A forked version of PHP-PDO-MySQL-Class to work with SQL Server.
Copy the files under src/
to your program
OR
composer require jabaruben/php-pdo-mssql-class
<?php
define('DBHost', '127.0.0.1');
define('DBName', 'Database');
define('DBUser', 'root');
define('DBPassword', '');
require(__DIR__ . "/src/PDO.class.php");
$DB = new Db(DBHost, DBPort, DBName, DBUser, DBPassword);
?>
Safety Example:
<?php
$DB->query("SELECT * FROM fruit WHERE name=?", array($_GET['name']));
?>
Unsafety Example:
<?php
$DB->query("SELECT * FROM fruit WHERE name=".$_GET['name']);
?>
id | name | color |
---|---|---|
1 | apple | red |
2 | banana | yellow |
3 | watermelon | green |
4 | pear | yellow |
5 | strawberry | red |
<?php
$DB->query("SELECT * FROM fruit WHERE name=? and color=?",array('apple','red'));
$DB->query("SELECT * FROM fruit WHERE name=:name and color=:color",array('name'=>'apple','color'=>'red'));
?>
Result:
Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[id] => 1
[name] => apple
[color] => red
)
)
<?php
$DB->query("SELECT * FROM fruit WHERE name IN (:fruits)",array(array('apple','banana')));
?>
Result:
Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[id] => 1
[name] => apple
[color] => red
)
[1] => Array
(
[id] => 2
[name] => banana
[color] => yellow
)
)
<?php
$query = "SELECT * FROM fruit WHERE name IN (:fruits) AND color = :color";
// use multidimensional array as $params
$params = array(
"color" => "red",
"fruits" => array(
"apple",
"banana"
)
);
$DB->query($query, $params);
?>
Result:
Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[id] => 1
[name] => apple
[color] => red
)
)
<?php
$DB->column("SELECT color FROM fruit WHERE name IN (:color)",array('apple','banana','watermelon'));
?>
Result:
Array
(
[0] => red
[1] => yellow
[2] => green
)
<?php
$DB->row("SELECT * FROM fruit WHERE name=? and color=?",array('apple','red'));
?>
Result:
Array
(
[id] => 1
[name] => apple
[color] => red
)
<?php
$DB->single("SELECT color FROM fruit WHERE name=? ",array('watermelon'));
?>
Result:
green
These operations will return the number of affected result set. (integer)
<?php
// Delete
$DB->query("DELETE FROM fruit WHERE id = :id", array("id"=>"1"));
$DB->query("DELETE FROM fruit WHERE id = ?", array("1"));
// Update
$DB->query("UPDATE fruit SET color = :color WHERE name = :name", array("name"=>"strawberry","color"=>"yellow"));
$DB->query("UPDATE fruit SET color = ? WHERE name = ?", array("yellow","strawberry"));
// Insert
$DB->query("INSERT INTO fruit(id,name,color) VALUES(?,?,?)", array(null,"mango","yellow"));//Parameters must be ordered
$DB->query("INSERT INTO fruit(id,name,color) VALUES(:id,:name,:color)", array("color"=>"yellow","name"=>"mango","id"=>null));//Parameters order free
?>
<?php
$DB->lastInsertId();
?>
<?php
$DB->querycount;
?>
<?php
$DB->closeConnection();
?>
<?php
try {
$DB->beginTransaction();
var_dump($DB->inTransaction()); // print "true"
$DB->commit();
} catch(Exception $ex) {
// handle Error
$DB->rollBack();
}
?>
Use iterator when you want to read thousands of data from the database for statistical or full update of Elastic Search or Solr indexes.
Iterator is a traversable object that does not read all the data queried from MySQL into memory.
So you can safely use foreach
to handle millions of MySQL result sets without worrying about excessive memory usage.
Example:
$iteratorInstance = $DB->iterator("SELECT * FROM fruit limit 0, 1000000;");
$colorCountMap = array(
'red' => 0,
'yellow' => 0,
'green' => 0
);
foreach($iteratorInstance as $key => $value) {
sendDataToElasticSearch($key, $value);
$colorCountMap[$value['color']]++;
}
var_export($colorCountMap);
Return:
array(3) {
[red] => 2
[yellow] => 2
[green] => 1
}