Database framework and query builder.
This library implements (yet another) database abstraction and (yet another) query builder.
It supports:
INSERT
, UPDATE
, DELETE
and SELECT
queries, with a chainable API.PDO
adding support for array
values with PDO-style :name
placeholders.An important non-goal of this project is the ability to switch from one database technology to another - while we do support both MySQL and PostgreSQL, and while a lot of the implementations are shared, no attempt is made at hiding or abstracting the differences between each technology. On the contrary, we try to make it plain and obvious that there are differences, both in terms of capabilities and best patterns for each DBMS.
We favor simplicity over ease of use - this library minimally abstracts PDO and stays reasonably close to SQL and the relational model, rather than attempting to hide it.
Per SimVersion, the 0.x
release series is feature-incomplete, not "unstable",
and will not transition to 1.x
until it is feature-complete.
The project has been widely used on many internal projects in our organization - it is "stable", but is still subject to changes, and will remain so for the foreseeable future.
The public API has been largely stable for many releases - at this point, most breaking changes are changes to
the internal protected
portion of the API; typically, a major 0.x+1
release has very little impact on client code.
Current target is php 8.1 or later.
Code adheres to PSR-2 and PSR-4.
You need a working Docker installation to run the tests.
The project includes a DevContainer and a launch.json
for testing and debugging
with VS Code - just open the project in VS Code, hit F5
to run the tests, and you should be good to go. ✨
To launch Docker and run the test-suite, e.g. in PHP 8.3
:
./test.sh 8.3
Once the Docker environment is running, you can run the tests more quickly on the existing Docker environment:
./test.sh
Once running, if you prefer, you can also just shell into the PHP container and run the tests from there, for example:
docker compose exec php bash
composer update
composer test
exit
The concepts used in this library can be roughly divided into two main areas: the framework and the model.
The framework (the mindplay\sql\framework
namespace) consists of database Connection, Statement and
Prepared Statement abstractions, and an implementation of these for PDO.
In addition, the framework includes an iterable Result model which includes support for a Mapper abstraction and implementations providing support for custom operations on individual records, as well as processing of large result sets in batches.
The model (the mindplay\sql\model
namespace) includes a Driver abstraction, Query Builders for INSERT
, SELECT
,
UPDATE
, DELETE
and custom SQL queries, a Schema model and a Type abstraction, which includes a Mapper
implementation for Type conversions.
Every project needs a Schema
class and one Table
class for every table in that schema.
This boostrapping process may seem a little verbose, but with IDE support, you will write these simple classes in no-time - these classes in turn will provide support for static analysis tools and IDEs, e.g. with auto-completion for table/column names, making your database work simple and safe.
It's worth it.
Define your table model by extending the Table
class.
Your table classes act as factories for Column
objects.
Add one method per column, each returning a Column
object - the Table
class provides several different
protected factory-methods to help with the creation of Column
instances.
The method-name should match the column name, so you can use __FUNCTION__
to avoid repetition.
The Table
class implements __get()
so you can skip the parens when referencing columns.
You should add a @property-read
annotation for each column for optimal static analysis.
The table model pattern looks like this:
/**
* @property-read Column $id
* @property-read Column $first_name
* @property-read Column $last_name
*/
class UserTable extends Table
{
public function id($alias)
{
return $this->autoColumn(__FUNCTION__, IntType::class, $alias);
}
public function first_name($alias)
{
return $this->requiredColumn(__FUNCTION__, StringType::class, $alias);
}
public function last_name($alias)
{
return $this->requiredColumn(__FUNCTION__, StringType::class, $alias);
}
}
The following protected
factory-methods are available to help create Column
instances:
requiredColumn()
for non-optional columns: the INSERT query-builder will throw an exception
if you don't explicitly specify a value for these.
optionalColumn()
for columns that have a default value and/or allow NULLs.
autoColumn()
for columns that the database itself will populate, e.g. auto-incrementing or
columns that are otherwise initialized by the database itself.
Refer to the Table
API for arguments.
