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PostgreSQL Tutorial/PostgreSQL Python/Call PostgreSQL Stored Procedures in Python

PostgreSQL Python: Call Stored Procedures

Summary: in this tutorial, you will learn how to call PostgreSQL stored procedures from a Python program.

This tutorial picks up from where the Call PostgreSQL Functions Tutorial left off.

Steps for calling a PostgreSQL stored procedure in Python

To call a PostgreSQL stored procedure in a Python program, you follow these steps:

First, create a new database connection to the PostgreSQL database server by calling the connect() function:

conn = psycopg2.connect(config)

The connect() method returns a new instance of the connection class.

Next, create a new cursor by calling the cursor() method of the connection object.

cur = conn.cursor()

Then, pass the name of the stored procedure and optional input values to the execute() method of the cursor object. For example:

cur.execute("CALL sp_name(%s, %s);", (val1, val2))

If your stored procedure does not accept any parameters, you can omit the second argument like this:

cur.execute("CALL sp_name);")

After that, call the commit() method to commit the transaction:

conn.commit();

Finally, call the close() method of the cursor and connection objects to close the connection to the PostgreSQL database server.

cur.close()
conn.close()

If you use context managers, you don’t need to explicitly call the close() method of the cursor and connection.

Calling a stored procedure example

Let’s take an example of calling a PostgreSQL stored procedure in Python.

1) Create a new stored procedure

First, open the Command Prompt on Windows or Terminal on Unix-like systems.

Second, connect to the suppliers database on the local PostgreSQL server:

psql -U postgres -d suppliers

Third, create a new stored procedure called add_new_part():

CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE add_new_part(
	new_part_name varchar,
	new_vendor_name varchar
)
AS $$
DECLARE
	v_part_id INT;
	v_vendor_id INT;
BEGIN
	-- insert into the parts table
	INSERT INTO parts(part_name)
	VALUES(new_part_name)
	RETURNING part_id INTO v_part_id;

	-- insert a new vendor
	INSERT INTO vendors(vendor_name)
	VALUES(new_vendor_name)
	RETURNING vendor_id INTO v_vendor_id;

	-- insert into vendor_parts
	INSERT INTO vendor_parts(part_id, vendor_id)
	VALUEs(v_part_id,v_vendor_id);

END;
$$
LANGUAGE PLPGSQL;

2) Create the call_stored_procedure.py module

First, create a new module called call_stored_procedure.py file in the project directory.

Second, define the following add_part() function that calls the add_new_part() stored procedure from the suppliers database:

import psycopg2
from config import load_config


def add_part(part_name, vendor_name):
    """ Add a new part """
    # read database configuration
    params = load_config()

    try:
        # connect to the PostgreSQL database
        with psycopg2.connect(**params) as conn:
            with conn.cursor() as cur:
                # call a stored procedure
                cur.execute('CALL add_new_part(%s,%s)', (part_name, vendor_name))

            # commit the transaction
            conn.commit()
    except (Exception, psycopg2.DatabaseError) as error:
        print(error)


if __name__ == '__main__':
    add_part('OLED', 'LG')

3) Execute the Python module

Execute the following command to run the call_stored_procedure.py module:

python call_stored_procedure.py

4) Verify the result

Execute the following statement to retrieve data from the parts, vendors, and vendor_parts tables to verify the result:

SELECT * FROM parts;
SELECT * FROM vendors;
SELECT * FROM vendor_parts;

Download the project source code

Summary

  • Use the execute() method of a cursor object to execute a stored procedure call.
  • Use the CALL sp_name(arguments) syntax to construct a stored procedure call.

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