PDO support for multiple queries (PDO_MYSQL, PDO_MYSQLND)

Try this function : mltiple queries and multiple values insertion.

function employmentStatus($Status) {
$pdo = PDO2::getInstance();

$sql_parts = array(); 
for($i=0; $i<count($Status); $i++){
    $sql_parts[] = "(:userID, :val$i)";
}

$requete = $pdo->dbh->prepare("DELETE FROM employment_status WHERE userid = :userID; INSERT INTO employment_status (userid, status) VALUES ".implode(",", $sql_parts));
$requete->bindParam(":userID", $_SESSION['userID'],PDO::PARAM_INT);
for($i=0; $i<count($Status); $i++){
    $requete->bindParam(":val$i", $Status[$i],PDO::PARAM_STR);
}
if ($requete->execute()) {
    return true;
}
return $requete->errorInfo();
}

A quick-and-dirty approach:

function exec_sql_from_file($path, PDO $pdo) {
    if (! preg_match_all("/('(\\\\.|.)*?'|[^;])+/s", file_get_contents($path), $m))
        return;

    foreach ($m[0] as $sql) {
        if (strlen(trim($sql)))
            $pdo->exec($sql);
    }
}

Splits at reasonable SQL statement end points. There is no error checking, no injection protection. Understand your use before using it. Personally, I use it for seeding raw migration files for integration testing.


As I know, PDO_MYSQLND replaced PDO_MYSQL in PHP 5.3. Confusing part is that name is still PDO_MYSQL. So now ND is default driver for MySQL+PDO.

Overall, to execute multiple queries at once you need:

  • PHP 5.3+
  • mysqlnd
  • Emulated prepared statements. Make sure PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES is set to 1 (default). Alternatively you can avoid using prepared statements and use $pdo->exec directly.

Using exec

$db = new PDO("mysql:host=localhost;dbname=test", 'root', '');

// works regardless of statements emulation
$db->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES, 0);

$sql = "
DELETE FROM car; 
INSERT INTO car(name, type) VALUES ('car1', 'coupe'); 
INSERT INTO car(name, type) VALUES ('car2', 'coupe');
";

$db->exec($sql);

Using statements

$db = new PDO("mysql:host=localhost;dbname=test", 'root', '');

// works not with the following set to 0. You can comment this line as 1 is default
$db->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES, 1);

$sql = "
DELETE FROM car; 
INSERT INTO car(name, type) VALUES ('car1', 'coupe'); 
INSERT INTO car(name, type) VALUES ('car2', 'coupe');
";

$stmt = $db->prepare($sql);
$stmt->execute();

A note:

When using emulated prepared statements, make sure you have set proper encoding (that reflects actual data encoding) in DSN (available since 5.3.6). Otherwise there can be a slight possibility for SQL injection if some odd encoding is used.


After half a day of fiddling with this, found out that PDO had a bug where...

--

//This would run as expected:
$pdo->exec("valid-stmt1; valid-stmt2;");

--

//This would error out, as expected:
$pdo->exec("non-sense; valid-stmt1;");

--

//Here is the bug:
$pdo->exec("valid-stmt1; non-sense; valid-stmt3;");

It would execute the "valid-stmt1;", stop on "non-sense;" and never throw an error. Will not run the "valid-stmt3;", return true and lie that everything ran good.

I would expect it to error out on the "non-sense;" but it doesn't.

Here is where I found this info: Invalid PDO query does not return an error

Here is the bug: https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=61613


So, I tried doing this with mysqli and haven't really found any solid answer on how it works so I thought I's just leave it here for those who want to use it..

try{
    // db connection
    $mysqli = new mysqli("host", "user" , "password", "database");
    if($mysqli->connect_errno){
        throw new Exception("Connection Failed: [".$mysqli->connect_errno. "] : ".$mysqli->connect_error );
        exit();
    }

    // read file.
    // This file has multiple sql statements.
    $file_sql = file_get_contents("filename.sql");

    if($file_sql == "null" || empty($file_sql) || strlen($file_sql) <= 0){
        throw new Exception("File is empty. I wont run it..");
    }

    //run the sql file contents through the mysqli's multi_query function.
    // here is where it gets complicated...
    // if the first query has errors, here is where you get it.
    $sqlFileResult = $mysqli->multi_query($file_sql);
    // this returns false only if there are errros on first sql statement, it doesn't care about the rest of the sql statements.

    $sqlCount = 1;
    if( $sqlFileResult == false ){
        throw new Exception("File: '".$fullpath."' , Query#[".$sqlCount."], [".$mysqli->errno."]: '".$mysqli->error."' }");
    }

    // so handle the errors on the subsequent statements like this.
    // while I have more results. This will start from the second sql statement. The first statement errors are thrown above on the $mysqli->multi_query("SQL"); line
    while($mysqli->more_results()){
        $sqlCount++;
        // load the next result set into mysqli's active buffer. if this fails the $mysqli->error, $mysqli->errno will have appropriate error info.
        if($mysqli->next_result() == false){
            throw new Exception("File: '".$fullpath."' , Query#[".$sqlCount."], Error No: [".$mysqli->errno."]: '".$mysqli->error."' }");
        }
    }
}
catch(Exception $e){
    echo $e->getMessage(). " <pre>".$e->getTraceAsString()."</pre>";
}

Tags:

Mysql

Php

Pdo