MDAC 2.5 SDK - ODBC Programmer's Reference
Chapter 21: ODBC API Reference
Conformance
Version Introduced: ODBC 1.0
Standards Compliance: ODBC
Summary
SQLColumnPrivileges returns a list of columns and associated privileges for the specified table. The driver returns the information as a result set on the specified StatementHandle.
Syntax
SQLRETURN SQLColumnPrivileges(
SQLHSTMT StatementHandle,
SQLCHAR * CatalogName,
SQLSMALLINT NameLength1,
SQLCHAR * SchemaName,
SQLSMALLINT NameLength2,
SQLCHAR * TableName,
SQLSMALLINT NameLength3,
SQLCHAR * ColumnName,
SQLSMALLINT NameLength4);
Arguments
StatementHandle
[Input]
Statement handle.
CatalogName
[Input]
Catalog name. If a driver supports names for some catalogs but not for others, such as when the driver retrieves data from different DBMSs, an empty string ("") denotes those catalogs that do not have names. CatalogName cannot contain a string search pattern.
If the SQL_ATTR_METADATA_ID statement attribute is set to SQL_TRUE, CatalogName is treated as an identifier and its case is not significant. If it is SQL_FALSE, CatalogName is an ordinary argument; it is treated literally, and its case is significant. For more information, see "Arguments in Catalog Functions" in Chapter 7, "Catalog Functions."
NameLength1
[Input]
Length of *CatalogName.
SchemaName
[Input]
Schema name. If a driver supports schemas for some tables but not for others, such as when the driver retrieves data from different DBMSs, an empty string ("") denotes those tables that do not have schemas. SchemaName cannot contain a string search pattern.
If the SQL_ATTR_METADATA_ID statement attribute is set to SQL_TRUE, SchemaName is treated as an identifier. If it is SQL_FALSE, SchemaName is an ordinary argument; it is treated literally, and its case is significant.
NameLength2
[Input]
Length of *SchemaName.
TableName
[Input]
Table name. This argument cannot be a null pointer. TableName cannot contain a string search pattern.
If the SQL_ATTR_METADATA_ID statement attribute is set to SQL_TRUE, TableName is treated as an identifier and its case is not significant. If it is SQL_FALSE, TableName is an ordinary argument; it is treated literally, and its case is significant.
NameLength3
[Input]
Length of *TableName.
ColumnName
[Input]
String search pattern for column names.
If the SQL_ATTR_METADATA_ID statement attribute is set to SQL_TRUE, ColumnName is treated as an identifier and its case is not significant. If it is SQL_FALSE, ColumnName is a pattern value argument; it is treated literally, and its case is significant.
NameLength4
[Input]
Length of *ColumnName.
Returns
SQL_SUCCESS, SQL_SUCCESS_WITH_INFO, SQL_STILL_EXECUTING, SQL_ERROR, or SQL_INVALID_HANDLE.
Diagnostics
When SQLColumnPrivileges returns SQL_ERROR or SQL_SUCCESS_WITH_INFO, an associated SQLSTATE value may be obtained by calling SQLGetDiagRec with a HandleType of SQL_HANDLE_STMT and a Handle of StatementHandle. The following table lists the SQLSTATE values commonly returned by SQLColumnPrivileges and explains each one in the context of this function; the notation "(DM)" precedes the descriptions of SQLSTATEs returned by the Driver Manager. The return code associated with each SQLSTATE value is SQL_ERROR, unless noted otherwise.
SQLSTATE | Error | Description |
01000 | General warning | Driver-specific informational message. (Function returns SQL_SUCCESS_WITH_INFO.) |
08S01 | Communication link failure | The communication link between the driver and the data source to which the driver was connected failed before the function completed processing. |
24000 | Invalid cursor state | A cursor was open on the StatementHandle, and SQLFetch or SQLFetchScroll had been called. This error is returned by the Driver Manager if SQLFetch or SQLFetchScroll has not returned SQL_NO_DATA, and is returned by the driver if SQLFetch or SQLFetchScroll has returned SQL_NO_DATA.
A cursor was open on the StatementHandle, but SQLFetch or SQLFetchScroll had not been called. |
40001 | Serialization failure | The transaction was rolled back due to a resource deadlock with another transaction. |
40003 | Statement completion unknown | The associated connection failed during the execution of this function, and the state of the transaction cannot be determined. |
HY000 | General error | An error occurred for which there was no specific SQLSTATE and for which no implementation-specific SQLSTATE was defined. The error message returned by SQLGetDiagRec in the *MessageText buffer describes the error and its cause. |
HY001 | Memory allocation error |
The driver was unable to allocate memory required to support execution or completion of the function. |
HY008 | Operation canceled | Asynchronous processing was enabled for the StatementHandle. The function was called, and before it completed execution, SQLCancel was called on the StatementHandle. Then the function was called again on the StatementHandle.
The function was called, and before it completed execution, SQLCancel was called on the StatementHandle from a different thread in a multithread application. |
HY009 | Invalid use of null pointer | The TableName argument was a null pointer.
(DM) The SQL_ATTR_METADATA_ID statement attribute was set to SQL_TRUE, the CatalogName argument was a null pointer, and the SQL_CATALOG_NAME InfoType returns that catalog names are supported. (DM) The SQL_ATTR_METADATA_ID statement attribute was set to SQL_TRUE, and the SchemaName or ColumnName argument was a null pointer. |
HY010 | Function sequence error | (DM) An asynchronously executing function (not this one) was called for the StatementHandle and was still executing when this function was called.
