The pg_cursors
view lists the cursors that are currently available. Cursors can be defined in several ways:
-
via the DECLARE statement in SQL
-
via the Bind message in the frontend/backend protocol, as described in Section 51.2.3
-
via the Server Programming Interface (SPI), as described in Section 45.1
The pg_cursors
view displays cursors created by any of these means. Cursors only exist for the duration of the transaction that defines them, unless they have been declared WITH HOLD
. Therefore non-holdable cursors are only present in the view until the end of their creating transaction.
Note: Cursors are used internally to implement some of the components of PostgreSQL, such as procedural languages. Therefore, the
pg_cursors
view might include cursors that have not been explicitly created by the user.
Table 50-62. pg_cursors
Columns
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
name | text | The name of the cursor |
statement | text | The verbatim query string submitted to declare this cursor |
is_holdable | boolean |
true if the cursor is holdable (that is, it can be accessed after the transaction that declared the cursor has committed); false otherwise |
is_binary | boolean |
true if the cursor was declared BINARY ; false otherwise |
is_scrollable | boolean |
true if the cursor is scrollable (that is, it allows rows to be retrieved in a nonsequential manner); false otherwise |
creation_time | timestamptz | The time at which the cursor was declared |
The pg_cursors
view is read only.
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