mysqli_stmt::prepare

mysqli_stmt_prepare

(PHP 5, PHP 7)

mysqli_stmt::prepare -- mysqli_stmt_prepareSQL ステートメントを実行するために準備する

説明

オブジェクト指向型

public mysqli_stmt::prepare(string $query): bool

手続き型

mysqli_stmt_prepare(mysqli_stmt $statement, string $query): bool

実行する前にSQL文を準備します。 指定するクエリは、単一のSQL文でなければいけません。

SQL文のテンプレートには、ゼロ個以上のパラメータマーカ (?) を含めることができます。 パラメータマーカは、プレースホルダとも呼ばれています。 パラメータマーカは、ステートメントを実行する前に mysqli_stmt_bind_param() を使用して アプリケーション変数にバインドする必要があります。

注意:

サーバーの max_allowed_packet よりも長いステートメントを mysqli_stmt_prepare() に渡した場合、 返ってくるエラーコードは MySQL Native Driver (mysqlnd) を使っているか MySQL Client Library (libmysqlclient) を使っているかで異なります。 それぞれ、次のように振る舞います。

  • Linux 上の mysqlnd では、エラーコード 1153 を返します。 エラーメッセージは got a packet bigger than max_allowed_packet bytes です。

  • Windows 上の mysqlnd では、エラーコード 2006 を返します。 エラーメッセージは server has gone away です。

  • すべてのプラットフォームの libmysqlclient では、エラーコード 2006 を返します。エラーメッセージは server has gone away です。

パラメータ

stmt

手続き型のみ: mysqli_stmt_init() が返す mysqli_stmt オブジェクト。

query

クエリを表す文字列。単一の SQL 文で構成されている必要があります。

SQL文には、適切な位置にゼロ個以上のパラメータマーカを含めることができます。 パラメータマーカは、クエスチョンマーク(?)で表します。

注意:

パラメータのマーカは、それが SQL 文の適切な位置にある場合のみ 有効です。例えば INSERT 文の VALUES() リストの中 (行に登録するカラム値を指定する) や WHERE 句で列のデータと比較する値などが適切な位置の例です。

しかし、識別子 (テーブルやカラムの名前) や SELECT 文で選択する 項目の名前に指定したり、(等号 = のような) 二項演算子の両側にパラメータを指定したりすることはできません。 後者の制限は、パラメータの型が判断できなくなることによるものです。 一般に、パラメータが使用可能なのはデータ操作言語 (DML) ステートメントであり、データ定義言語 (DDL) ステートメントでは 使用できません。

返り値

成功した場合に true を、失敗した場合に false を返します。

例1 mysqli_stmt::prepare() の例

オブジェクト指向型

<?php

mysqli_report
(MYSQLI_REPORT_ERROR MYSQLI_REPORT_STRICT);
$mysqli = new mysqli("localhost""my_user""my_password""world");

$city "Amersfoort";

/* プリペアドステートメントを作成します */
$stmt $mysqli->stmt_init();
$stmt->prepare("SELECT District FROM City WHERE Name=?");

/* マーカにパラメータをバインドします */
$stmt->bind_param("s"$city);

/* クエリを実行します */
$stmt->execute();

/* 結果変数をバインドします */
$stmt->bind_result($district);

/* 値を取得します */
$stmt->fetch();

printf("%s is in district %s\n"$city$district);

手続き型

<?php

mysqli_report
(MYSQLI_REPORT_ERROR MYSQLI_REPORT_STRICT);
$link mysqli_connect("localhost""my_user""my_password""world");

$city "Amersfoort";

/* プリペアドステートメントを作成します */
$stmt mysqli_stmt_init($link);
mysqli_stmt_prepare($stmt"SELECT District FROM City WHERE Name=?");

/* マーカにパラメータをバインドします */
mysqli_stmt_bind_param($stmt"s"$city);

/* クエリを実行します */
mysqli_stmt_execute($stmt);

/* 結果変数をバインドします */
mysqli_stmt_bind_result($stmt$district);

/* 値を取得します */
mysqli_stmt_fetch($stmt);

printf("%s is in district %s\n"$city$district);

上の例の出力は以下となります。

Amersfoort is in district Utrecht

参考

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User Contributed Notes 10 notes

up
17
logos-php at kith dot org
12 years ago
Note that if you're using a question mark as a placeholder for a string value, you don't surround it with quotation marks in the MySQL query.

