work.
[EDIT, regarding fear of TOO-MANY-ROWS]
Huh, I'd create a whole new PL/SQL BEGIN-END block, containing a loop which would do the job, displaying all rows returned by SELECT statement.
As I don't have your tables, I used HR's. Have a look:
SQL> DECLARE
2 vs_statement VARCHAR2 (1000);
3 my_var1 VARCHAR2(100);
4 my_var2 VARCHAR2(100);
5 CURSOR c1 IS
6 SELECT table_name
7 FROM all_tables
8 WHERE table_name LIKE Upper('%departments%');
9 BEGIN
10 FOR table_rec IN c1 LOOP
11 vs_statement := 'begin for cur_r in ( '
12 || Chr(10)
13 || 'select distinct a.department_id, a.department_name from '
14 || Chr(10)
15 || table_rec.table_name
16 ||
17 ' A, employees b where A.department_id = B.department_id order by 1) loop'
18 || Chr(10)
19 || ' dbms_output.put_line(cur_r.department_name); '
20 || Chr(10)
21 || ' end loop; end;';
22
23 EXECUTE IMMEDIATE vs_statement; -- into my_var1, my_var2;
24 END LOOP;
25 END;
26 /
Administration
Marketing
Purchasing
Human Resources
Shipping
IT
Public Relations
Sales
Executive
Finance
Accounting
PL/SQL procedure successfully completed.
SQL>
"Each select will return multiple records...Resultset should be printed to the user on a screen"
Open a ref cursor for each generated statement. Loop round that and display the values.
DECLARE
rc sys_refcursor;
vs_statement VARCHAR2 (1000);
my_var1 VARCHAR2(100);
my_var2 VARCHAR2(100);
CURSOR c1 IS
SELECT table_name
FROM all_tables
WHERE table_name LIKE Upper('redit_1%');
BEGIN
<< tab_loop >>
FOR table_rec IN c1 LOOP
vs_statement :=
'select a.userinfo, a.userstatus from '
|| table_rec.table_name
|| ' A, FILES b where A.objectid = B.id order by 1';
open rc for vs_statement;
dbms_output.put_line('records for '||table_rec.table_name);
<< rec_loop >>
loop
fetch rc into my_var1,my_var2;
exit when rc%notfound;
dbms_output.Put_line(my_var1
||' '
|| my_var2);
end loop rec_loop;
close rc;
END LOOP tab_loop;
END;
/