Note that "required" and "optional" do not necessarily correlate 1:1 with IS NULL
in your schema.
For example, a column could be "required" but still allow SQL NULL
values - in this case, "required"
means you must explicitly supply a null-value e.g. to the INSERT query-builder, which may be safer and
more explicit for some use-cases.
Every Column
references a Type
by it's class-name. (e.g. DateType::class
, etc.)
Type
implementations are responsible for converting between SQL values and PHP values, in both directions.
Type
implementations are auto-wired in the DI container internally - you don't need to explicitly
register a custom Type
implementation.
Built-in types are available for the scalar PHP types (string
, int
, float
, bool
and null
) as well
as a few other SQL types.
For available types and documentation, look in the mindplay\sql\model\types
namespace.
Define your schema model by extending the Schema
class.
Your schema class acts as a factory for Table
objects.
Add one method per Table
type, each returning a Table
object - the Schema
class provides a
protected factory-method createTable()
to help with the creation of Table
instances.
The method-name should match the table-name, so you can use __FUNCTION__
to avoid repetition.
The Schema
class implements __get()
so you can skip the parens when referencing tables.
You should add a @property-read
annotation for each table for optimal static analysis.
The schema model pattern looks like this:
/**
* @property-read UserTable $user
* @property-read AddressTable $address
*/
class UserSchema extends Schema
{
/**
* @param string $alias
*
* @return UserTable
*/
public function user($alias)
{
return $this->createTable(UserTable::class, __FUNCTION__, $alias);
}
/**
* @param string $alias
*
* @return AddressTable
*/
public function address($alias)
{
return $this->createTable(AddressTable::class, __FUNCTION__, $alias);
}
}
If you use a dependency injection container, you should perform this bootstrapping once and register these objects as services in your container.
First, select a Database
implementation - for example:
$db = new MySQLDatabase();
Next, create (and register in your DI container) your Schema
model:
/** @var UserSchema $schema */
$schema = $db->getSchema(UserSchema::class);
Finally, create (and register) a matching Connection
implementation - for example:
$connection = $db->createConnection(new PDO("mysql:dbname=foo;host=127.0.0.1", "root", "root"));
Don't quibble about the fact that you need three different dependencies - it may seem complicated or verbose, but it's actually very simple; each of these three components have a very distinct purpose and scope:
The Database
model acts as a factory for Schema
-types and various query-types (insert, select, etc.)
Your Schema
-type acts as a factory-class for your domain-specific Table
-types.
The Connection
object provides a thin wrapper over PDO
, which doesn't have an interface of it's own.
Note that the Database
model and Schema
-types have no dependency on the Connection
object - the
database model and query-builders operate entirely in the abstract with no dependency on any physical
database connection, which is great, as it enables you to write (and unit-test) complex query-builders
independently of any database connection.
Creating a query begins with the Database
model and your Schema
-type.
Here is a basic example of building a SELECT query with a SelectQuery
builder, which is created
by the select()
factory-method:
$user = $schema->user;
$query = $db->select($user)
->where("{$user->first_name} LIKE :name")
->bind("name", "%rasmus%")
->order("{$user->last_name} DESC, {$user->first_name} DESC")
->page(1, 20); // page 1, 20 records per page, e.g.: OFFSET 0 LIMIT 20
Note the use of __toString()
magic, which is supported by Table
-types and Column
objects: these
properties/methods return quoted names - for example, {$user->last_name}
expands to "user"."last_name"
if you're using a PostgresConnection
.
Factory-methods are available for the following query-builders:
select(Table $from)
creates a SelectQuery
builder for SELECT
queriesinsert(Table $into)
creates an InsertQuery
builder for INSERT
queriesupdate(Table $table)
creates an UpdateQuery
builder for UPDATE
queriesdelete(Table $table)
creates DeleteQuery
builder for DELETE
queriessql(string $sql)
creates a SQLQuery
builder for custom SQL queriesAll of the query-builders support parameter binding via bind()
and apply()
.
Query-builders for SELECT
, UPDATE
and DELETE
queries support conditions via the where()
method.
