Oracle Data Provider for .NET classes and APIs provide data access to the Oracle Database from a .NET client application and from .NET stored procedures and functions.
However, some limitations and restrictions exist when Oracle Data Provider for .NET is used within a .NET stored procedure. These are discussed in the next section.
The following is a simple .NET stored procedure example.
using System;
using Oracle.DataAccess.Client;
using Oracle.DataAccess.Types;
public class CLRLibrary1
{
// .NET Stored Function returning the DEPTNO of the employee whose
// EMPNO is 'empno'
public static uint GetDeptNo(uint empno)
{
uint deptno = 0;
// Create and open a context connection
OracleConnection conn = new OracleConnection();
if( OracleConnection.IsAvailable == true )
{
conn.ConnectionString = "context connection=true";
}
else
{
//set connection string for a normal client connection
conn.ConnectionString = "user id=scott;password=tiger;" +
"data source=oracle";
}
conn.Open();
// Create and execute a command
OracleCommand cmd = conn.CreateCommand();
cmd.CommandText = "SELECT DEPTNO FROM EMP WHERE EMPNO = :1";
cmd.Parameters.Add(":1",OracleDbType.Int32,empno,
System.Data.ParameterDirection.Input);
OracleDataReader rdr = cmd.ExecuteReader();
if (rdr.Read())
deptno = (uint)rdr.GetInt32(0);
rdr.Close();
cmd.Dispose();
conn.Close();
return deptno;
} // GetDeptNo
} // CLRLibrary1
See Also:
Oracle Database Extensions for .NET Developer's Guide for more information about how to create .NET Stored procedures
Table 4-1, "API Support Comparison Between Client Application and .NET Stored Procedure"