SHOW LISTINGS¶
Lists the listings that you have privileges to access. Shows only listings where the user running the command has any of USAGE, MODIFY, or OWNERSHIP against the listing.
Syntax¶
SHOW LISTINGS [ LIKE '<pattern>' ]
[ STARTS WITH '<name_string>' ]
[ LIMIT <rows> [ FROM '<name_string>' ] ]
Optional parameters¶
LIKE 'pattern'
Optionally filters the command output by object name. The filter uses case-insensitive pattern matching, with support for SQL wildcard characters (
%
and_
).For example, the following patterns return the same results:
... LIKE '%testing%' ...
... LIKE '%TESTING%' ...
. Default: No value (no filtering is applied to the output).
STARTS WITH 'name_string'
Optionally filters the command output based on the characters that appear at the beginning of the object name. The string must be enclosed in single quotes and is case-sensitive.
For example, the following strings return different results:
... STARTS WITH 'B' ...
... STARTS WITH 'b' ...
. Default: No value (no filtering is applied to the output)
LIMIT rows [ FROM 'name_string' ]
Optionally limits the maximum number of rows returned, while also enabling “pagination” of the results. The actual number of rows returned might be less than the specified limit. For example, the number of existing objects is less than the specified limit.
The optional
FROM 'name_string'
subclause effectively serves as a “cursor” for the results. This enables fetching the specified number of rows following the first row whose object name matches the specified string:The string must be enclosed in single quotes and is case-sensitive.
The string does not have to include the full object name; partial names are supported.
Default: No value (no limit is applied to the output)
Note
For SHOW commands that support both the
FROM 'name_string'
andSTARTS WITH 'name_string'
clauses, you can combine both of these clauses in the same statement. However, both conditions must be met or they cancel out each other and no results are returned.In addition, objects are returned in lexicographic order by name, so
FROM 'name_string'
only returns rows with a higher lexicographic value than the rows returned bySTARTS WITH 'name_string'
.For example:
... STARTS WITH 'A' LIMIT ... FROM 'B'
would return no results.... STARTS WITH 'B' LIMIT ... FROM 'A'
would return no results.... STARTS WITH 'A' LIMIT ... FROM 'AB'
would return results (if any rows match the input strings).
Usage notes¶
To SHOW a listing, you must be using a role that has USAGE, MODIFY, or OWNERSHIP privilege on the listing.
The command does not require a running warehouse to execute.
The value for
LIMIT rows
cannot exceed10000
. IfLIMIT rows
is omitted, the command results in an error if the result set is larger than 10K rows.To view results for which more than 10K records exist, either include
LIMIT rows
or query the corresponding view in the Snowflake Information Schema.
To post-process the output of this command, you can use the RESULT_SCAN function, which treats the output as a table that can be queried.
Output¶
The command output provides listing properties and metadata in the following columns:
Column |
Description |
|
Global name of the listing |
|
Name specified when the listing was created. |
|
Title specified in the listing manifest |
|
Sub title specified in the listing manifest |
|
Provider profile name as specified in the listing manifest. |
|
Date and time when the listing was created. |
|
Date and time when the listing was last updated. |
|
Date and time when the listing was last published. |
|
State of the listing, one of:
|
|
Review state, for public listings only. |
|
Associated comment, if present. |
|
Listing owner. |
|
Owner role type. |
|
Listing regions. |
|
Comma separated list of target accounts. |
|
Is monetized flag. |
|
Is application flag. If |
|
Is targeted flag. |
Examples¶
Show all the listings with names that start with MYLISTING
:
SHOW LISTINGS LIKE 'MYLISTING%'
Show ten listings starting from listing MYLISTING
:
SHOW LISTINGS LIMIT 10 FROM 'MYLISTING%'