==================================================================
Name

*DEPRECATED* use new dblink syntax
dblink -- Returns a resource id for a data set from a remote database

Synopsis

dblink(text connstr, text sql)

Inputs

  connstr

    standard libpq format connection srting, 
    e.g. "hostaddr=127.0.0.1 port=5432 dbname=mydb user=postgres password=mypasswd"

  sql

    sql statement that you wish to execute on the remote host
    e.g. "select * from pg_class"

Outputs

  Returns setof int (res_id)

Example usage

  select dblink('hostaddr=127.0.0.1 port=5432 dbname=mydb user=postgres password=mypasswd'
               ,'select f1, f2 from mytable');

==================================================================

Name

*DEPRECATED* use new dblink syntax
dblink_tok -- Returns individual select field results from a dblink remote query

Synopsis

dblink_tok(int res_id, int fnumber)

Inputs

  res_id

    a resource id returned by a call to dblink()

  fnumber

    the ordinal position (zero based) of the field to be returned from the dblink result set

Outputs

  Returns text

Example usage

  select dblink_tok(t1.dblink_p,0) as f1, dblink_tok(t1.dblink_p,1) as f2
  from (select dblink('hostaddr=127.0.0.1 port=5432 dbname=mydb user=postgres password=mypasswd'
                     ,'select f1, f2 from mytable') as dblink_p) as t1;


==================================================================
*DEPRECATED* use new dblink syntax
A more convenient way to use dblink may be to create a view:

 create view myremotetable as
 select dblink_tok(t1.dblink_p,0) as f1, dblink_tok(t1.dblink_p,1) as f2
 from (select dblink('hostaddr=127.0.0.1 port=5432 dbname=template1 user=postgres password=postgres'
                    ,'select proname, prosrc from pg_proc') as dblink_p) as t1;

Then you can simply write:

   select f1, f2 from myremotetable where f1 like 'bytea%';

==================================================================
Name
*DEPRECATED* use new dblink_exec syntax
dblink_last_oid -- Returns last inserted oid

Synopsis

dblink_last_oid(int res_id) RETURNS oid

Inputs

  res_id

    any resource id returned by dblink function;

Outputs

  Returns oid of last inserted tuple

Example usage

test=# select dblink_last_oid(dblink('hostaddr=127.0.0.1 port=5432 dbname=mydb user=postgres password=mypasswd'
               ,'insert into mytable (f1, f2) values (1,2)'));

 dblink_last_oid
----------------
 16553
(1 row)