DB2 Version 9.7 for Linux, UNIX, and Windows

Example: Returning a REF CURSOR from a procedure (PL/SQL)

This example demonstrates how to define and open a REF CURSOR variable, and then pass it as a procedure parameter.

The cursor variable is specified as an IN OUT parameter so that the result set is made available to the caller of the procedure:
CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE emp_by_job (
    p_job           VARCHAR2,
    p_emp_refcur    IN OUT SYS_REFCURSOR
)
IS
BEGIN
    OPEN p_emp_refcur FOR SELECT empno, ename FROM emp WHERE job = p_job;
END;
The EMP_BY_JOB procedure is invoked in the following anonymous block by assigning the procedure's IN OUT parameter to a cursor variable that was declared in the anonymous block's declaration section. The result set is fetched using this cursor variable.
DECLARE
    v_empno         emp.empno%TYPE;
    v_ename         emp.ename%TYPE;
    v_job           emp.job%TYPE := 'SALESMAN';
    v_emp_refcur    SYS_REFCURSOR;
BEGIN
    DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('EMPLOYEES WITH JOB ' || v_job);
    DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('EMPNO    ENAME');
    DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('-----    -------');
    emp_by_job(v_job, v_emp_refcur);
    LOOP
        FETCH v_emp_refcur INTO v_empno, v_ename;
        EXIT WHEN v_emp_refcur%NOTFOUND;
        DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE(v_empno || '     ' || v_ename);
    END LOOP;
    CLOSE v_emp_refcur;
END;
The following example output is generated when the anonymous block executes:
EMPLOYEES WITH JOB SALESMAN
EMPNO    ENAME
-----    -------
7499     ALLEN
7521     WARD
7654     MARTIN
7844     TURNER