ECHO
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Executes a stored procedure and returns a set of rows as a result.
Syntax
Positional Notation is the standard way for passing arguments to functions.
ECHO { procedure_name([arg[, ...]])| database_name.procedure_name([arg [, ...]]) };
Named Notation is when the argument name is specified using => to separate it from the argument expression.
ECHO { procedure_name([arg=>val [,...]])| database_name.procedure_name([arg=>val [,...]])
Mixed Notation is a combination of positional and named notation.
ECHO { procedure_name([arg [, ...] [, arg=>val [,...] ]])| database_name.procedure_name([arg [, ...] [, arg=>val [,...] ]])
Arguments
-
procedure_
: The name of the stored procedure to execute.name -
argument_
: A list of optional arguments to pass as input parameters to the stored procedure.list
Remarks
-
Stored procedures use a late binding approach when returning sets of rows.
That is, a query object with parameter bindings is returned by a stored procedure, not a materialized row set. To get the set of rows for the query returned by a stored procedure, you must run the procedure using ECHO
. -
You can consume the results of an
ECHO
statement from a client application program just like you consume the results of aSELECT
statement. -
The CALL command is similar to
ECHO
but does not produce a set of rows as a result.Any query value returned is ignored when using CALL
. -
Refer to the Permission Matrix for the required permission.
-
When using Named Notation and Mixed Notation the following are applicable:
-
Once a named argument is used, all arguments to the right must be named as well.
-
Named arguments cannot refer to other arguments.
-
Argument names are case-sensitive.
-
A different order of the same arguments may yield different plans.
-
Example
You cannot use ECHO
to execute a stored procedure that does not return a value, or a stored procedure that returns an ARRAY
or RECORD
value.ECHO
will be a single row with the column name RESULT
.
DELIMITER //CREATE PROCEDURE return_scalar() RETURNS INT ASBEGINRETURN 2;END //DELIMITER ;ECHO return_scalar();
+--------+
| RESULT |
+--------+
| 2 |
+--------+
1 row in set
The behavior is different when the stored procedure returns a query type variable.
CREATE TABLE t(a INT, b VARCHAR(30));INSERT t VALUES(1, "red"), (2, "green"), (3, "blue");DELIMITER //CREATE PROCEDURE p(x INT) RETURNS query(a INT, b VARCHAR(30)) ASDECLAREq query(a INT, b VARCHAR(30)) =SELECT a, bFROM tWHERE a >= x;BEGINRETURN q;END //DELIMITER ;
You can use the ECHO
command to call this procedure, evaluate the query it returns, and output the resulting rows, as follows:
ECHO p(2);
+------+-------+
| a | b |
+------+-------+
| 3 | blue |
| 2 | green |
+------+-------+
Named notation and mixed notation can be used for the arguments of ECHO
, similar to how named notation is used in CALL
.p
, created above.
ECHO p(x=>2);
+------+-------+
| a | b |
+------+-------+
| 3 | blue |
| 2 | green |
+------+-------+
You can use ECHO
command to obtain a scalar value from a stored procedure.
DELIMITER //CREATE or REPLACE PROCEDURE p() RETURNS INT ASBEGINRETURN 17;end //DELIMITER ;CALL p();ECHO p();
+---------+
| RESULT |
+---------+
| 17 |
+---------+
Consume Output of Echo in a Python Application
A stored procedure may optionally return a QUERY
value which evaluates to a set of rows.ECHO
statement to run the procedure.
Setup
As an example, first run the following SQL statements:
-- Setup for Python ECHO example.USE information_schema;DROP DATABASE IF EXISTS test;CREATE DATABASE test;USE test;CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS tbl(id INT, value VARCHAR(30));INSERT INTO tbl VALUES(1, "red");INSERT INTO tbl VALUES(2, "green");INSERT INTO tbl VALUES(3, "blue");DELIMITER //CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE p(x INT) RETURNS QUERY(id INT, value VARCHAR(30)) ASDECLAREr QUERY(id INT, value VARCHAR(30)) =SELECT id, value FROM tblWHERE id >= x;BEGINRETURN r;END//DELIMITER ;
Python Application
Then, make sure the SingleStore Python library is installed.
Now run the following:
import singlestoredb as s2# Specify connection information for SingleStore HeliosHOST = "127.0.0.1"PORT = 3306USER = "root"PASSWORD = ""# Specify which database to work with.DATABASE = "test"def get_connection(db=DATABASE):""" Returns a new connection to the database. """return s2.connect(host=HOST, port=PORT, user=USER, password=PASSWORD, database=db)def test_echo(x):with get_connection(db=DATABASE) as conn:query = 'echo p(%s)'with conn.cursor() as cur:cur.execute(query, [x])for r in cur:print("id = %s, value = %s" % (r[0], r[1]))
Now, test_
can be called from the Python command line to display rows retrieved using ECHO
.
test_echo(2);
The following output is produced:
>>> test_echo(2);
id = 2, value = green
id = 3, value = blue
Last modified: November 27, 2024