In addition, some query-builders support a few features specific to those types of queries.
All types of query-builders extend the Query
builder, which implements parameter binding - the one
feature that is common to all query-types, including the "raw" SQLQuery
type.
⚠ To avoid SQL injection, all values should be bound to placeholders - we can't prevent you from inserting literal values directly into queries, but don't: you should always use parameter binding.
You can bind individual placeholders (such as :name
) to values using the bind()
method:
$query->bind("name", $value);
For native scalar types (string
, int
, float
, bool
, null
and arrays of those) the type is
automatically inferred from the value-type.
For other types, you must manually specify which type to use - for example, the built-in DateType
can be used to expand an integer timestamp value into a DATE
SQL expression:
$query->bind("created", $timestamp, DateType::class);
For convenience, you can also apply()
a map of name/value-pairs to several placeholders:
$query->apply([
"first_name" => $first_name,
"last_name" => $last_name,
]);
Note that apply()
works for scalar types (and arrays of those) only - explicitly binding to
specific types requires multiple calls to bind()
.
SELECT
QueriesThe SELECT query-builder supports by far the widest range of API methods:
where()
method.order()
method.innerJoin()
, leftJoin()
and outerJoin()
methods.limit()
and page()
methods.We'll cover all of these in the following sections.
To create a SELECT query-builder, you must specify the root of the projection - for example:
$user = $schema->user;
$query = $db->select($user);
If you don't manually specify which columns should be selected, by default, this will build a simple query like:
SELECT * FROM user
You can explicitly designate the columns you wish to select:
$user = $schema->user;
$query = $db
->select($user)
->columns([
$user->first_name,
$user->last_name,
]);
Note that the raw SQL values from the selected columns will be automatically converted to PHP types using the type-information defined in your table/column-model.
Contrast this with the value()
method, which lets you add any custom SQL expression to be selected:
$user = $schema->user;
$query = $db
->select($user)
->columns([$user->id])
->value("CONCAT({$user->first_name}, ' ', {$user->last_name})", "full_name");
Note that, since we're building an SQL expression and passing that as a string, the type-information in the columns can't automatically be used - in this example, the raw SQL value is a string, and that happens to be the type we want back, so we don't need to specify a type.
In other cases, you may need to explicitly specify the type - for example, here we're calculating
an age
value, designating the value for conversion with IntType::class
:
$user = $schema->user;
$query = $db
->select($user)
->table($user)
->value("DATEDIFF(hour, {$user->dob}, NOW()) / 8766", "age", IntType::class);
Note also the use of table($user)
in this example - we're selecting the entire table (all of the
columns) as well as the custom age
expression.
Building on the above example, we can add an SQL HAVING
clause to select users of legal drinking age:
$query->having("age >= 21");
Repeated calls to having()
will append to the list of HAVING
expressions.
(Note that this particular example could be optimized by duplicating the DATEDIFF
expression
and adding the >= 21
condition to the where()
clause instead.)
We can build an aggregate query by adding an SQL GROUP BY
clause - for example, here
we create a projection of the number of users grouped by country name:
$user = $schema->user;
$query = $db
->select($user)
->columns([$user->country])
->groupBy($user->country)
->value("COUNT({$user})", "num_users");
Note that repeated calls to groupBy()
will append to the list of GROUP BY
terms.
WHERE
)Note that the where()
method is supported by the SELECT, UPDATE and DELETE query-builders.
When you add multiple conditions with where()
, these are combined with the AND
operator - so
your query has to match all of the conditions applied to it.
⚠ Literal SQL expressions in
where()
conditions must always use:name
placeholders - resist the temptation to inject literal values, even when this seems perfectly safe: refactoring etc. could make a safe injection become unsafe, and there is no reason to take that risk, ever.
