mssql_bind
(PHP 4 >= 4.0.7, PHP 5, PECL odbtp >= 1.1.1)
mssql_bind — Adds a parameter to a stored procedure or a remote stored procedure
Описание
$stmt
, string $param_name
, mixed &$var
, int $type
[, bool $is_output
= false
[, bool $is_null
= false
[, int $maxlen
= -1
]]] )Binds a parameter to a stored procedure or a remote stored procedure.
Список параметров
-
stmt
-
Statement resource, obtained with mssql_init().
-
param_name
-
The parameter name, as a string.
Замечание:
You have to include the @ character, like in the T-SQL syntax. See the explanation included in mssql_execute().
-
var
-
The PHP variable you'll bind the MSSQL parameter to. It is passed by reference, to retrieve OUTPUT and RETVAL values after the procedure execution.
-
type
-
One of:
SQLTEXT
,SQLVARCHAR
,SQLCHAR
,SQLINT1
,SQLINT2
,SQLINT4
,SQLBIT
,SQLFLT4
,SQLFLT8
,SQLFLTN
. -
is_output
-
Whether the value is an OUTPUT parameter or not. If it's an OUTPUT parameter and you don't mention it, it will be treated as a normal input parameter and no error will be thrown.
-
is_null
-
Whether the parameter is
NULL
or not. Passing theNULL
value asvar
will not do the job. -
maxlen
-
Used with char/varchar values. You have to indicate the length of the data so if the parameter is a varchar(50), the type must be
SQLVARCHAR
and this value 50.
Возвращаемые значения
Возвращает TRUE
в случае успешного завершения или FALSE
в случае возникновения ошибки.
Примеры
Пример #1 mssql_bind() example
<?php
// Connect to MSSQL and select the database
mssql_connect('KALLESPC\SQLEXPRESS', 'sa', 'phpfi');
mssql_select_db('php');
// Create a new stored prodecure
$stmt = mssql_init('NewUserRecord');
// Bind the field names
mssql_bind($stmt, '@username', 'Kalle', SQLVARCHAR, false, false, 60);
mssql_bind($stmt, '@name', 'Kalle', SQLVARCHAR, false, false, 60);
mssql_bind($stmt, '@age', 19, SQLINT1, false, false, 3);
// Execute
mssql_execute($stmt);
// Free statement
mssql_free_statement($stmt);
?>
Смотрите также
- mssql_execute() - Executes a stored procedure on a MS SQL server database
- mssql_free_statement() - Free statement memory
- mssql_init() - Initializes a stored procedure or a remote stored procedure
- PHP Руководство
- Функции по категориям
- Индекс функций
- Справочник функций
- Расширения для работы с базами данных
- Расширения для работы с базами данных отдельных производителей
- Microsoft SQL Server
- mssql_bind
- mssql_close
- mssql_connect
- mssql_data_seek
- mssql_execute
- mssql_fetch_array
- mssql_fetch_assoc
- mssql_fetch_batch
- mssql_fetch_field
- mssql_fetch_object
- mssql_fetch_row
- mssql_field_length
- mssql_field_name
- mssql_field_seek
- mssql_field_type
- mssql_free_result
- mssql_free_statement
- mssql_get_last_message
- mssql_guid_string
- mssql_init
- mssql_min_error_severity
- mssql_min_message_severity
- mssql_next_result
- mssql_num_fields
- mssql_num_rows
- mssql_pconnect
- mssql_query
- mssql_result
- mssql_rows_affected
- mssql_select_db
Коментарии
mssql_bind binds by reference, not by value, even on input parameters. Improper binding can cause strange errors; in my case "Error converting data type varchar to int"
--SAMPLE STORED PROCEDURE
CREATE Procedure [dbo].[myproc]
(
@one VARCHAR(10) = 'n1',
@two VARCHAR(10) = 'n2',
@three VARCHAR(10) = 'n3',
@four VARCHAR(10) = 'n4',
@five VARCHAR(10) = 'n5'
)
AS
BEGIN
SET NOCOUNT ON;
SELECT
@one AS 'one',
@two AS 'two',
@three AS 'three',
@four AS 'four',
@five AS 'five'
END
//SAMPLE PHP CALL
$sp_name = 'mydb.dbo.myproc';
$proc = mssql_init($sp_name);
$sp_parms->one = 'one';
$sp_parms->two = 'two';
$sp_parms->three = 'three';
foreach ($sp_parms as $key=>$parm) {
#THIS FAILS, because it's binding values!
