Class Google::Cloud::Spanner::V1::ExecuteSqlRequest (v0.7.4)

The request for ExecuteSql and ExecuteStreamingSql.

Inherits

  • Object

Extended By

  • Google::Protobuf::MessageExts::ClassMethods

Includes

  • Google::Protobuf::MessageExts

Methods

#param_types

def param_types() -> ::Google::Protobuf::Map{::String => ::Google::Cloud::Spanner::V1::Type}
Returns
  • (::Google::Protobuf::Map{::String => ::Google::Cloud::Spanner::V1::Type}) — It is not always possible for Cloud Spanner to infer the right SQL type from a JSON value. For example, values of type BYTES and values of type STRING both appear in params as JSON strings.

    In these cases, param_types can be used to specify the exact SQL type for some or all of the SQL statement parameters. See the definition of Type for more information about SQL types.

#param_types=

def param_types=(value) -> ::Google::Protobuf::Map{::String => ::Google::Cloud::Spanner::V1::Type}
Parameter
  • value (::Google::Protobuf::Map{::String => ::Google::Cloud::Spanner::V1::Type}) — It is not always possible for Cloud Spanner to infer the right SQL type from a JSON value. For example, values of type BYTES and values of type STRING both appear in params as JSON strings.

    In these cases, param_types can be used to specify the exact SQL type for some or all of the SQL statement parameters. See the definition of Type for more information about SQL types.

Returns
  • (::Google::Protobuf::Map{::String => ::Google::Cloud::Spanner::V1::Type}) — It is not always possible for Cloud Spanner to infer the right SQL type from a JSON value. For example, values of type BYTES and values of type STRING both appear in params as JSON strings.

    In these cases, param_types can be used to specify the exact SQL type for some or all of the SQL statement parameters. See the definition of Type for more information about SQL types.

#params

def params() -> ::Google::Protobuf::Struct
Returns
  • (::Google::Protobuf::Struct) — Parameter names and values that bind to placeholders in the SQL string.

    A parameter placeholder consists of the @ character followed by the parameter name (for example, @firstName). Parameter names must conform to the naming requirements of identifiers as specified at https://cloud.google.com/spanner/docs/lexical#identifiers.

    Parameters can appear anywhere that a literal value is expected. The same parameter name can be used more than once, for example:

    "WHERE id > @msg_id AND id < @msg_id + 100"

    It is an error to execute a SQL statement with unbound parameters.

#params=

def params=(value) -> ::Google::Protobuf::Struct
Parameter
  • value (::Google::Protobuf::Struct) — Parameter names and values that bind to placeholders in the SQL string.

    A parameter placeholder consists of the @ character followed by the parameter name (for example, @firstName). Parameter names must conform to the naming requirements of identifiers as specified at https://cloud.google.com/spanner/docs/lexical#identifiers.

    Parameters can appear anywhere that a literal value is expected. The same parameter name can be used more than once, for example:

    "WHERE id > @msg_id AND id < @msg_id + 100"

    It is an error to execute a SQL statement with unbound parameters.

Returns
  • (::Google::Protobuf::Struct) — Parameter names and values that bind to placeholders in the SQL string.

    A parameter placeholder consists of the @ character followed by the parameter name (for example, @firstName). Parameter names must conform to the naming requirements of identifiers as specified at https://cloud.google.com/spanner/docs/lexical#identifiers.

    Parameters can appear anywhere that a literal value is expected. The same parameter name can be used more than once, for example:

    "WHERE id > @msg_id AND id < @msg_id + 100"

    It is an error to execute a SQL statement with unbound parameters.

#partition_token

def partition_token() -> ::String
Returns
  • (::String) — If present, results will be restricted to the specified partition previously created using PartitionQuery(). There must be an exact match for the values of fields common to this message and the PartitionQueryRequest message used to create this partition_token.

#partition_token=

def partition_token=(value) -> ::String
Parameter
  • value (::String) — If present, results will be restricted to the specified partition previously created using PartitionQuery(). There must be an exact match for the values of fields common to this message and the PartitionQueryRequest message used to create this partition_token.
Returns
  • (::String) — If present, results will be restricted to the specified partition previously created using PartitionQuery(). There must be an exact match for the values of fields common to this message and the PartitionQueryRequest message used to create this partition_token.

