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PostgreSQL Server Programming

You're reading from   PostgreSQL Server Programming Take your skills with PostgreSQL to a whole new level with this fascinating guide to server programming. A step by step approach with illuminating examples will educate you in the full range of possibilities.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849516983
Length 264 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

PostgreSQL Server Programming
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. What Is a PostgreSQL Server? 2. Server Programming Environment FREE CHAPTER 3. Your First PL/pgSQL Function 4. Returning Structured Data 5. PL/pgSQL Trigger Functions 6. Debugging PL/pgSQL 7. Using Unrestricted Languages 8. Writing Advanced Functions in C 9. Scaling Your Database with PL/Proxy 10. Publishing Your Code as PostgreSQL Extensions Index

Basic guidelines for writing C code


After having written our first function, let's look at some of the basic coding guidelines for PostgreSQL backend coding.

Memory allocation

One of the places you have to be extra careful when writing C code in general is memory management. For any non-trivial C program you have to carefully design and implement your programs so that all your allocated memory is freed when you are done with it, or else you will "leak memory" and will probably run out of memory at some point.

As this is also a common concern for PostgreSQL it has it's own solution for it—Memory Contexts. Let's take a deeper dive into them.

Use palloc() and pfree()

Most PostgreSQL memory allocations are done using PostgreSQL's memory allocation function palloc() and not standard C malloc(). What makes palloc() special, is that it allocates the memory in current context and the whole memory is freed in one go when the context is destroyed. For example, the transaction context—which is the current...

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