Ruby API for calling Oracle PL/SQL procedures.
ruby-plsql gem provides simple Ruby API for calling Oracle PL/SQL procedures. It could be used both for accessing Oracle PL/SQL API procedures in legacy applications as well as it could be used to create PL/SQL unit tests using Ruby testing libraries.
NUMBER, BINARY_INTEGER, PLS_INTEGER, NATURAL, NATURALN, POSITIVE, POSITIVEN, SIGNTYPE, SIMPLE_INTEGER, VARCHAR, VARCHAR2, NVARCHAR2, CHAR, NCHAR, DATE, TIMESTAMP, CLOB, BLOB, BOOLEAN, PL/SQL RECORD, TABLE, VARRAY, OBJECT and CURSOR types are supported for input and output parameters and return values of PL/SQL procedures and functions.
ruby-plsql supports Ruby 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 2.5 (ruby-oci8 2.2.3+ is needed for Ruby 2.4) and JRuby 9.1 implementations.
require "rubygems"
require "ruby-plsql"
plsql.connection = OCI8.new("hr","hr","xe")
plsql.test_uppercase('xxx') # => "XXX"
plsql.test_uppercase(:p_string => 'xxx') # => "XXX"
plsql.test_copy("abc", nil, nil) # => { :p_to => "abc", :p_to_double => "abcabc" }
plsql.test_copy(:p_from => "abc", :p_to => nil, :p_to_double => nil)
# => { :p_to => "abc", :p_to_double => "abcabc" }
plsql.hr.test_uppercase('xxx') # => "XXX"
plsql.test_package.test_uppercase('xxx') # => 'XXX'
# PL/SQL records or object type parameters should be passed as Hash
p_employee = { :employee_id => 1, :first_name => 'First', :last_name => 'Last', :hire_date => Time.local(2000,01,31) }
plsql.test_full_name(p_employee)
# TABLE or VARRAY parameters should be passed as Array
plsql.test_sum([1,2,3,4])
# Nested objects or arrays are also supported
p_employee = { :employee_id => 1, :first_name => 'First', :last_name => 'Last', :hire_date => Time.local(2000,01,31),
:address => {:street => 'Street', :city => 'City', :country => 'Country'},
:phones => [{:type => 'mobile', :phone_number => '123456'}, {:type => 'fixed', :phone_number => '654321'}]}
plsql.test_store_employee(p_employee)
# Returned cursor can be fetched
plsql.test_cursor do |cursor|
cursor.fetch # => one row from cursor
cursor.fetch_all # => all rows from cursor
end
plsql.connection.autocommit = false
plsql.commit
plsql.rollback
plsql.logoff
Look at RSpec tests under spec directory for more usage examples.
Note: named arguments in procedures calls should be in lower case.
ruby-plsql also provides simple API for select/insert/update/delete table operations (with Sequel-like syntax). This could be useful if ruby-plsql is used without ActiveRecord (e.g. for writing PL/SQL unit tests):
# insert record in table
employee = { :employee_id => 1, :first_name => 'First', :last_name => 'Last', :hire_date => Time.local(2000,01,31) }
plsql.employees.insert employee # INSERT INTO employees VALUES (1, 'First', 'Last', ...)
# insert many records
employees = [employee1, employee2, ... ] # array of many Hashes
plsql.employees.insert employees
# insert many records as list of values
plsql.employees.insert_values [:employee_id, :first_name, :last_name],
[1, 'First 1', 'Last 1'],
[2, 'First 2', 'Last 2']
# select one record
plsql.employees.first # SELECT * FROM employees
# fetch first row => {:employee_id => ..., :first_name => '...', ...}
plsql.employees.first(:employee_id => 1) # SELECT * FROM employees WHERE employee_id = 1
plsql.employees.first("WHERE employee_id = 1")
plsql.employees.first("WHERE employee_id = :employee_id", 1)
# select many records
plsql.employees.all # => [{...}, {...}, ...]