#mssql_bind($proc, '@'.$key, $parm, SQLVARCHAR)
# or die("Unable to bind $sp_name:$key<br>".mssql_get_last_message());
#THIS SUCCEEDS, USES A REFERENCE
mssql_bind($proc, '@'.$key, $sp_parms->$key, SQLVARCHAR)
or die("Unable to bind $sp_name:$key<br>".mssql_get_last_message());
}
I had the same problem but the posted solution above just produced null results. Here's a modification that ended up working:
#THIS SUCCEEDS, USES A REFERENCE
mssql_bind($proc, '@'.$key, $sp_parms[$key], SQLVARCHAR)
or die("Unable to bind $sp_name:$key<br>".mssql_get_last_message());
for type :
SQLCHAR DBCHAR
SQLVARCHAR DBCHAR
SQLTEXT DBCHAR
SQLBINARY DBBINARY
SQLVARBINARY DBBINARY
SQLIMAGE DBBINARY
SQLINT1 DBTINYINT
SQLINT2 DBSMALLINT
SQLINT4 DBINT
SQLFLT4 DBFLT4
SQLFLT8 DBFLT8
SQLBIT DBBIT
SQLMONEY4 DBMONEY4
SQLMONEY DBMONEY
SQLDATETIM4 DBDATETIM4
SQLDATETIME DBDATETIME
SQLDECIMAL DBDECIMAL
SQLNUMERIC DBNUMERIC
source : http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa937008(SQL.80).aspx
<?php
//IP Address, if instance then IP\Instance
$server = 'a.b.c.d';
$link = mssql_connect($server, 'sql_user', 'sql_user_pass');
//Select DB
$dbn = 'dbName';
mssql_select_db($dbn);
//Define Procedure
$lala = 'tstProc';
$proc = mssql_init($lala, $link);
//Define Parameters
$parm1 = 'one';
$parm2 = 'two';
$parm3 = 'three';
//Load Parameters
mssql_bind($proc, '@num', $parm1, SQLCHAR, false, false, 10);
mssql_bind($proc, '@naamen', $parm2, SQLCHAR, false, false, 10);
mssql_bind($proc, '@desci', $parm3, SQLCHAR, false, false, 10);
//Execute Procedure
mssql_execute($proc);
//Free Memory
mssql_free_statement($proc);
//...and whenever the wolf did howl, all the sheep had to do was bleat!
?>
Use:
SQLVARCHAR for binary
SQLINT4 for datetime
SQLFLT8 for decimal
SQLVARCHAR for image
SQLFLT8 for money
SQLCHAR for nchar
SQLTEXT for ntext
SQLFLT8 for numeric
SQLVARCHAR for nvarchar
SQLFLT8 for real
SQLINT4 for smalldatetime
SQLFLT8 for smallmoney
SQLVARCHAR for sql_variant
SQLINT4 for timestamp
SQLVARCHAR for varbinary
I found SQLVARCHAR better for datetime.
It was performing some other non-strtotime() convertions when it was set to SQLINT4
There isn't a bind function for regular SQL queries; not even a escape function. I found this nice piece of code:
<?php
function mssql_escape($data) {
if(is_numeric($data))
return $data;
$unpacked = unpack('H*hex', $data);
return '0x' . $unpacked['hex'];
}
?>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/574805/
In order to bind DATETIME, i suggest to convert the date to double, then use SQLFLT8 instead of SQLVARCHAR.
In SQL Server Datetime is a standard double. The integer part represent the number of days since 1-1-1900 and the fractional part represent the fraction of the day (e.g: 0.5 means noon, 0.75 means 6 PM).
Using SQLVARCHAR may lead to errors depending on the local server config.
<?php
function PhpTimeToOLEDateTime($timestamp)
{
$a_date = getdate ($timestamp);
$year= $a_date['year']; //this year
$partial_days = ($year-1900)*365;//days elapsed since 1-1-1900
//let's calculate how many 29 february from 1900 to first day on this year
$partial_days +=(int)(($year-1) / 4); //each 4 years a leap year since year 0
$partial_days -= (int)(($year-1) / 100); //each 100 years skip a leap
$partial_days += (int)(($year-1) / 400); //each 400 years add a leap
$partial_days -= 460; //459 leap years before 1900 + 1 for math (year 0 does not exist)
$partial_days += $a_date['yday'];
$seconds = $a_date['hours'] * 3600;
$seconds += $a_date['minutes'] * 60;
$seconds += $a_date['seconds'];
$d = (double) $partial_days;
$d += ((double)$seconds)/86400.0;
return $d;
}
?>
Sample binding
<?php
$now = PhpTimeToOLEDateTime(time());
mssql_bind($proc, "@dateparam", $now, SQLFLT8, false);
?>
The actual way to bind datetime variables to is by using a SQLVARCHAR with a date variable of the form date('Y-m-d H:i:s);
<?php
...
$date = date('Y-m-d H:i:s');
mssql_bind($stmt, "@Date", $date, SQLVARCHAR);
?>