Before, after, each row and table level triggers [Oracle]
The goal of this page is to demonstrate the most important differences between
before and
after triggers as well as the differences between
for each row and
table level triggers.
Before / for each row trigger
A before trigger is called
before because it fires before
create table t_update_before_each_row ( txt varchar2(10) ); create table log ( txt varchar2(20) ); create trigger update_before_each_row before update on t_update_before_each_row for each row begin :new.txt := upper(:new.txt); insert into log values ('old: ' || :old.txt); insert into log values ('new: ' || :new.txt); end update_before_each_row; /
insert into t_update_before_each_row values('one'); insert into t_update_before_each_row values('two'); insert into t_update_before_each_row values('three'); insert into t_update_before_each_row values('four');
Updating (that is: concatenating the value with itself) the rows containing
two and
three:
update t_update_before_each_row set txt = txt || txt where substr(txt,1,1) = 't';
select * from t_update_before_each_row;
As can be seen by the output of the select statement, the trigger changed the values of the new values; they're in uppercase now:
one TWOTWO THREETHREE four
The log displays the old and new values:
select * from log;
old: two new: TWOTWO old: three new: THREETHREE
Cleaning up:
drop table t_update_before_each_row; drop table log;
After / for each row trigger
In contrast to a before trigger,
an after trigger does not allow to change
:new.field_name
because the value is, when the trigger fires, already written to the table.
If one tries to assign a value to
:new.field_name
, Oracle throws an
ORA-04084: cannot change NEW values for this trigger type.
create table t_update_after_each_row ( txt varchar2(10) ); create table log ( txt varchar2(20) ); create trigger update_after_each_row after update on t_update_after_each_row for each row begin -- :new.txt := upper(:old.txt); -- ORA-04084: cannot change NEW values for this trigger type insert into log values ('old: ' || :old.txt); insert into log values ('new: ' || :new.txt); end update_after_each_row; /
insert into t_update_after_each_row values('one'); insert into t_update_after_each_row values('two'); insert into t_update_after_each_row values('three'); insert into t_update_after_each_row values('four');
update t_update_after_each_row set txt = txt || txt where substr(txt,1,1) = 't';
select * from t_update_after_each_row;
one twotwo threethree four
select * from log;
As the log table shows, it is possible to use
:new
and
:old
although it's not possible to assign something to
:new
.
old: two new: twotwo old: three new: threethree
Cleaning up:
drop table t_update_after_each_row; drop table log;
Table level trigger
A table level trigger is a trigger that doesn't fire for each row to be changed. Accordingly, it lacks the
for each row
. Consequently, both, the :new
and :old
are not permitted in the trigger's
PL/SQL block
, otherwise, an ORA-04082: NEW or OLD references not allowed in table level triggers is thrown.
create table t_update_before ( txt varchar2(10) ); create table log ( txt varchar2(20) ); create trigger update_before before update on t_update_before begin -- :new.txt := upper(:old.txt); -- ORA-04082 insert into log values ('update trigger'); end update_before; /
insert into t_update_before values('one'); insert into t_update_before values('two'); insert into t_update_before values('three'); insert into t_update_before values('four');
update t_update_before set txt = txt || txt where substr(txt,1,1) = 't';
select * from t_update_before;
one twotwo threethree four
select * from log;
Although two rows were updated, only one record is found in the log table:
select * from log;
update trigger
An update statement that doesn't update any row:
update t_update_before set txt = txt || txt where txt = 'no update';
Still, the trigger fires...
select * from log;
... which results in another row found in the log table:
update trigger update trigger
Cleaning up:
drop table t_update_before; drop table log;
Order of execution
Oracle allows to create multiple triggers on the same table. The order of the execution of these triggers is undeterministic (or random, if you want this word) except that all before triggers fire before the after triggers.