The where()
method accepts either a single SQL condition, or an array of conditions - for example:
$user = $schema->user;
$query = $db
->select($user)
->where([
"{$user->first_name} LIKE :first_name",
"{$user->last_name} LIKE :last_name",
])
->apply([
"first_name" => "ras%",
"last_name" => "sch%",
]);
This produces an SQL query like:
SELECT * FROM user WHERE (first_name LIKE "ras%") AND (last_name LIKE "sch%")
Two simple helper-functions are available to help you build arbitrarily nested conditions with
any combination of AND
and OR
operators:
expr::all()
combines conditions to match all given conditions. (by combining them with AND
.)expr::any()
combines conditions to match any of the given conditions. (by combining with OR
.)For example:
expr::all(["a = :a", "b = :b"])
combines to "(a = :a) AND (b = :b)"
expr::any(["a = :a", "b = :b"])
combines to "(a = :a) OR (b = :b)"
So, building on the first example above, if you wanted to search by first_name
or last_name
, you
can use expr::any()
to combine the conditions before adding them to the query - that is:
$user = $schema->user;
$query = $db
->select($user)
->where(
expr::any([
"{$user->first_name} LIKE :first_name",
"{$user->last_name} LIKE :last_name",
])
)
->apply([
"first_name" => "ras%",
"last_name" => "sch%",
]);
This produces an SQL query like:
SELECT * FROM user WHERE (first_name LIKE "ras%") OR (last_name LIKE "sch%")
⚠ Note that both of these functions throw an
InvalidArgumentException
if you pass an empty array. This is very much by design, since we can't combine zero conditions into one meaningful condition - if some list of conditions in your domain is zero-or-more, you need to actively decide if this should generate no added condition, anIS NULL
condition, or something else entirely.
Various JOIN-methods are supported by the SELECT, UPDATE and DELETE query-builders, including
innerJoin()
, leftJoin()
and rightJoin()
.
All the JOIN-methods accept the same arguments, e.g. leftJoin(Table $table, string $expr)
, and so on.
The $table
argument designates the table to JOIN with, and the $expr
argument specifies the ON
clause.
Let's examine a typical use-case with customer
and order
tables - and let's say we want a list
of customer records, and the number of orders each customer has placed:
$customer = $schema->customer;
$order = $schema->order;
$query = $db
->select($customer)
->table($customer)
->leftJoin($order, "{$order->customer_id} = {$customer->id}")
->value("COUNT({$order})", "num_orders")
->groupBy($customer->id);
This produces an SQL query like:
SELECT
customer.*,
COUNT(order) AS num_orders
FROM
customer
LEFT JOIN
order ON order.customer_id = customer.id
GROUP BY
customer.id
Note the use of groupBy()
and value()
, which are specific to the SELECT query-builder.
Note that self-join is possible by naming the relational variables - for example, in the typical
use-case with an employee
table, where a supervisor_id
references another employee
, we can
create a second alias, e.g. employee AS supervisor
to get a list of employees including the
name of their direct supervisor:
$employee = $schema->employee;
$supervisor = $schema->employee("supervisor"); // e.g. "employee AS supervisor"
$query = $db
->select($employee)
->table($employee)
->leftJoin($supervisor, "{$supervisor->id} = {$emplyoee->supervisor_id}")
->columns($supervisor->name);
INSERT
QueriesThis is probably the simplest of the available query-builders.
To create an INSERT query-builder, you must specify the destination table - and then call the add()
method to add one or more records - for example:
$user = $schema->user;
$query = $db
->insert($user)
->add([
"first_name" => "Rasmus",
"last_name" => "Schultz",
"dob" => 951030427,
]);
Note that the array keys must match column-names in the destination table - so that type-conversions for the columns can be applied.
If you think this approach is too fragile, you can choose to get the column-names from the schema model instead:
$user = $schema->user;
$query = $db
->insert($user)
->add([
$user->first_name->getName() => "Rasmus",
$user->last_name->getName() => "Schultz",
$user->dob->getName() => 951030427,
]);
This is safer (in terms of static analysis) but a bit verbose.
Note that, if you add multiple records, when executed, these will be inserted with a single INSERT statement.