How do I get the data from the column_name? Oracle PL/SQL

How do I get the data(i.e rows) from the column_name I retrieved from SQL statement? (Completely new to PL/SQL).
Here is my code:
create or replace procedure com_coll_cur
as
type comColcur is ref cursor;
com_col_cur comColcur;
sql_stmt varchar2(4000);
type newtab_field is table of comColcur%TYPE;
begin
sql_stmt :=
'select column_name from all_tab_cols where table_name in (''TAB1'', ''TAB2'') ' ||
'group by column_name having count(*)>1';
open com_col_cur for sql_stmt;
loop
fetch com_col_cur into newtab_field;
exit when com_col_cur%NOTFOUND;
end loop;
close com_col_cur;
end;
What I'm trying to do here is first find the common columns between the two tables. This part only grabs column_name but I also want the data in that common columns. So I used cursor to "point" that common column_name and used loop(fetch) to get the data inside that common column_name. Finally, I want to create new table with this common columns only with their data.
I am new to everything here and any help will be appreciate it.
You don't understand how works cursors and fetch.
Fetch get the data from the cursor, so in your procedure example you get only column names, not the data in the columns. To get data you need another cursor - select from the target table or use the dynamic sql.
This is a code that do what you describe. It is not clear to me how you want to store data from two tables - subsequently or in another manner. Let's assume that we store them subsequently. Also this code suggests than columns with the same names have the same datatypes. Part of this code (to make datatype) I get from another stackoverflow post to save time to write it:
How do I get column datatype in Oracle with PL-SQL with low privileges?
dbms_output.put_line - used to print sql statements that we create
declare
cSql varchar2(4000);
cCols varchar2(4000);
cNewTableName varchar2(30) := 'AABBCC';
cTb1 varchar2(30) := 'TAB1';
cTb2 varchar2(30) := 'TAB2';
begin
for hc in (
select T.column_name, T.typ
from
(
select column_name,
data_type||
case when data_precision is not null and nvl(data_scale,0)>0 then '('||data_precision||','||data_scale||')'
when data_precision is not null and nvl(data_scale,0)=0 then '('||data_precision||')'
when data_precision is null and data_scale is not null then '(*,'||data_scale||')'
when char_length>0 then '('||char_length|| case char_used
when 'B' then ' Byte'
when 'C' then ' Char'
else null
end||')'
end||decode(nullable, 'N', ' NOT NULL') typ
from all_tab_cols
where table_name in (cTb1, cTb2) ) T
group by T.column_name, T.typ having count(*) > 1)
loop
cSql := cSql || case when cSql is null then null else ',' end || hc.column_name || ' ' || hc.typ;
cCols := cCols || case when cCols is null then null else ',' end || hc.column_name;
end loop;
if (cSql is not null) then
-- First drop table if it exists
for hc in (select * from all_objects where object_type = 'TABLE' and object_name = cNewTableName)
loop
execute immediate 'drop table ' || hc.object_name;
end loop;
-- create table
cSql := 'create table ' || cNewTableName || '(' || cSql || ')';
dbms_output.put_line(cSql);
execute immediate cSql;
-- insert data
cSql := 'insert into ' || cNewTableName || '(' || cCols || ') select ' || cCols || ' from ' || cTb1;
dbms_output.put_line(cSql);
execute immediate cSql;
cSql := 'insert into ' || cNewTableName || '(' || cCols || ') select ' || cCols || ' from ' || cTb2;
dbms_output.put_line (cSql);
execute immediate cSql;
end if;
end;

oracle procedure giving ORA-00905: missing keyword

I'm trying to create a generic procedure to synchronize sequences.
I want to call the procedure and pass name of table, column and sequence but my procedure won't run due to an error.
Procedure:
CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE INCREMENT_SEQ(table_name in varchar2 , id_column in varchar2 , sequence_name in varchar2)
AS
current_value number;
seq_val number := -1;
begin
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'select max(' || table_name || '.' || id_column || ') into current_value from ' || table_name ;
WHILE current_value >= seq_val
LOOP
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'select ' || sequence_name || '.nextval into seq_val from dual';
end loop;
end;
when I run the script I'm having the following error:
Error at line 2
ORA-00905: missing keyword
ORA-06512: at "TGC100_DEV.INCREMENT_SEQ", line 6
ORA-06512: at line 1
Script Terminated on line 16.
But I have no idea how to solve. Any advice would be helpfull.
You should put INTO clause outside the query:
CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE INCREMENT_SEQ(table_name in varchar2 , id_column in varchar2 , sequence_name in varchar2)
AS
current_value number;
seq_val number := -1;
begin
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'select max(' || table_name || '.' || id_column || ') from ' || table_name into current_value;
WHILE current_value >= seq_val
LOOP
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'select ' || sequence_name || '.nextval from dual' into seq_val;
end loop;
end;
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'select max(' || table_name || '.' || id_column || ') into current_value from ' || table_name ;
It is syntactically incorrect. The INTO clause should be outside of EXECUTE IMMEDIATE statement.
Something like,
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'your SQL statement' INTO variable USING value;
UPDATE It is better to have the dynamic SQL as a variable to avoid confusions with so many single quotes and concatenation in the EXECUTE IMMEDIATE statement itself.
The other answer by Aramilo was posted before my answer, but I got confused to see the INTO clause already outside the statement.
For developers, it is always a good practice to first check the dynamic SQL using DBMS OUTPUT before actually executing it. Thus, it saves a lot of time to debug the whole bunch of PL/SQL code. Once confirmed that the dynamic SQL formed is correct, remove the DBMS_OUTPUT and execute the PL/SQL code.

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