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mysqli-database-clas 1.0 | MIT/X Consortium ... | 5 | PHP 5, Databases, Design Patterns |
Description | Authors Josh Campbell Contributor | ||||||||
This package can store and retrieve objects in MySQL using arrays. |
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MysqliDb -- Simple MySQLi wrapper and object mapper with prepared statements <hr>
Initialization Objects mapping Insert Query Update Query Select Query Delete Query Insert Data Insert XML Running raw SQL queries Query Keywords Where Conditions Order Conditions Group Conditions Properties Sharing Joining Tables Subqueries EXISTS / NOT EXISTS condition Has method Helper Methods Transaction Helpers Error Helpers Table Locking
To utilize this class, first import MysqliDb.php into your project, and require it.
require_once ('MysqliDb.php');
It is also possible to install library via composer
composer require joshcam/mysqli-database-class:dev-master
Simple initialization with utf8 charset set by default:
$db = new MysqliDb ('host', 'username', 'password', 'databaseName');
Advanced initialization:
$db = new MysqliDb (Array (
'host' => 'host',
'username' => 'username',
'password' => 'password',
'db'=> 'databaseName',
'port' => 3306,
'prefix' => 'my_',
'charset' => 'utf8'));
table prefix, port and database charset params are optional. If no charset should be set charset, set it to null
Also it is possible to reuse already connected mysqli object:
$mysqli = new mysqli ('host', 'username', 'password', 'databaseName');
$db = new MysqliDb ($mysqli);
If no table prefix were set during object creation its possible to set it later with a separate call:
$db->setPrefix ('my_');
If you need to get already created mysqliDb object from another class or function use
function init () {
// db staying private here
$db = new MysqliDb ('host', 'username', 'password', 'databaseName');
}
...
function myfunc () {
// obtain db object created in init ()
$db = MysqliDb::getInstance();
...
}
dbObject.php is an object mapping library built on top of mysqliDb to provide model representation functionality. See <a href='dbObject.md'>dbObject manual for more information</a>
Simple example
$data = Array ("login" => "admin",
"firstName" => "John",
"lastName" => 'Doe'
);
$id = $db->insert ('users', $data);
if($id)
echo 'user was created. Id=' . $id;
Insert with functions use
$data = Array (
'login' => 'admin',
'active' => true,
'firstName' => 'John',
'lastName' => 'Doe',
'password' => $db->func('SHA1(?)',Array ("secretpassword+salt")),
// password = SHA1('secretpassword+salt')
'createdAt' => $db->now(),
// createdAt = NOW()
'expires' => $db->now('+1Y')
// expires = NOW() + interval 1 year
// Supported intervals [s]econd, [m]inute, [h]hour, [d]day, [M]onth, [Y]ear
);
$id = $db->insert ('users', $data);
if ($id)
echo 'user was created. Id=' . $id;
else
echo 'insert failed: ' . $db->getLastError();
Insert with on duplicate key update
$data = Array ("login" => "admin",
"firstName" => "John",
"lastName" => 'Doe',
"createdAt" => $db->now(),
"updatedAt" => $db->now(),
);
$updateColumns = Array ("updatedAt");
$lastInsertId = "id";
$db->onDuplicate($updateColumns, $lastInsertId);
$id = $db->insert ('users', $data);
Insert multiple datasets at once
$data = Array(
Array ("login" => "admin",
"firstName" => "John",
"lastName" => 'Doe'
),
Array ("login" => "other",
"firstName" => "Another",
"lastName" => 'User',
"password" => "very_cool_hash"
)
);
$ids = $db->insertMulti('users', $data);
if(!$ids) {
echo 'insert failed: ' . $db->getLastError();
} else {
echo 'new users inserted with following id\'s: ' . implode(', ', $ids);
}
If all datasets only have the same keys, it can be simplified
$data = Array(
Array ("admin", "John", "Doe"),
Array ("other", "Another", "User")
);
$keys = Array("login", "firstName", "lastName");
$ids = $db->insertMulti('users', $data, $keys);
if(!$ids) {
echo 'insert failed: ' . $db->getLastError();
} else {
echo 'new users inserted with following id\'s: ' . implode(', ', $ids);
}
<a href='https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/replace.html'>Replace()</a> method implements same API as insert();
$data = Array (
'firstName' => 'Bobby',
'lastName' => 'Tables',
'editCount' => $db->inc(2),
// editCount = editCount + 2;
'active' => $db->not()
// active = !active;
);
$db->where ('id', 1);
if ($db->update ('users', $data))
echo $db->count . ' records were updated';