#query_mode

def query_mode() -> ::Google::Cloud::Spanner::V1::ExecuteSqlRequest::QueryMode
Returns

#query_mode=

def query_mode=(value) -> ::Google::Cloud::Spanner::V1::ExecuteSqlRequest::QueryMode
Parameter
Returns

#query_options

def query_options() -> ::Google::Cloud::Spanner::V1::ExecuteSqlRequest::QueryOptions
Returns

#query_options=

def query_options=(value) -> ::Google::Cloud::Spanner::V1::ExecuteSqlRequest::QueryOptions
Parameter
Returns

#request_options

def request_options() -> ::Google::Cloud::Spanner::V1::RequestOptions
Returns

#request_options=

def request_options=(value) -> ::Google::Cloud::Spanner::V1::RequestOptions
Parameter
Returns

#resume_token

def resume_token() -> ::String
Returns
  • (::String) — If this request is resuming a previously interrupted SQL statement execution, resume_token should be copied from the last PartialResultSet yielded before the interruption. Doing this enables the new SQL statement execution to resume where the last one left off. The rest of the request parameters must exactly match the request that yielded this token.

#resume_token=

def resume_token=(value) -> ::String
Parameter
  • value (::String) — If this request is resuming a previously interrupted SQL statement execution, resume_token should be copied from the last PartialResultSet yielded before the interruption. Doing this enables the new SQL statement execution to resume where the last one left off. The rest of the request parameters must exactly match the request that yielded this token.
Returns
  • (::String) — If this request is resuming a previously interrupted SQL statement execution, resume_token should be copied from the last PartialResultSet yielded before the interruption. Doing this enables the new SQL statement execution to resume where the last one left off. The rest of the request parameters must exactly match the request that yielded this token.

#seqno

def seqno() -> ::Integer
Returns
  • (::Integer) — A per-transaction sequence number used to identify this request. This field makes each request idempotent such that if the request is received multiple times, at most one will succeed.

    The sequence number must be monotonically increasing within the transaction. If a request arrives for the first time with an out-of-order sequence number, the transaction may be aborted. Replays of previously handled requests will yield the same response as the first execution.

    Required for DML statements. Ignored for queries.

#seqno=

def seqno=(value) -> ::Integer
Parameter
  • value (::Integer) — A per-transaction sequence number used to identify this request. This field makes each request idempotent such that if the request is received multiple times, at most one will succeed.

    The sequence number must be monotonically increasing within the transaction. If a request arrives for the first time with an out-of-order sequence number, the transaction may be aborted. Replays of previously handled requests will yield the same response as the first execution.

    Required for DML statements. Ignored for queries.

Returns
  • (::Integer) — A per-transaction sequence number used to identify this request. This field makes each request idempotent such that if the request is received multiple times, at most one will succeed.

    The sequence number must be monotonically increasing within the transaction. If a request arrives for the first time with an out-of-order sequence number, the transaction may be aborted. Replays of previously handled requests will yield the same response as the first execution.

    Required for DML statements. Ignored for queries.

#session

def session() -> ::String
Returns
  • (::String) — Required. The session in which the SQL query should be performed.

#session=

def session=(value) -> ::String
Parameter
  • value (::String) — Required. The session in which the SQL query should be performed.
Returns
  • (::String) — Required. The session in which the SQL query should be performed.

#sql

def sql() -> ::String
Returns
  • (::String) — Required. The SQL string.

#sql=

def sql=(value) -> ::String
Parameter
  • value (::String) — Required. The SQL string.
Returns
  • (::String) — Required. The SQL string.

#transaction

def transaction() -> ::Google::Cloud::Spanner::V1::TransactionSelector
Returns
  • (::Google::Cloud::Spanner::V1::TransactionSelector) — The transaction to use.

    For queries, if none is provided, the default is a temporary read-only transaction with strong concurrency.

    Standard DML statements require a read-write transaction. To protect against replays, single-use transactions are not supported. The caller must either supply an existing transaction ID or begin a new transaction.

    Partitioned DML requires an existing Partitioned DML transaction ID.

#transaction=

def transaction=(value) -> ::Google::Cloud::Spanner::V1::TransactionSelector
Parameter
  • value (::Google::Cloud::Spanner::V1::TransactionSelector) — The transaction to use.

    For queries, if none is provided, the default is a temporary read-only transaction with strong concurrency.

    Standard DML statements require a read-write transaction. To protect against replays, single-use transactions are not supported. The caller must either supply an existing transaction ID or begin a new transaction.

    Partitioned DML requires an existing Partitioned DML transaction ID.

Returns
  • (::Google::Cloud::Spanner::V1::TransactionSelector) — The transaction to use.

    For queries, if none is provided, the default is a temporary read-only transaction with strong concurrency.

    Standard DML statements require a read-write transaction. To protect against replays, single-use transactions are not supported. The caller must either supply an existing transaction ID or begin a new transaction.

    Partitioned DML requires an existing Partitioned DML transaction ID.