plsql.employees.all(:order_by => :employee_id)
plsql.employees.all("WHERE employee_id > :employee_id", 5)
# count records
plsql.employees.count # SELECT COUNT(*) FROM employees
plsql.employees.count("WHERE employee_id > :employee_id", 5)
# update records
plsql.employees.update(:first_name => 'Second', :where => {:employee_id => 1})
# UPDATE employees SET first_name = 'Second' WHERE employee_id = 1
# delete records
plsql.employees.delete(:employee_id => 1) # DELETE FROM employees WHERE employee_id = 1
# select from sequences
plsql.employees_seq.nextval # SELECT employees_seq.NEXTVAL FROM dual
plsql.employees_seq.currval # SELECT employees_seq.CURRVAL FROM dual
If using with Rails then include in initializer file:
plsql.activerecord_class = ActiveRecord::Base
and then you do not need to specify plsql.connection (this is also safer when ActiveRecord reestablishes connection to database).
You may have a look at this Cheat Sheet for instructions on how to use ruby-plsql
Install as gem with
gem install ruby-plsql
or include gem in Gemfile if using bundler.
In addition install either ruby-oci8 (for MRI/YARV) or copy Oracle JDBC driver to $JRUBY_HOME/lib (for JRuby).
If you are using MRI Ruby implementation then you need to install ruby-oci8 gem (version 2.0.x or 2.1.x) as well as Oracle client, e.g. Oracle Instant Client.
If you are using JRuby then you need to download latest Oracle JDBC driver - either ojdbc7.jar for Java 8 and 7, ojdbc6.jar for Java 6, 7, 8 or ojdbc5.jar for Java 5. You can refer the support matrix for details.
And copy this file to one of these locations. JDBC driver will be searched in this order:
- in
JRUBY_HOME/lib
directory - in
./lib
directory of Rails application - or include path to JDBC driver jar file in Java
CLASSPATH
- in some directory which is in
PATH
If you put multiple versions of JDBC driver in the same directory the higher version one will be used.
Make sure to setup the following Oracle-specific environment variables properly
- NLS_LANG - preferred value
NLS_LANG=AMERICAN_AMERICA.AL32UTF8
- ORA_SDTZ The setting should point a machine timezone like:
ORA_SDTZ=Europe/Riga
, otherwise Oracle by default uses a Fixed-offset timezone (like03:00
) that is not daylight saving (DST) aware, which will lead to wrong translations of the timestamp values between Ruby code (DTS-aware) and Oracle session (non-DST-aware). - ORACLE_HOME
You may either alter your environment settings or set the values in file spec/support/custom_config.rb
. Sample file custom_config.rb.sample
shows how to do that.
Make sure you use correct version of Oracle client for database you're connecting to. Otherwise you may encounter TimeZone errors like this
Review spec/spec_helper.rb
to see default schema/user names and database names (use environment variables to override defaults)
-
With local Vagrant based Oracle XE database.
Download Oracle XE database
oracle-xe-11.2.0-1.0.x86_64.rpm.zip
from Oracle Home page and put it into project home directory.From project home directory run
vagrant up
command to build fully functioning Centos 6.6 virtual machine with installed Oracle XE database. -
Within other Oracle Database create Oracle database schema for test purposes.
SQL> CREATE USER hr IDENTIFIED BY hr; SQL> GRANT unlimited tablespace, create session, create table, create sequence, create procedure, create type, create view, create synonym TO hr; SQL> CREATE USER arunit IDENTIFIED BY arunit; SQL> GRANT create session TO arunit;
-
Install bundler with
gem install bundler
-
Install necessary gems with
bundle install
-
Run tests with local Vagrant based Oracle XE database
USE_VM_DATABASE=Y rake spec
-
Run tests with other Oracle database
rake spec
- Source code: http://github.com/rsim/ruby-plsql
- Bug reports / Feature requests: http://github.com/rsim/ruby-plsql/issues
- Discuss at oracle_enhanced adapter group: http://groups.google.com/group/oracle-enhanced
- Raimonds Simanovskis
- Edgars Beigarts
- Oleh Mykytyuk
- Wiehann Matthysen
- Dayle Larson
- Yasuo Honda
- Yavor Nikolov
(The MIT License)
Copyright (c) 2008-2014 Raimonds Simanovskis
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the 'Software'), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
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