else
echo 'update failed: ' . $db->getLastError();
update()
also support limit parameter:
$db->update ('users', $data, 10);
// Gives: UPDATE users SET ... LIMIT 10
After any select/get function calls amount or returned rows is stored in $count variable
$users = $db->get('users'); //contains an Array of all users
$users = $db->get('users', 10); //contains an Array 10 users
or select with custom columns set. Functions also could be used
$cols = Array ("id", "name", "email");
$users = $db->get ("users", null, $cols);
if ($db->count > 0)
foreach ($users as $user) {
print_r ($user);
}
or select just one row
$db->where ("id", 1);
$user = $db->getOne ("users");
echo $user['id'];
$stats = $db->getOne ("users", "sum(id), count(*) as cnt");
echo "total ".$stats['cnt']. "users found";
or select one column value or function result
$count = $db->getValue ("users", "count(*)");
echo "{$count} users found";
select one column value or function result from multiple rows:
$logins = $db->getValue ("users", "login", null);
// select login from users
$logins = $db->getValue ("users", "login", 5);
// select login from users limit 5
foreach ($logins as $login)
echo $login;
You can also load .CSV or .XML data into a specific table. To insert .csv data, use the following syntax:
$path_to_file = "/home/john/file.csv";
$db->loadData("users", $path_to_file);
This will load a .csv file called file.csv in the folder /home/john/ (john's home directory.) You can also attach an optional array of options. Valid options are:
Array(
"fieldChar" => ';', // Char which separates the data
"lineChar" => '\r\n', // Char which separates the lines
"linesToIgnore" => 1 // Amount of lines to ignore at the beginning of the import
);
Attach them using
$options = Array("fieldChar" => ';', "lineChar" => '\r\n', "linesToIgnore" => 1);
$db->loadData("users", "/home/john/file.csv", $options);
To load XML data into a table, you can use the method loadXML. The syntax is smillar to the loadData syntax.
$path_to_file = "/home/john/file.xml";
$db->loadXML("users", $path_to_file);
You can also add optional parameters. Valid parameters:
Array(
"linesToIgnore" => 0, // Amount of lines / rows to ignore at the beginning of the import
"rowTag" => "<user>" // The tag which marks the beginning of an entry
)
Usage:
$options = Array("linesToIgnore" => 0, "rowTag" => "<user>"):
$path_to_file = "/home/john/file.xml";
$db->loadXML("users", $path_to_file, $options);
Use paginate() instead of get() to fetch paginated result
$page = 1;
// set page limit to 2 results per page. 20 by default
$db->pageLimit = 2;
$products = $db->arraybuilder()->paginate("products", $page);
echo "showing $page out of " . $db->totalPages;
Instead of getting an pure array of results its possible to get result in an associative array with a needed key. If only 2 fields to fetch will be set in get(), method will return result in array($k => $v) and array ($k => array ($v, $v)) in rest of the cases.
$user = $db->map ('login')->ObjectBuilder()->getOne ('users', 'login, id');
Array
(
[user1] => 1
)
$user = $db->map ('login')->ObjectBuilder()->getOne ('users', 'id,login,createdAt');
Array
(
[user1] => stdClass Object
(
[id] => 1
[login] => user1
[createdAt] => 2015-10-22 22:27:53
)
)
MysqliDb can return result in 3 different formats: Array of Array, Array of Objects and a Json string. To select a return type use ArrayBuilder(), ObjectBuilder() and JsonBuilder() methods. Note that ArrayBuilder() is a default return type
// Array return type
$= $db->getOne("users");
echo $u['login'];
// Object return type
$u = $db->ObjectBuilder()->getOne("users");
echo $u->login;
// Json return type
$json = $db->JsonBuilder()->getOne("users");
$users = $db->rawQuery('SELECT * from users where id >= ?', Array (10));
foreach ($users as $user) {
print_r ($user);
}
To avoid long if checks there are couple helper functions to work with raw query select results:
Get 1 row of results:
$user = $db->rawQueryOne ('select * from users where id=?', Array(10));
echo $user['login'];
// Object return type
$user = $db->ObjectBuilder()->rawQueryOne ('select * from users where id=?', Array(10));
echo $user->login;
Get 1 column value as a string:
$password = $db->rawQueryValue ('select password from users where id=? limit 1', Array(10));
echo "Password is {$password}";
NOTE: for a rawQueryValue() to return string instead of an array 'limit 1' should be added to the end of the query.
