Updated on 2024-12-19 GMT+08:00

Universal File Access Functions

Universal file access functions provide local access interfaces for files on a database server. Only files in the database cluster directory and the log_directory directory can be accessed. Use a relative path for files in the cluster directory, and a path matching the log_directory configuration setting for log files. Only database system administrators can use these functions.

pg_ls_dir(dirname text)

Description: Lists files in a directory.

Return type: setof text

Note: pg_ls_dir returns all the names in the specified directory, except the special entries "." and "..".

Examples:

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SELECT pg_ls_dir('./');
      pg_ls_dir       
----------------------
 .postgresql.conf.swp
 postgresql.conf
 pg_tblspc
 PG_VERSION
 pg_ident.conf
 core
 server.crt
 pg_serial
 pg_twophase
 postgresql.conf.lock
 pg_stat_tmp
 pg_notify
 pg_subtrans
 pg_ctl.lock
 pg_xlog
 pg_clog
 base
 pg_snapshots
 postmaster.opts
 postmaster.pid
 server.key.rand
 server.key.cipher
 pg_multixact
 pg_errorinfo
 server.key
 pg_hba.conf
 pg_replslot
 .pg_hba.conf.swp
 cacert.pem
 pg_hba.conf.lock
 global
 gaussdb.state
(32 rows)

pg_read_file(filename text, offset bigint, length bigint)

Description: Returns the content of a text file.

Return type: text

Note: pg_read_file returns part of a text file. It can return a maximum of length bytes from offset. The actual size of fetched data is less than length if the end of the file is reached first. If offset is negative, it is the length rolled back from the file end. If offset and length are omitted, the entire file is returned.

Examples:

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SELECT pg_read_file('postmaster.pid',0,100);
             pg_read_file              
---------------------------------------
 53078                                +
 /srv/BigData/hadoop/data1/coordinator+
 1500022474                           +
 8000                                 +
 /var/run/dws                         +
 localhost                            +
  2
(1 row)

pg_read_binary_file(filename text [, offset bigint, length bigint,missing_ok boolean])

Description: Returns the content of a binary file.

Return type: bytea

Note: pg_read_binary_file is similar to pg_read_file, except that the result is a bytea value; accordingly, no encoding checks are performed. In combination with the convert_from function, this function can be used to read a file in a specified encoding:

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SELECT convert_from(pg_read_binary_file('filename'), 'UTF8');

pg_stat_file(filename text)

Description: Returns status information about a file.

Return type: record

Note: pg_stat_file returns a record containing the file size, last access timestamp, last modification timestamp, last file status change timestamp, and a boolean value indicating if it is a directory. Typical use cases are as follows:

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SELECT * FROM pg_stat_file('filename');
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SELECT (pg_stat_file('filename')).modification;

Examples:

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SELECT * FROM pg_stat_file('postmaster.pid');
 
 size |         access         |      modification      |         change         
| creation | isdir 
------+------------------------+------------------------+------------------------
+----------+-------
  117 | 2017-06-05 11:06:34+08 | 2017-06-01 17:18:08+08 | 2017-06-01 17:18:08+08 
|          | f
(1 row)
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SELECT (pg_stat_file('postmaster.pid')).modification;
      modification      
------------------------
 2017-06-01 17:18:08+08
(1 row)