pgtcl is a tcl package for front-end programs to interface with Postgres95 backends. PgTcl does not use the libpq library but communicates to the backend directly via the frontend-backend protocol. Thus, it is more efficient than previous postgres->tcl bindings which are layered on top of libpq. In addition, pgtcl can handle multiple backend connections from a single frontend application. If you have any questions or bug reports, please send them to Jolly Chen at jolly@cs.berkeley.edu. ------------------------------------------------------------------- The pgtcl package provides the following commands. pg_connect - opens a connection to the backend server pg_disconnect - closes a connection pg_exec - send a query to the backend pg_result - manipulate the results of a query pg_lo_creat - create a large object pg_lo_open - open a large object pg_lo_close - close a large object pg_lo_read - read a large object pg_lo_write - write a large object pg_lo_lseek - seek to a position on a large object pg_lo_tell - return the current seek position of a large object pg_lo_unlink - delete a large object pg_lo_import - import a Unix file into a large object pg_lo_export - export a large object into a Unix file 1) pg_connect: opens a connection to the backend syntax: pg_connect dbName [-host hostName] [-port portNumber] [-tty pqtty] [-options optionalBackendArgs]] the return result is either an error message or a handle for a database connection. Handles start with the prefix "pgp" 2) pg_disconnect: closes a connection syntax: pg_disconnect connection The argument passed in must be a connection pointer. 3) pg_exec: send a query string to the backend syntax: pg_exec connection query the return result is either an error message or a handle for a query result. Handles start with the prefix "pgp" 4) pg_result: get information about a query result syntax: pg_result result ?option? the options are: -status the status of the result -oid if the last query was an insert, returns the oid of the inserted tuple -conn the connection that produced the result -assign arrayName assign the results to an array -numTuples the number of tuples in the query -attributes returns a list of the name/type pairs of the tuple attributes -getTuple tupleNumber returns the values of the tuple in a list -clear clear the result buffer. Do not reuse after this ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- The pg_lo* routines are interfaces to the Inversion large objects in postgres. The functions are designed to mimic the analogous file system functions in the standard Unix file system interface. The pg_lo* routines should typically be used within a BEGIN/END transaction block becaus the file descriptor returned by pg_lo_open is only valid for the current transaction. pg_lo_import and pg_lo_export MUST be used in a BEGIN/END transaction block. * pg_lo_creat: create a large object syntax: g_lo_creat conn mode mode can be any OR'ing together of INV_READ, INV_WRITE, and INV_ARCHIVE. The OR delimiter character is "|". e.g. [pg_lo_creat $conn "INV_READ|INV_WRITE"] returns the oid of the large object created. * pg_lo_open: open a large object syntax: pg_lo_open conn objOid mode where mode can be either "r", "w", or "rw" returns a file descriptor for use in later pg_lo* routines * pg_lo_close: close a large object syntax: pg_lo_close conn fd * pg_lo_read: read a large object syntax: pg_lo_read conn fd bufVar len reads at most len bytes from a large object into a variable named bufVar. Note that the third argument should be a variable name. * pg_lo_write: write a large object syntax: pg_lo_write conn fd buf len write at most len bytes to a large object. The third argument should be the actual string to write, not a variable name. * pg_lo_lseek: seek to a position on a large object syntax: pg_lo_lseek conn fd offset whence whence can be "SEEK_CUR", "SEEK_END", or "SEEK_SET" * pg_lo_tell: return the current seek position of a large object syntax: pg_lo_tell conn fd * pg_lo_unlink: delete a large object syntax: pg_lo_unlink conn lobjId * pg_lo_import: import a Unix file into a large object syntax: pg_lo_import conn filename pg_lo_import must be called within a BEGIN/END transaction block * pg_lo_export: export a large object into a Unix file syntax: pg_lo_export conn lobjId filename pg_lo_export must be called within a BEGIN/END transaction block ------------------------------------------------------------------ Here's a small example of how to use the routines: # getDBs : # get the names of all the databases at a given host and port number # with the defaults being the localhost and port 5432 # return them in alphabetical order proc getDBs { {host "localhost"} {port "5432"} } { # datnames is the list to be result set conn [pg_connect template1 -host $host -port $port] set res [pg_exec $conn "SELECT datname FROM pg_database ORDER BY datname"] set ntups [pg_result $res -numTuples] for {set i 0} {$i < $ntups} {incr i} { lappend datnames [pg_result $res -getTuple $i] } pg_disconnect $conn return $datnames }