(DM) SQLExecute, SQLExecDirect, SQLBulkOperations, or SQLSetPos was called for the StatementHandle and returned SQL_NEED_DATA. This function was called before data was sent for all data-at-execution parameters or columns. |
HY013 | Memory management error | The function call could not be processed because the underlying memory objects could not be accessed, possibly because of low memory conditions. |
HY090 | Invalid string or buffer length | (DM) The value of one of the name length arguments was less than 0 but not equal to SQL_NTS. |
The value of one of the name length arguments exceeded the maximum length value for the corresponding name. (See "Comments.") | ||
HYC00 | Optional feature not implemented | A catalog name was specified, and the driver or data source does not support catalogs.
A schema name was specified, and the driver or data source does not support schemas. A string search pattern was specified for the column name, and the data source does not support search patterns for that argument. The combination of the current settings of the SQL_CONCURRENCY and SQL_CURSOR_TYPE statement attributes was not supported by the driver or data source. The SQL_ATTR_USE_BOOKMARKS statement attribute was set to SQL_UB_VARIABLE, and the SQL_ATTR_CURSOR_TYPE statement attribute was set to a cursor type for which the driver does not support bookmarks. |
HYT00 | Timeout expired | The query timeout period expired before the data source returned the result set. The timeout period is set through SQLSetStmtAttr, SQL_ATTR_QUERY_TIMEOUT. |
HYT01 | Connection timeout expired | The connection timeout period expired before the data source responded to the request. The connection timeout period is set through SQLSetConnectAttr, SQL_ATTR_CONNECTION_TIMEOUT. |
IM001 | Driver does not support this function | (DM) The driver associated with the StatementHandle does not support the function. |
Comments
SQLColumnPrivileges returns the results as a standard result set, ordered by TABLE_CAT, TABLE_SCHEM, TABLE_NAME, COLUMN_NAME, and PRIVILEGE.
Note SQLColumnPrivileges might not return privileges for all columns. For example, a driver might not return information about privileges for pseudo-columns, such as Oracle ROWID. Applications can use any valid column, regardless of whether it is returned by SQLColumnPrivileges.
The lengths of VARCHAR columns are not shown in the table; the actual lengths depend on the data source. To determine the actual lengths of the CATALOG_NAME, SCHEMA_NAME, TABLE_NAME, and COLUMN_NAME columns, an application can call SQLGetInfo with the SQL_MAX_CATALOG_NAME_LEN, SQL_MAX_SCHEMA_NAME_LEN, SQL_MAX_TABLE_NAME_LEN, and SQL_MAX_COLUMN_NAME_LEN options.
Note For more information about the general use, arguments, and returned data of ODBC catalog functions, see Chapter 7, "Catalog Functions."
The following columns have been renamed for ODBC 3.x. The column name changes do not affect backward compatibility because applications bind by column number.
ODBC 2.0 column | ODBC 3.x column |
TABLE_QUALIFIER | TABLE_CAT |
TABLE_OWNER | TABLE_SCHEM |
The following table lists the columns in the result set. Additional columns beyond column 8 (IS_GRANTABLE) can be defined by the driver. An application should gain access to driver-specific columns by counting down from the end of the result set rather than specifying an explicit ordinal position. For more information, see "Data Returned by Catalog Functions" in Chapter 7, "Catalog Functions."
Column name |
Column number | Data type |
Comments |
TABLE_CAT (ODBC 1.0) |
1 | Varchar | Catalog identifier; NULL if not applicable to the data source. If a driver supports catalogs for some tables but not for others, such as when the driver retrieves data from different DBMSs, it returns an empty string ("") for those tables that do not have catalogs. |
TABLE_SCHEM (ODBC 1.0) |
2 | Varchar | Schema identifier; NULL if not applicable to the data source. If a driver supports schemas for some tables but not for others, such as when the driver retrieves data from different DBMSs, it returns an empty string ("") for those tables that do not have schemas. |
TABLE_NAME (ODBC 1.0) |
3 | Varchar not NULL |
Table identifier. |
COLUMN_NAME (ODBC 1.0) |
4 | Varchar not NULL |
Column name. The driver returns an empty string for a column that does not have a name. |
GRANTOR (ODBC 1.0) |
5 | Varchar | Name of the user who granted the privilege; NULL if not applicable to the data source.
For all rows in which the value in the GRANTEE column is the owner of the object, the GRANTOR column will be "_SYSTEM". |
GRANTEE (ODBC 1.0) |
6 | Varchar not NULL |
Name of the user to whom the privilege was granted. |
PRIVILEGE (ODBC 1.0) |
7 | Varchar not NULL |
Identifies the column privilege. May be one of the following (or others supported by the data source when implementation-defined):
SELECT: The grantee is permitted to retrieve data for the column. INSERT: The grantee is permitted to provide data for the column in new rows that are inserted into the associated table. UPDATE: The grantee is permitted to update data in the column. REFERENCES: The grantee is permitted to refer to the column within a constraint (for example, a unique, referential, or table check constraint). |
IS_GRANTABLE (ODBC 1.0) |
8 | Varchar | Indicates whether the grantee is permitted to grant the privilege to other users; "YES", "NO", or "NULL" if unknown or not applicable to the data source.
A privilege is either grantable or not grantable, but not both. The result set returned by SQLColumnPrivileges will never contain two rows for which all columns except the IS_GRANTABLE column contain the same value. |
Code Example
For a code example of a similar function, see SQLColumns.
Related Functions
For information about | See |
Binding a buffer to a column in a result set | SQLBindCol |
Canceling statement processing | SQLCancel |
Returning the columns in a table or tables | SQLColumns |
Fetching a block of data or scrolling through a result set | SQLFetchScroll |
Fetching multiple rows of data | SQLFetch |
Returning privileges for a table or tables | SQLTablePrivileges |
Returning a list of tables in a data source | SQLTables |