pg_send_query

(PHP 4 >= 4.2.0, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

pg_send_query Envia uma consulta (query) assincrona

Descrição

pg_send_query ( resource $connection , string $query ) : bool
pg_send_query ( string $query ) : bool

pg_send_query() envia uma consulta (query) assíncrona para connection. Diferente de pg_query(), ela pode enviar consultas múltiplas para o PostgreSQL e carregar os resultados, um por um, usando pg_get_result(). A execução do script não é bloqueada enquanto as consultas estão sendo executadas. Use pg_connection_busy() para checar se a conexão está ocupada. (por exemplo, se uma consulta está sendo executada). A consulta pode ser cancelada chamando pg_cancel_query().

Apesar de ser possível enviar multiplas consultas de uma vez, você não pode enviar múltiplas consultas para uma conexão ocupada. Se a consulta é enviada enquando a conexão está ocupada ela espera até que a última cosulta seja finalizada e descarta todos os resultados.

Exemplo #1 Asynchronous Queries

<?php
    $dbconn 
pg_connect("dbname=publisher") or die("Could not connect");
    if (!
pg_connection_busy($dbconn)) {
        
pg_send_query($dbconn,"select * from authors; select count(*) from authors;");
    }

    
$res1 pg_get_result($dbconn);
    echo 
"First call to pg_get_result(): $res1\n";
    
$rows1 pg_num_rows($res1);
    echo 
"$res1 has $rows1 records\n\n";

    
$res2 pg_get_result($dbconn);
    echo 
"second call to pg_get_result(): $res2\n";
    
$rows2 pg_num_rows($res2);
     echo 
"$res2 has $rows2 records\n";
?>

O exemplo acima deve mostrar a seguinte saída:

first call to pg_get_result(): Resource id #3
Resource id #3 has 3 records

second call to pg_get_result(): Resource id #4
Resource id #4 has 1 records

Veja também pg_query(), pg_cancel_query(), pg_get_result() e pg_connection_busy().

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User Contributed Notes 6 notes

up
0
moodsey211 at gmail dot com
13 years ago
pg_send_query would not stop your script from executing but it would stop the script from exiting.

Example:

<?php
$con
= pg_connect('dbname=payroll');
pg_send_query('SELECT process_payroll()'); // Where process_payroll is a super long process
?>

You would still need to wait for the query to finish before the any display would be sent to the browser. And surprisingly, unlike pg_query this script would not generate the Maximum execution time error.
up
0
rw burgholzer is name at deq dot virginia dot gov
14 years ago
Regarding the failure to process them all now, then retrieve the results later, I found that all queries would return successfully if I added a further condition to your while loop in the "stack_query()" method.

By adding:
&& (pg_transaction_status($conn) === PGSQL_TRANSACTION_IDLE ) )

Every query executed with no errors.

<?php
$conn
= pg_connect("dbname=dbname host=localhost user=psql ");
if (
$conn === FALSE)
  exit(
"Can't connect to db");

$q = array();
// send some queries
foreach (range(0, 50) as $i)
 
stack_query($q, $conn, "SELECT 'query $i' AS str;");
// receive them
while (true)
  {
   
$left = stack_query($q, $conn);
    echo
"$left left... ";
   
$result = pg_get_result($conn);
    if (
$left == 0 && $result === FALSE)
      break;
   
$row = pg_fetch_assoc($result);
   
// depending on race conditions, you wont get all your original queries here.
   
echo "got $row[str]\n";
  }

function
stack_query(&$queries, $conn, $sql = FALSE)
{
  if (
$sql !== FALSE)
   
$queries[] = $sql;
  while (
count($queries) && !pg_connection_busy($conn)  && (pg_transaction_status($conn) === PGSQL_TRANSACTION_IDLE ) )
   
pg_send_query($conn, array_shift($queries));
  return
count($queries) + (pg_connection_busy($conn) ? 1 : 0);
}
?>
up
-1
Likeyouover others at hotmail dot com
20 years ago
<?php
// --------- OPEN CONN ---

  
$conn = pg_connect("host='127.0.0.1' dbname='test' user='usertest' password='passtest'");