UPDATE
QueriesTo create an UPDATE query-builder, you must specify the table to be updated and the conditions,
and then designate the value to be applied - for example, here we update the user
table where user.id = 123
,
setting the value of the first_name
column:
$user = $schema->user;
$query = $db
->update($user)
->where("{$user->id} = :id")
->bind("id", 123)
->setValue($user->first_name, "Rasmus");
For convenience, you could also use assign()
with a key/value array instead:
$query->assign([
"first_name" => "Rasmus"
]);
In either case, type-conversions will automatically be applied according to the column-type.
You can also use setExpr()
, which lets you specify a custom SQL expression to compute a value - for example,
here we update the last_logged_in
column using the SQL NOW()
function to get the DB server's current date/time:
$user = $schema->user;
$query = $db
->update($user)
->where("{$user->id} = :id")
->bind("id", 123)
->setExpr($user->last_logged_in, "NOW()");
In addition, PostgreSQL supports returning()
, and MySQL supports limit()
and order()
.
Note that building nested queries is possible with the UPDATE query-builder.
DELETE
QueriesTo create a DELETE query-builder, you must specify the table from which to delete and the
conditions - for example, here we delete from the user
table where user.id = 123
:
$user = $schema->user;
$query = $db
->delete($user)
->where("{$user->id} = :id")
->bind("id", 123);
In addition, PostgreSQL supports returning()
, and MySQL supports limit()
and order()
.
Note that building nested queries is possible with the DELETE query-builder.
The SQLQuery
type lets you leverage all the framework features for "hand-written" SQL queries - e.g.
parameter binding (with array support), column references, types, mappers, result iteration, etc.
Don't think of custom SQL queries as a "last resort" - use query-builders for queries that are dynamic in nature, but don't shy away from raw SQL because it "looks" or "feels" wrong: a static query is often both simpler and easier to understand when written using plain SQL syntax.
For example, to create a simple SQL query counting new users created in the past month:
$user = $schema->user;
$query = $db
->sql("SELECT COUNT({$user}) as num_users FROM {$user} WHERE {$user->created} > :first_date")
->bind("first_date", time() + 30*24*60*60, TimestampType::class);
This approach has several benefits over raw SQL with PDO:
The use of the table/column-model ensures that the referenced column exists in your schema, gets correctly qualified and quoted, enable static analysis (and safe renaming) in an IDE, etc.
You can bind()
values to placeholders with type-conversions, which enables you to write
code with the same types you use in your application model. (in this example an integer timestamp.)
Various convenience features like result iteration, batching and mapping are fully supported.
For static, one-off queries, this approach is definitely worth considering.
The SELECT query-builder supports __toString()
magic, which allows you to build the full SQL query
and insert it into another query-builder instance.
This enables you to build nested SELECT queries - for example, you can use value()
to inline a
sub-query and return the result, or you can use expr()
to inline a sub-query and a condition on
the result of that sub-query.
Let's examine a typical use-case with customer
and order
tables - and let's say we want a list
of customer IDs and names, and the number of orders they've placed.
Also, let's say we only want to count order
rows with a minimum total
sale over $100.
We need to build the sub-query for the number of orders first:
$customer = $schema->customer;
$order = $schema->order;
$num_orders = $db
->select($order)
->value("COUNT({$order})")
->where([
"{$order->total} > :min_total",
"{$order->customer_id} = {$customer->id}",
]);
Two important things to note about this sub-query:
We've deliberately left the :min_total
placeholder unbound - this placeholder will be bound
in the parent query instead, which is the one we'll actually execute. We're just leveraging
the first query-builder for it's ability to build an SQL statement.
This query can't be executed in the first place, because the second condition references
{$customer->id}
, which will be established by the parent query.
Next, we build the parent query, using value()
to insert and return the value from the sub-query:
$query = $db
->select($customer)
->columns([
$customer->id,
$customer->first_name,
$customer->last_name,
])
->value($num_orders, "num_orders")
->bind("min_total", 100);
Again, note that the :min_total
placeholder was bound to the parent query, not to the sub-query.