Get 1 column value from multiple rows:
$logins = $db->rawQueryValue ('select login from users limit 10');
foreach ($logins as $login)
echo $login;
More advanced examples:
$params = Array(1, 'admin');
$users = $db->rawQuery("SELECT id, firstName, lastName FROM users WHERE id = ? AND login = ?", $params);
print_r($users); // contains Array of returned rows
// will handle any SQL query
$params = Array(10, 1, 10, 11, 2, 10);
$q = "(
SELECT a FROM t1
WHERE a = ? AND B = ?
ORDER BY a LIMIT ?
) UNION (
SELECT a FROM t2
WHERE a = ? AND B = ?
ORDER BY a LIMIT ?
)";
$resutls = $db->rawQuery ($q, $params);
print_r ($results); // contains Array of returned rows
where()
, orWhere()
, having()
and orHaving()
methods allows you to specify where and having conditions of the query. All conditions supported by where() are supported by having() as well.
WARNING: In order to use column to column comparisons only raw where conditions should be used as column name or functions cant be passed as a bind variable.
Regular == operator with variables:
$db->where ('id', 1);
$db->where ('login', 'admin');
$results = $db->get ('users');
// Gives: SELECT * FROM users WHERE id=1 AND login='admin';
$db->where ('id', 1);
$db->having ('login', 'admin');
$results = $db->get ('users');
// Gives: SELECT * FROM users WHERE id=1 HAVING login='admin';
Regular == operator with column to column comparison:
// WRONG
$db->where ('lastLogin', 'createdAt');
// CORRECT
$db->where ('lastLogin = createdAt');
$results = $db->get ('users');
// Gives: SELECT * FROM users WHERE lastLogin = createdAt;
$db->where ('id', 50, ">=");
// or $db->where ('id', Array ('>=' => 50));
$results = $db->get ('users');
// Gives: SELECT * FROM users WHERE id >= 50;
BETWEEN / NOT BETWEEN:
$db->where('id', Array (4, 20), 'BETWEEN');
// or $db->where ('id', Array ('BETWEEN' => Array(4, 20)));
$results = $db->get('users');
// Gives: SELECT * FROM users WHERE id BETWEEN 4 AND 20
IN / NOT IN:
$db->where('id', Array(1, 5, 27, -1, 'd'), 'IN');
// or $db->where('id', Array( 'IN' => Array(1, 5, 27, -1, 'd') ) );
$results = $db->get('users');
// Gives: SELECT * FROM users WHERE id IN (1, 5, 27, -1, 'd');
OR CASE
$db->where ('firstName', 'John');
$db->orWhere ('firstName', 'Peter');
$results = $db->get ('users');
// Gives: SELECT * FROM users WHERE firstName='John' OR firstName='peter'
$db->where ('firstName', 'John');
$db->orWhere ('firstName', 'Peter');
$results = $db->get ('users');
// Gives: SELECT * FROM users WHERE firstName='John' OR firstName='peter'
NULL comparison:
$db->where ("lastName", NULL, 'IS NOT');
$results = $db->get("users");
// Gives: SELECT * FROM users where lastName IS NOT NULL
Also you can use raw where conditions:
$db->where ("id != companyId");
$db->where ("DATE(createdAt) = DATE(lastLogin)");
$results = $db->get("users");
Or raw condition with variables:
$db->where ("(id = ? or id = ?)", Array(6,2));
$db->where ("login","mike")
$res = $db->get ("users");
// Gives: SELECT * FROM users WHERE (id = 6 or id = 2) and login='mike';
Find the total number of rows matched. Simple pagination example:
$offset = 10;
$count = 15;
$users = $db->withTotalCount()->get('users', Array ($offset, $count));
echo "Showing {$count} from {$db->totalCount}";
To add LOW PRIORITY | DELAYED | HIGH PRIORITY | IGNORE and the rest of the mysql keywords to INSERT (), REPLACE (), GET (), UPDATE (), DELETE() method or FOR UPDATE | LOCK IN SHARE MODE into SELECT ():
$db->setQueryOption ('LOW_PRIORITY')->insert ($table, $param);
// GIVES: INSERT LOW_PRIORITY INTO table ...
