The DBMS_DB_VERSION
package specifies the Oracle version numbers and other information useful for simple conditional compilation selections based on Oracle versions.
See Also:
PL/SQL Users Guide and Reference regarding conditional compilationThis package contains the following topics
Overview
Constants
Examples
The DBMS_DB_VERSION
package specifies the Oracle version numbers and other information useful for simple conditional compilation selections based on Oracle versions.
The package for the Oracle Database 11g Release 1 version is shown below.
PACKAGE DBMS_DB_VERSION IS VERSION CONSTANT PLS_INTEGER := 11; -- RDBMS version number RELEASE CONSTANT PLS_INTEGER := 1; -- RDBMS release number ver_le_9_1 CONSTANT BOOLEAN := FALSE; ver_le_9_2 CONSTANT BOOLEAN := FALSE; ver_le_9 CONSTANT BOOLEAN := FALSE; ver_le_10_1 CONSTANT BOOLEAN := FALSE; ver_le_10_2 CONSTANT BOOLEAN := FALSE; ver_le_10 CONSTANT BOOLEAN := FALSE; ver_le_11_1 CONSTANT BOOLEAN := TRUE; ver_le_11 CONSTANT BOOLEAN := TRUE; END DBMS_DB_VERSION;
The boolean constants follow a naming convention. Each constant gives a name for a boolean expression. For example:
VER_LE_9_1
represents version <= 9 and release <= 1
VER_LE_10_2
represents version <= 10 and release <= 2
VER_LE_10
represents version <= 10
A typical usage of these boolean constants is:
$IF DBMS_DB_VERSION.VER_LE_10 $THEN version 10 and earlier code $ELSIF DBMS_DB_VERSION.VER_LE_11 $THEN version 11 code $ELSE version 12 and later code $END
This code structure will protect any reference to the code for hypothetical version 12. It also prevents the controlling package constant DBMS_DB_VERSION
.VER_LE_11
from being referenced when the program is compiled under version 10. A similar observation applies to version 11. This scheme works even though the static constant VER_LE_11
is not defined in version 10 database because conditional compilation protects the $ELSIF
from evaluation if DBMS_DB_VERSION
.VER_LE_10
is TRUE
.
The DBMS_DB_VERSION
package contains different constants for different Oracle Database releases. The Oracle Database 11g Release 1 version of the DBMS_DB_VERSION
package uses the constants shown in Table 51-1.
Table 51-1 DBMS_DB_VERSION Constants
Name | Type | Value | Description |
---|---|---|---|
|
|
10 |
Current version |
|
|
2 |
Current release |
|
|
|
Version <= 9 |
|
|
|
Version <= 9 and release <= 1 |
|
|
|
Version <= 9 and release <= 2 |
|
|
|
Version <= 10 |
|
|
|
Version <= 10 and release <= 1 |
|
|
|
Version <=10 and release <= 2 |
|
|
|
Version <= 11 |
|
|
|
Version <=11 and release <= 1 |
This example uses conditional compilation to guard new features.
CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE whetstone IS -- Notice that conditional compilation constructs -- can interrupt a regular PL/SQL statement. -- You can locate a conditional compilation directive anywhere -- there is whitespace in the regular statement. SUBTYPE my_real IS $IF DBMS_DB_VERSION.VER_LE_9 $THEN NUMBER $ELSE BINARY_DOUBLE $END; t CONSTANT my_real := $IF DBMS_DB_VERSION.VER_LE_9 $THEN 0.499975 $ELSE 0.499975d $END; t2 CONSTANT my_real := $if DBMS_DB_VERSION.VER_LE_9 $THEN 2.0 $ELSE 2.0d $END; x CONSTANT my_real := $IF DBMS_DB_VERSION.VER_LE_9 $THEN 1.0 $ELSE 1.0d $END; y CONSTANT my_real := $IF DBMS_DB_VERSION.VER_LE_9 $THEN 1.0 $ELSE 1.0d $END; z MY_REAL; PROCEDURE P(x IN my_real, y IN my_real, z OUT NOCOPY my_real) IS x1 my_real; y1 my_real; BEGIN x1 := x; y1 := y; x1 := t * (x1 + y1); y1 := t * (x1 + y1); z := (x1 + y1)/t2; END P; BEGIN P(x, y, z); DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE ('z = '|| z); END whetstone; /