This produces an SQL query like:
SELECT
customer.id,
customer.first_name,
customer.last_name,
(
SELECT COUNT(order) FROM order
WHERE (order.total > 100)
AND (order.customer_id = customer.id)
) AS num_orders
FROM
customer
Note that, in simple cases like this, using multiple query-builders may be overly verbose: you may need query-builders for queries that are dynamic in nature, but for a simple static sub-query, you might also consider simply inserting the sub-query as literal SQL - like so:
$query = $db
->select($customer)
->columns([
$customer->id,
$customer->first_name,
$customer->last_name,
])
->value(
"SELECT COUNT({$order}) FROM {$order}"
. " WHERE ({$order->total} > :min_total)"
. " AND ({$order->customer_id} = {$customer->id})",
"num_orders"
)
->bind("min_total", 100);
One approach isn't "better" or "worse" than the other - building an inline SQL statement in this way produces the exact same SQL query, so it is mostly a question of whether the sub-query is dynamic or static in nature.
To directly execute a query, simply pass it to Connection::execute()
:
$connection->execute(
$db->sql("DELETE FROM order WHERE id = :id")->bind("id", 123)
);
The execute()
method returns the PreparedStatement
instance after running it, which makes
it possible to subsequently count the number of rows affected by an INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE.
You can use this to check if a DELETE was successful:
$delete = $db->sql("DELETE FROM order WHERE id = :id")->bind("id", 123);
if ($connection->execute($delete)->getRowsAffected() !== 1) {
// delete failed!
}
The Connection::fetch()
method produces an iterable Result
instance.
This makes it easy to fetch a result and iterate over the rows:
$query = $db->sql("SELECT * FROM user");
$result = $connection->fetch($query);
foreach ($result as $row) {
var_dump($row["id"], $row["first_name"]);
}
Note that there is no built-in row-model: the Result
instance yields simple array
values
by default, with column-names mapping to the projected values. (See also mappers,
which let you map the rows to model objects, etc.)
For convenience, a couple of shortcuts are available to read the result set, e.g.:
$result->all()
will read the entire result set into memory and returns an array
.$result->firstRow()
to read the first row, e.g. for result sets that produce a single record,
such as simple primary key queries, etc.$result->firstCol()
to read the first column of the first row, e.g. for result sets that produce
a single record with a single column, such as COUNT
queries, etc.To enable conversion of projected SQL values to PHP types, the SELECT query-builder internally maps the
projected values against Type
implementations defined by your table/column-models.
For example, if you have a user
table with a created
column of type TimestampType
, fetching this
column internally maps the SQL DATETIME
type to an integer
timestamp:
$user = $schema->user;
$query = $db
->select($user)
->where("{$user->id} = :id")
->bind("id", 123);
$row = $connection->fetch($query)->firstRow();
var_dump($row["created"]); // => (int) 1553177264
While basic type-conversions are internally applied (by a built-in Mapper
implementation) you also
have the option of manually mapping rows against a custom function.
For example, to perform a basic mapping of user
rows to User
model instances, you might apply
a simple mapper-function using mapRecords()
, as follows:
$user = $schema->user;
$query = $db
->select($user)
->mapRecords(function (array $row) {
return new User($row["id"], $row["first_name"], $row["last_name"]);
});
$results = $connection->fetch($query);
foreach ($results as $result) {
var_dump($result); // class User#1 (0) { ... }
}
If you apply multiple mappers, these will be applied in the order they were added - applying
another mapper after the one in this example, the next mapper will receive the User
instance.
So you can chain as many operations as you want to, as long as you make sure the next mapper
expects an input like the output produced by the previous one.
If a mapping operation is common, you can implement it in a reusable way, by implementing the
Mapper
interface - for example, we can refactor the mapping function above to a Mapper
, like so:
class UserMapper implements Mapper
{
public function map(array $rows)
{
foreach ($rows as $row) {
yield new User($row["id"], $row["first_name"], $row["last_name"]);
}
}
}
To apply this mapper to a query, use map()
instead of mapRecords()
:
$query = $db
->select($user)
->map(new UserMapper());
Note the fact that mappers process an entire batch of rows at a time - in this example, we used
the yield
statement to create a Generator,
which is more convenient than manually creating and appending to an array, and also enables you to customize
keys, e.g. using the yield $key => $value
syntax.