For example, do this:

mysqli_stmt_prepare($stmt, "SELECT * FROM foo WHERE foo.Date > ?");

Do not do this:

mysqli_stmt_prepare($stmt, "SELECT * FROM foo WHERE foo.Date > '?'");

If you put quotation marks around a question mark in the query, then PHP doesn't recognize the question mark as a placeholder, and then when you try to use mysqli_stmt_bind_param(), it gives an error to the effect that you have the wrong number of parameters.

The lack of quotation marks around a string placeholder is implicit in the official example on this page, but it's not explicitly stated in the docs, and I had trouble figuring it out, so figured it was worth posting.
up
5
logos-php at kith dot orgpp
12 years ago
Turns out you can't directly use a prepared statement for a query that has a placeholder in an IN() clause.

There are ways around that (such as constructing a string that consists of n question marks separated by commas, then using that set of placeholders in the IN() clause), but you can't just say IN (?).

This is a MySQL restriction rather than a PHP restriction, but it's not really documented in the MySQL docs either, so I figured it was worth mentioning here.

(Btw, turns out someone else had previously posted the info that I put in my previous comment, about not using quotation marks. Sorry for the repeat; not sure how I missed the earlier comment.)
up
4
andrey at php dot net
18 years ago
If you select LOBs use the following order of execution or you risk mysqli allocating more memory that actually used

1)prepare()
2)execute()
3)store_result()
4)bind_result()

If you skip 3) or exchange 3) and 4) then mysqli will allocate memory for the maximal length of the column which is 255 for tinyblob, 64k for blob(still ok), 16MByte for MEDIUMBLOB - quite a lot and 4G for LONGBLOB (good if you have so much memory). Queries which use this order a bit slower when there is a LOB but this is the price of not having memory exhaustion in seconds.
up
2
ndungi at gmail dot com
15 years ago
The `prepare` , `bind_param`, `bind_result`, `fetch` result, `close` stmt cycle can be tedious at times. Here is an object that does all the mysqli mumbo jumbo for you when all you want is a select leaving you to the bare essential `preparedSelect` on a prepared stmt. The method returns the result set as a 2D associative array with the `select`ed columns as keys. I havent done sufficient error-checking and it also may have some bugs. Help debug and improve on it.

I used the bible.sql db from http://www.biblesql.net/sites/biblesql.net/files/bible.mysql.gz.

Baraka tele!

============================

<?php

class DB
{
    public
$connection;
   
   
#establish db connection
   
public function __construct($host="localhost", $user="user", $pass="", $db="bible")
    {
       
$this->connection = new mysqli($host, $user, $pass, $db);
                 
        if(
mysqli_connect_errno())
        {
            echo(
"Database connect Error : "
           
. mysqli_connect_error($mysqli));
        }   
    }
   
   
#store mysqli object
   
public function connect()
    {
        return
$this->connection;
    }

   
#run a prepared query
   
public function runPreparedQuery($query, $params_r)
    {
       
$stmt = $this->connection->prepare($query);
       
$this->bindParameters($stmt, $params_r);

        if (
$stmt->execute()) {
            return
$stmt;
        } else {
            echo(
"Error in $statement: "
                     
. mysqli_error($this->connection));
            return
0;
        }
       
    }

# To run a select statement with bound parameters and bound results.
# Returns an associative array two dimensional array which u can easily 
# manipulate with array functions.

   
public function preparedSelect($query, $bind_params_r)
    {
       
$select = $this->runPreparedQuery($query, $bind_params_r);
       
$fields_r = $this->fetchFields($select);
       
        foreach (
$fields_r as $field) {
           
$bind_result_r[] = &${$field};
        }
       
       
$this->bindResult($select, $bind_result_r);
       
       
$result_r = array();
       
$i = 0;
        while (
$select->fetch()) {
            foreach (
$fields_r as $field) {
               
$result_r[$i][$field] = $$field;
            }
           
$i++;
        }
       
$select->close();
        return
$result_r;   
    }
   
   
   