$db->setQueryOption ('FOR UPDATE')->get ('users');
// GIVES: SELECT * FROM USERS FOR UPDATE;
Also you can use an array of keywords:
$db->setQueryOption (Array('LOW_PRIORITY', 'IGNORE'))->insert ($table,$param);
// GIVES: INSERT LOW_PRIORITY IGNORE INTO table ...
Same way keywords could be used in SELECT queries as well:
$db->setQueryOption ('SQL_NO_CACHE');
$db->get("users");
// GIVES: SELECT SQL_NO_CACHE * FROM USERS;
Optionally you can use method chaining to call where multiple times without referencing your object over an over:
$results = $db
->where('id', 1)
->where('login', 'admin')
->get('users');
$db->where('id', 1);
if($db->delete('users')) echo 'successfully deleted';
$db->orderBy("id","asc");
$db->orderBy("login","Desc");
$db->orderBy("RAND ()");
$results = $db->get('users');
// Gives: SELECT * FROM users ORDER BY id ASC,login DESC, RAND ();
Order by values example:
$db->orderBy('userGroup', 'ASC', array('superuser', 'admin', 'users'));
$db->get('users');
// Gives: SELECT * FROM users ORDER BY FIELD (userGroup, 'superuser', 'admin', 'users') ASC;
If you are using setPrefix () functionality and need to use table names in orderBy() method make sure that table names are escaped with ``.
$db->setPrefix ("t_");
$db->orderBy ("users.id","asc");
$results = $db->get ('users');
// WRONG: That will give: SELECT * FROM t_users ORDER BY users.id ASC;
$db->setPrefix ("t_");
$db->orderBy ("`users`.id", "asc");
$results = $db->get ('users');
// CORRECT: That will give: SELECT * FROM t_users ORDER BY t_users.id ASC;
$db->groupBy ("name");
$results = $db->get ('users');
// Gives: SELECT * FROM users GROUP BY name;
Join table products with table users with LEFT JOIN by tenantID
$db->join("users u", "p.tenantID=u.tenantID", "LEFT");
$db->where("u.id", 6);
$products = $db->get ("products p", null, "u.name, p.productName");
print_r ($products);
Add AND condition to join statement
$db->join("users u", "p.tenantID=u.tenantID", "LEFT");
$db->joinWhere("users u", "u.tenantID", 5);
$products = $db->get ("products p", null, "u.name, p.productName");
print_r ($products);
// Gives: SELECT u.login, p.productName FROM products p LEFT JOIN users u ON (p.tenantID=u.tenantID AND u.tenantID = 5)
Add OR condition to join statement
$db->join("users u", "p.tenantID=u.tenantID", "LEFT");
$db->joinOrWhere("users u", "u.tenantID", 5);
$products = $db->get ("products p", null, "u.name, p.productName");
print_r ($products);
// Gives: SELECT u.login, p.productName FROM products p LEFT JOIN users u ON (p.tenantID=u.tenantID OR u.tenantID = 5)
Its is also possible to copy properties
$db->where ("agentId", 10);
$db->where ("active", true);
$customers = $db->copy ();
$res = $customers->get ("customers", Array (10, 10));
// SELECT * FROM customers where agentId = 10 and active = 1 limit 10, 10
$cnt = $db->getValue ("customers", "count(id)");
echo "total records found: " . $cnt;
// SELECT count(id) FROM users where agentId = 10 and active = 1
Subquery init
Subquery init without an alias to use in inserts/updates/where Eg. (select * from users)
$sq = $db->subQuery();
$sq->get ("users");
A subquery with an alias specified to use in JOINs . Eg. (select * from users) sq
$sq = $db->subQuery("sq");
$sq->get ("users");
Subquery in selects:
$ids = $db->subQuery ();
$ids->where ("qty", 2, ">");
$ids->get ("products", null, "userId");
$db->where ("id", $ids, 'in');
$res = $db->get ("users");
// Gives SELECT * FROM users WHERE id IN (SELECT userId FROM products WHERE qty > 2)
Subquery in inserts:
$userIdQ = $db->subQuery ();
$userIdQ->where ("id", 6);
$userIdQ->getOne ("users", "name"),
$data = Array (
"productName" => "test product",
"userId" => $userIdQ,
"lastUpdated" => $db->now()
);
$id = $db->insert ("products", $data);
