No. The block as a whole will get rolled back on failure, but the raise
statement on its own does not perform a rollback.
For example, this block fails and is implicitly rolled back (exactly as if it was an SQL insert
etc):
begin
insert into demo(id) values(1);
dbms_output.put_line(sql%rowcount || ' row inserted');
raise program_error;
exception
when program_error then raise;
end;
ERROR at line 1:
ORA-06501: PL/SQL: program error
ORA-06512: at line 6
SQL> select * from demo;
no rows selected
But this block is not rolled back, even though there is a raise
inside it:
begin
begin
insert into demo(id) values(1);
dbms_output.put_line(sql%rowcount || ' row inserted');
raise program_error;
exception
when program_error then
dbms_output.put_line('Raising exception');
raise;
end;
exception
when program_error then null;
end;
1 row inserted
Raising exception
PL/SQL procedure successfully completed.
SQL> select * from demo;
ID
----------
1
1 row selected.
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