// --------- OPEN FILE ---

  
$fp = fopen('logo.gif', "r");
  
$buffer = fread($fp, filesize('logo.gif'));
  
fclose($fp);

// --------- CREATE - INSERT OID ---

  
pg_exec($conn, "begin");

  
$oid = pg_locreate($conn);

  
$rs = pg_exec($conn,"INSERT INTO test(tipo, images) VALUES('A1', $oid);");
  
$handle = pg_loopen ($conn, $oid, "w");

  
pg_lowrite ($handle, $buffer);
  
pg_loclose ($handle);

  
pg_exec($conn, "commit");

// --------- OPEN - INSERT OID ---

  
$rs = pg_exec($conn, "SELECT images FROM test WHERE tipo = 'A1';");
  
$row = pg_fetch_row($rs, 0);

  
pg_exec($conn, "begin");
  
$loid = pg_loopen($conn, $row[0], "r");

  
header("Content-type: image/gif");

  
pg_loreadall($loid);
  
pg_loclose($loid);

  
pg_exec ($conn, "commit");

// --------- UNLINK OID ---

  
pg_exec($conn, "begin");

  
$loid = $row[0];
  
pg_lounlink($conn, $loid);

  
pg_exec ($conn, "commit");

// --------- DELETE OID ---

  
pg_exec($conn, "DELETE FROM test WHERE tipo = 'A1';");

// --------- CLOSE CONN ---

  
pg_close();
?>
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-1
Mikewithme at yahoo dot com
20 years ago
Due to a bug, OLD API does not available with PHP 4.2.0 and 4.2.1.

PHP 4.2.2 will support OLD API again and will be kept long enough.

New API will be available PHP 4.2.0 to later versions.
yohgaki at php dot net
19-Jun-2002 04:00
Due to a bug, PHP 4.2.0 and 4.2.1 does not support pg_lo_import() old API. It's fixed in PHP 4.2.2.

BTW, new API will be always available from PHP 4.2.0 to later versions. Older API will be kept long enough, also.
ceco at noxis dot net
15-May-2002 09:08
it works for me (php-4.2.1)

not like this

int pg_lo_import ( string pathname [, resource connection])

but
int pg_lo_import ( resource connection, string pathname )

don't know the reason
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-1
Ron Howard
21 years ago
If there is an error in one of your queries, the queries following it will not get executed, and there will *not* be an error message displayed. The only way I can think of to determine if an SQL error happened is to use pg_trace.

Example:

pg_send_query($connection,
    "SELECT id FROM users;
    SELECT * FROM customers;
     [INVALID-SQL-STATEMENT];
    SELECT name FROM countries;");

while ($result = pg_get_result($connection))
    $results[] = $result;

The $results array will only have two items in it.
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-3
vincentdephily
18 years ago
Note that if you send a query without calling pg_get_result() for the previous one (supposing it has finished and the connection is not busy), the previous query will get discarded.

See for yourself (tested on php4.4.0, postgres8.0.4, Linux/FreeBSD) :
<?
$conn
= pg_connect("dbname=template1 host=localhost user=pgsql");
if (
$conn === FALSE)
  exit(
"Can't connect to db");

$q = array();
// send some queries
foreach (range(0, 500) as $i)
 
stack_query($q, $conn, "SELECT 'query $i' AS str;");
// receive them
while (true)
  {
   
$left = stack_query($q, $conn);
    echo
"$left left... ";
   
$result = pg_get_result($conn);
    if (
$left == 0 && $result === FALSE)
      break;
   
$row = pg_fetch_assoc($result);
   
// depending on race conditions, you wont get all your original queries here.
   
echo "got $row[str]\n";
  }

function
stack_query(&$queries, $conn, $sql = FALSE)
{
  if (
$sql !== FALSE)
   
$queries[] = $sql;
  while (
count($queries) && !pg_connection_busy($conn))
   
pg_send_query($conn, array_shift($queries));
  return
count($queries) + (pg_connection_busy($conn) ? 1 : 0);
}
?>

You will have to write a higher level of abstraction if you want a "send all queries now, receive them later" behaviour.
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