#takes in array of bind parameters and binds them to result of
    #executed prepared stmt
   
   
private function bindParameters(&$obj, &$bind_params_r)
    {
       
call_user_func_array(array($obj, "bind_param"), $bind_params_r);
    }
   
    private function
bindResult(&$obj, &$bind_result_r)
    {
       
call_user_func_array(array($obj, "bind_result"), $bind_result_r);
    }
   
   
#returns a list of the selected field names
   
   
private function fetchFields($selectStmt)
    {
       
$metadata = $selectStmt->result_metadata();
       
$fields_r = array();
        while (
$field = $metadata->fetch_field()) {
           
$fields_r[] = $field->name;
        }

        return
$fields_r;
    }
}
#end of class

#An example of the DB class in use

$DB = new DB("localhost", "root", "", "bible");
$var = 5;
$query = "SELECT abbr, name from books where id > ?" ;
$bound_params_r = array("i", $var);

$result_r = $DB->preparedSelect($query, $bound_params_r);

#loop thru result array and display result

foreach ($result_r as $result) {
    echo
$result['abbr'] . " : " . $result['name'] . "<br/>" ;
}

?>
up
1
kontakt at arthur minus schiwon dot de
15 years ago
If you wrap the placeholders with quotation marks you will experience warnings like "Number of variables doesn't match number of parameters in prepared statement" (at least with INSERT Statements).
up
0
philip at independentliving dot se
8 years ago
To see sql errors from your prepare:

$stmt = mysqli_stmt_init($link);

mysqli_stmt_prepare ( $stmt ,"INSERT INTO foo
            (id, textval,whatever) values (?,?,?) or  die( print_r(mysqli_stmt_error($stmt)));
up
0
mhradek AT gmail.com
16 years ago
A particularly helpful adaptation of this function and the call_user_func_array function:

// $params is sent as array($val=>'i', $val=>'d', etc...)

function db_stmt_bind_params($stmt, $params)
{
    $funcArg[] = $stmt;
    foreach($params as $val=>$type)
    {
        $funcArg['type'] .= $type;
        $funcArg[] = $val;
    }
    return call_user_func_array('mysqli_stmt_bind_param', $funcArgs);
}

Thanks to 'sned' for the code.
up
0
st dot john dot johnson at gmail dot com
16 years ago
In reference to what lachlan76 said before, stored procedures CAN be executed through prepared statements as long as you tell the DB to move to the next result before executing again.

Example (Five calls to a stored procedure):

<?php
for ($i=0;$i<5;$i++) {
 
$statement = $mysqli->stmt_init();
 
$statement->prepare("CALL some_procedure( ? )");

 
// Bind, execute, and bind.
 
$statement->bind_param("i", 1);
 
$statement->execute();
 
$statement->bind_result($results);

  while(
$statement->fetch()) {
   
// Do what you want with your results.
 
}

 
$statement->close();

 
// Now move the mysqli connection to a new result.
 
while($mysqli->next_result()) { }
}
?>

If you include the last statement, this code should execute without the nasty "Commands out of sync" error.
up
0
lachlan76 at gmail dot com
17 years ago
Do not try to use a stored procedure through a prepared statement.

Example:

<?php
$statement
= $mysqli->stmt_init();
$statement->prepare("CALL some_procedure()");
?>

If you attempt to do this, it will fail by dropping the connection during the next query.  Use mysqli_multi_query instead.

Example:

<?php
$mysqli
->multi_query("CALL some_procedure()");
do
{
 
$result = $mysqli->store_result();

  
// Do your processing work here 
 
 
$result->free();
} while(
$mysqli->next_result());
?>

This means that you cannot bind parameters or results, however.
up
-1
lukaszNOSPAMPLEASE at epas dot pl
16 years ago
i've got some bad news for you guys if you haven't found out already.
the trick with mysqli_next_result() only prevents having the connection dropped after a stored procedure call.
apparently you can bind parameters for a prepared stored procedure call, but you'll get messed up records from mysqli_stmt_fetch() after mysqli_stmt_bind_result(), at least when the stored procedure itself contains a prepared statement.
a way to avoid data corruption could be specifying the CLIENT_MULTI_STATEMENTS flag in mysqli_real_connect(), if it wasn't disabled entirely (for security reasons, as they say). another option is to use mysqli_multi_query(), but then you can't bind at all.
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