Oracle® Database SQL Reference 10g Release 2 (10.2) Part Number B14200-02 |
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Purpose
Use the ALTER
PROCEDURE
statement to explicitly recompile a standalone stored procedure. Explicit recompilation eliminates the need for implicit run-time recompilation and prevents associated run-time compilation errors and performance overhead.
To recompile a procedure that is part of a package, recompile the entire package using the ALTER
PACKAGE
statement (see ALTER PACKAGE).
Note: This statement does not change the declaration or definition of an existing procedure. To redeclare or redefine a procedure, use theCREATE PROCEDURE statement with the OR REPLACE clause (see CREATE PROCEDURE). |
The ALTER
PROCEDURE
statement is quite similar to the ALTER
FUNCTION
statement. Please refer to ALTER FUNCTION for more information.
Prerequisites
The procedure must be in your own schema or you must have ALTER
ANY
PROCEDURE
system privilege.
Syntax
alter_procedure::=
compiler_parameters_clause::=
Semantics
schema
Specify the schema containing the procedure. If you omit schema
, then Oracle Database assumes the procedure is in your own schema.
procedure
Specify the name of the procedure to be recompiled.
Specify COMPILE
to recompile the procedure. The COMPILE
keyword is required. Oracle Database recompiles the procedure regardless of whether it is valid or invalid.
Oracle Database first recompiles objects upon which the procedure depends, if any of those objects are invalid.
Oracle Database also invalidates any local objects that depend upon the procedure, such as procedures that call the recompiled procedure or package bodies that define procedures that call the recompiled procedure.
If Oracle Database recompiles the procedure successfully, then the procedure becomes valid. If recompiling the procedure results in compilation errors, then Oracle Database returns an error and the procedure remains invalid. You can see the associated compiler error messages with the SQL*Plus command SHOW
ERRORS
.
During recompilation, Oracle Database drops all persistent compiler switch settings, retrieves them again from the session, and stores them at the end of compilation. To avoid this process, specify the REUSE
SETTINGS
clause.
See Also: Oracle Database Concepts for information on how Oracle Database maintains dependencies among schema objects, including remote objects and "Recompiling a Procedure: Example" |
Specify DEBUG
to instruct the PL/SQL compiler to generate and store the code for use by the PL/SQL debugger. Specifying this clause is the same as specifying PLSQL_DEBUG
= TRUE
in the compiler_parameters_clause
.
See Also: Oracle Database Application Developer's Guide - Fundamentals for information on debugging procedures |
This clause has the same behavior for a procedure as it does for a function. Please refer to the ALTER
FUNCTION
compiler_parameters_clause.
This clause has the same behavior for a procedure as it does for a function. Please refer to the ALTER
FUNCTION
clause REUSE SETTINGS.
Example
Recompiling a Procedure: Example To explicitly recompile the procedure remove_emp
owned by the user hr
, issue the following statement:
ALTER PROCEDURE hr.remove_emp COMPILE;
If Oracle Database encounters no compilation errors while recompiling credit
, then credit
becomes valid. Oracle Database can subsequently execute it without recompiling it at run time. If recompiling credit
results in compilation errors, then Oracle Database returns an error and credit
remains invalid.
Oracle Database also invalidates all dependent objects. These objects include any procedures, functions, and package bodies that call credit
. If you subsequently reference one of these objects without first explicitly recompiling it, then Oracle Database recompiles it implicitly at run time.