// Gives INSERT INTO PRODUCTS (productName, userId, lastUpdated) values ("test product", (SELECT name FROM users WHERE id = 6), NOW());
Subquery in joins:
$usersQ = $db->subQuery ("u");
$usersQ->where ("active", 1);
$usersQ->get ("users");
$db->join($usersQ, "p.userId=u.id", "LEFT");
$products = $db->get ("products p", null, "u.login, p.productName");
print_r ($products);
// SELECT u.login, p.productName FROM products p LEFT JOIN (SELECT * FROM t_users WHERE active = 1) u on p.userId=u.id;
$sub = $db->subQuery();
$sub->where("company", 'testCompany');
$sub->get ("users", null, 'userId');
$db->where (null, $sub, 'exists');
$products = $db->get ("products");
// Gives SELECT * FROM products WHERE EXISTS (select userId from users where company='testCompany')
A convenient function that returns TRUE if exists at least an element that satisfy the where condition specified calling the "where" method before this one.
$db->where("user", $user);
$db->where("password", md5($password));
if($db->has("users")) {
return "You are logged";
} else {
return "Wrong user/password";
}
Disconnect from the database:
$db->disconnect();
Reconnect in case mysql connection died:
if (!$db->ping())
$db->connect()
Get last executed SQL query: Please note that function returns SQL query only for debugging purposes as its execution most likely will fail due missing quotes around char variables.
$db->get('users');
echo "Last executed query was ". $db->getLastQuery();
Check if table exists:
if ($db->tableExists ('users'))
echo "hooray";
mysqli_real_escape_string() wrapper:
$escaped = $db->escape ("' and 1=1");
Please keep in mind that transactions are working on innoDB tables. Rollback transaction if insert fails:
$db->startTransaction();
...
if (!$db->insert ('myTable', $insertData)) {
//Error while saving, cancel new record
$db->rollback();
} else {
//OK
$db->commit();
}
After you executed a query you have options to check if there was an error. You can get the MySQL error string or the error code for the last executed query.
$db->where('login', 'admin')->update('users', ['firstName' => 'Jack']);
if ($db->getLastErrno() === 0)
echo 'Update succesfull';
else
echo 'Update failed. Error: '. $db->getLastError();
To track query execution time setTrace() function should be called.
$db->setTrace (true);
// As a second parameter it is possible to define prefix of the path which should be striped from filename
// $db->setTrace (true, $_SERVER['SERVER_ROOT']);
$db->get("users");
$db->get("test");
print_r ($db->trace);
[0] => Array
(
[0] => SELECT * FROM t_users ORDER BY `id` ASC
[1] => 0.0010669231414795
[2] => MysqliDb->get() >> file "/avb/work/PHP-MySQLi-Database-Class/tests.php" line #151
)
[1] => Array
(
[0] => SELECT * FROM t_test
[1] => 0.00069189071655273
[2] => MysqliDb->get() >> file "/avb/work/PHP-MySQLi-Database-Class/tests.php" line #152
)
To lock tables, you can use the lock method together with setLockMethod. The following example will lock the table users for write access.
$db->setLockMethod("WRITE")->lock("users");
Calling another ->lock() will remove the first lock. You can also use
$db->unlock();
to unlock the previous locked tables. To lock multiple tables, you can use an array. Example:
$db->setLockMethod("READ")->lock(array("users", "log"));
This will lock the tables users and log for READ access only. Make sure you use unlock()* afterwards or your tables will remain locked!
Files (6) |
File | Role | Description |
---|---|---|
composer.json | Data | Auxiliary data |
dbObject.md | Doc. | Documentation |
dbObject.php | Class | Class source |
LICENSE | Lic. | License text |
MysqliDb.php | Class | Class source |
README.md | Doc. | Documentation |
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