ALTER ROUTINE — change the definition of a routine
ALTER ROUTINEname[ ( [ [argmode] [argname]argtype[, ...] ] ) ]action[ ... ] [ RESTRICT ] ALTER ROUTINEname[ ( [ [argmode] [argname]argtype[, ...] ] ) ] RENAME TOnew_nameALTER ROUTINEname[ ( [ [argmode] [argname]argtype[, ...] ] ) ] OWNER TO {new_owner| CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER } ALTER ROUTINEname[ ( [ [argmode] [argname]argtype[, ...] ] ) ] SET SCHEMAnew_schemaALTER ROUTINEname[ ( [ [argmode] [argname]argtype[, ...] ] ) ] [ NO ] DEPENDS ON EXTENSIONextension_namewhereactionis one of: IMMUTABLE | STABLE | VOLATILE | [ NOT ] LEAKPROOF [ EXTERNAL ] SECURITY INVOKER | [ EXTERNAL ] SECURITY DEFINER PARALLEL { UNSAFE | RESTRICTED | SAFE } COSTexecution_costROWSresult_rowsSETconfiguration_parameter{ TO | = } {value| DEFAULT } SETconfiguration_parameterFROM CURRENT RESETconfiguration_parameterRESET ALL
ALTER ROUTINE changes the definition of a routine, which
can be an aggregate function, a normal function, or a procedure. See
under ALTER AGGREGATE, ALTER FUNCTION,
and ALTER PROCEDURE for the description of the
parameters, more examples, and further details.
To rename the routine foo for type
integer to foobar:
ALTER ROUTINE foo(integer) RENAME TO foobar;
This command will work independent of whether foo is an
aggregate, function, or procedure.
This statement is partially compatible with the ALTER
ROUTINE statement in the SQL standard. See
under ALTER FUNCTION
and ALTER PROCEDURE for more details. Allowing
routine names to refer to aggregate functions is
a PostgreSQL extension.
Note that there is no CREATE ROUTINE command.