mysqli::options

mysqli_options

(PHP 5)

mysqli::options -- mysqli_optionsSet options

Description

Object oriented style

bool mysqli::options ( int $option , mixed $value )

Procedural style

bool mysqli_options ( mysqli $link , int $option , mixed $value )

Used to set extra connect options and affect behavior for a connection.

This function may be called multiple times to set several options.

mysqli_options() should be called after mysqli_init() and before mysqli_real_connect().

Parameters

link

Procedural style only: A link identifier returned by mysqli_connect() or mysqli_init()

option

The option that you want to set. It can be one of the following values:

Valid options
Name Description
MYSQLI_OPT_CONNECT_TIMEOUT connection timeout in seconds (supported on Windows with TCP/IP since PHP 5.3.1)
MYSQLI_OPT_LOCAL_INFILE enable/disable use of LOAD LOCAL INFILE
MYSQLI_INIT_COMMAND command to execute after when connecting to MySQL server
MYSQLI_READ_DEFAULT_FILE Read options from named option file instead of my.cnf
MYSQLI_READ_DEFAULT_GROUP Read options from the named group from my.cnf or the file specified with MYSQL_READ_DEFAULT_FILE.
MYSQLI_SERVER_PUBLIC_KEY RSA public key file used with the SHA-256 based authentication.

value

The value for the option.

Return Values

Returns TRUE on success or FALSE on failure.

Changelog

Version Description
5.5.0 The MYSQLI_SERVER_PUBLIC_KEY option was added.

Examples

See mysqli_real_connect().

Notes

Note:

MySQLnd always assumes the server default charset. This charset is sent during connection hand-shake/authentication, which mysqlnd will use.

Libmysqlclient uses the default charset set in the my.cnf or by an explicit call to mysqli_options() prior to calling mysqli_real_connect(), but after mysqli_init().

See Also

Коментарии

Автор:
Here es little example to create a SSL Connection

<?php

$db 
mysqli_init();

/*
When you want so use a separate cnf
$test = $db->options(MYSQLI_EAD_DEFAULT_FILE,'myother.cnf');
*/

$db->ssl_set('server-key.pem','server-cert.pem',
'cacert.pem',NULL,NULL);

$db->real_connect('localhost','root','','mydb');

//Here some query

$db->close();

?>
2007-03-07 16:46:03
http://php5.kiev.ua/manual/ru/mysqli.options.html
Example on using mysqli_options to increase size of max_allowed_packet for working with big blobs.

function dbConnect()
{
   $user = 'jomama';
   $pass = 'cartoon';
   $dbName = 'LifeCycle';
   $host = 'localhost';

   $mysqli = mysqli_init();
   mysqli_options($mysqli,MYSQLI_READ_DEFAULT_GROUP,
                                    "max_allowed_packet=50M");
   mysqli_real_connect($mysqli,$host, $user, $pass,$dbName) 
                  or die ('<P>Unable to connect</P>');

   return $mysqli;
}
2008-02-14 14:05:26
http://php5.kiev.ua/manual/ru/mysqli.options.html
There is an undocumented option: MYSQLI_OPT_READ_TIMEOUT. This is similar to MYSQLI_OPT_CONNECT_TIMEOUT in theory, but has a slightly different application. Connection timeout only specifies the wait time for the initial TCP connection. Once that is created, the timeout no longer applies. Read timeout, however, is from the time the TCP connection is created until the first packet of actual data is received. There are instances where a TCP connection can be established, but the MySQL server stalls indefinitely, preventing execution from ever returning to PHP. Specifying a read timeout alleviates this condition, whereas connect timeout wouldn't. 

If the MYSQLI_OPT_READ_TIMEOUT constant isn't defined, it is still supported on versions where that isn't the case. You can define it yourself in older PHP versions with the following code.

<?php
if (!defined('MYSQLI_OPT_READ_TIMEOUT')) {
   
define ('MYSQLI_OPT_READ_TIMEOUT'11);
}
?>

You can then use read timeout the same way you could a connect timeout as follows. Please note that since these are two different timeout values for two different parts of the entire connection process, the timeouts do stack (eg: 10 seconds connect timeout + 10 seconds read timeout = maximum possible timeout of 20 seconds)

<?php
//create the object
$connection mysqli_init();

//specify the connection timeout
$connection->options(MYSQLI_OPT_CONNECT_TIMEOUT10);

//specify the read timeout
$connection->options(MYSQLI_OPT_READ_TIMEOUT10);

//initiate the connection to the server, using both previously specified timeouts
$connection->real_connect('server''user''pass''database');
?>
2018-07-21 01:14:25
http://php5.kiev.ua/manual/ru/mysqli.options.html
Автор:
Although it is not explained on the manual, MYSQLI_OPT_SSL_VERIFY_SERVER_CERT is an option only valid for mysqlnd and will raise an error if used with mysqli.
2022-01-27 16:59:09
http://php5.kiev.ua/manual/ru/mysqli.options.html
With Objective Approach 
init of mysqli is depreciated from 8.1 it seem so
You could have to use an empty __construct()
So You have proper int and float 

class DB extends \mysqli {
   private function __construct(
           private $_user = DBUSER,
           private $_pass = DBPWD,
           private $_dbName = DBNAME,
           private $_dbHost = DBHOST,
   ) {
      parent::__construct();
      parent::options(MYSQLI_OPT_INT_AND_FLOAT_NATIVE, 1);
      parent::real_connect($this->_dbHost, $this->_user, $this->_pass, $this->_dbName);
      }
   }
2022-09-08 08:35:58
http://php5.kiev.ua/manual/ru/mysqli.options.html
Автор:
The `MYSQLI_OPT_SSL_VERIFY_SERVER_CERT` seems to always fail, with `options()` always returning false.
Use the `MYSQLI_CLIENT_SSL_DONT_VERIFY_SERVER_CERT` flag with `real_connect()` instead.
2023-05-18 05:17:57
http://php5.kiev.ua/manual/ru/mysqli.options.html

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