Normally, PL/Perl is installed as a “trusted” programming
language named plperl
. In this setup, certain Perl
operations are disabled to preserve security. In general, the
operations that are restricted are those that interact with the
environment. This includes file handle operations,
require
, and use
(for
external modules). There is no way to access internals of the
database server process or to gain OS-level access with the
permissions of the server process,
as a C function can do. Thus, any unprivileged database user can
be permitted to use this language.
Here is an example of a function that will not work because file system operations are not allowed for security reasons:
CREATE FUNCTION badfunc() RETURNS integer AS $$ my $tmpfile = "/tmp/badfile"; open my $fh, '>', $tmpfile or elog(ERROR, qq{could not open the file "$tmpfile": $!}); print $fh "Testing writing to a file\n"; close $fh or elog(ERROR, qq{could not close the file "$tmpfile": $!}); return 1; $$ LANGUAGE plperl;
The creation of this function will fail as its use of a forbidden operation will be caught by the validator.
Sometimes it is desirable to write Perl functions that are not
restricted. For example, one might want a Perl function that sends
mail. To handle these cases, PL/Perl can also be installed as an
“untrusted” language (usually called
PL/PerlU).
In this case the full Perl language is available. When installing the
language, the language name plperlu
will select
the untrusted PL/Perl variant.
The writer of a PL/PerlU function must take care that the function cannot be used to do anything unwanted, since it will be able to do anything that could be done by a user logged in as the database administrator. Note that the database system allows only database superusers to create functions in untrusted languages.
If the above function was created by a superuser using the language
plperlu
, execution would succeed.
In the same way, anonymous code blocks written in Perl can use
restricted operations if the language is specified as
plperlu
rather than plperl
, but the caller
must be a superuser.
While PL/Perl functions run in a separate Perl interpreter for each SQL role, all PL/PerlU functions executed in a given session run in a single Perl interpreter (which is not any of the ones used for PL/Perl functions). This allows PL/PerlU functions to share data freely, but no communication can occur between PL/Perl and PL/PerlU functions.
Perl cannot support multiple interpreters within one process unless
it was built with the appropriate flags, namely either
usemultiplicity
or useithreads
.
(usemultiplicity
is preferred unless you actually need
to use threads. For more details, see the
perlembed man page.)
If PL/Perl is used with a copy of Perl that was not built
this way, then it is only possible to have one Perl interpreter per
session, and so any one session can only execute either
PL/PerlU functions, or PL/Perl functions
that are all called by the same SQL role.