To avoid memory overhead when processing larger result sets, the Result
model internally fetches records
(and applies mappers, etc.) in batches.
The default batch size is 1000 records, e.g. large enough to fetch the result of most normal queries in a single round-trip.
If needed, you can specify a different batch size via Connection::fetch()
- the batch processing is
internal, so when you loop over the Result
with a foreach
statement, the difference isn't directly
visible in your client code:
$query = $db
->select($user)
->map(new UserMapper());
$result = $connection->fetch($query, 100); // batches of 100
foreach ($result as $row) {
// ...
}
Because mappers are applied to batches, the UserMapper
in this example internally gets
invoked for every set of 100 records - assuming the records fall out of scope your client code, this
means that only 100 User
instances will exist in-memory at a time.
The SELECT query-builder is able to rewrite itself into an SQL COUNT(*)
query, removing the
LIMIT
, OFFSET
and ORDER BY
clauses, and ignoring any applied mappers.
For example, if you're building a search-form that displays pages of 20 records, you can count the total number of results (e.g. to be displayed somewhere) before executing the actual query:
$query = $db
->select($user)
->where("{$user->name} LIKE :name")
->bind("name", "%rasmus%")
->page($page_no, 20); // $page_no is the base-1 page number
$count = $connection->count($query); // total number of matching results (for display)
$num_pages = ceil($count / 20); // total number of pages (for display)
$result = $connection->fetch($query); // 20 records of the requested page number
Note that any conditions and JOINs etc. will be preserved and applied as normal, only the root
projection of the query is changed into COUNT(*)
, and the query is immediately executed and fetched.
The Connection
interfaces supports transactions in a safer, more atomic way than bare PDO.
Rather than disparate begin, commit and rollback-methods, a single transact()
method accepts a
callback, and the transaction must explicitly either commit or roll back immediately.
In this abbreviated example, we update a payment
and create a subscription
atomically:
$connection->transact(function () use ($connection, $db) {
$connection->execute(
$db->sql("UPDATE payment WHERE id = :payment_id SET paid = NOW()")->bind(...)
);
$connection->execute(
$db->sql("INSERT INTO subscription (...) VALUES (...)")->bind(...);
);
return true; // COMMITS the transaction
});
The callback function must explicitly return either true
to commit the transaction, or false
to roll back -
returning anything other than a bool
will roll back the transaction and generate an exception.
If an unhandled exception is thrown while invoking your callback, the transaction will be rolled back, and the exception will be re-thrown.
Note that nested transactions are possible, e.g. by calling transact()
from within a callback. The result of
doing so is a single SQL transaction around the top-level call to transact()
, and therefore, all transaction
callbacks must return true
to commit - if any of the callbacks in a net transaction return false
(or
generate an exception, etc.) the transaction will be rolled back, and a TransactionAbortedException
will be
thrown. In other words, any nested transactions must agree to either commit or rollback - this ensures that
the top-level transaction will either succeed or fail as a whole.
To efficiently execute the same query many times, you can manually prepare()
a statement -
for example, to DELETE a list of order
records:
$delete = $connection->prepare($db->sql("DELETE FROM order WHERE id = :id"));
foreach ($ids as $id) {
$delete->bind("id", $id);
$delete->execute();
}
Note that the prepare()
method eagerly expand arrays to multiple placeholders - while you can
bind()
the placeholders of a PreparedStatement
instance to scalar (int
, float
, string
,
bool
and null
) values, binding array
values to an already prepared statement is not possible,
because this changes the structure of the query itself. (If your use-case requires you to bind
placeholders to different array
values, instead use the bind()
method of the query-builder and
avoid re-binding the prepared statement.)
Logging of queries is supported via the Logger
interface - and instance
can be injected into a Connection
instance with the addLogger()
method.
A BufferedPSRLogger
implementation is available - this will buffer
executed queries, until you choose to flush them to a PSR-3 logger,
for example:
$buffer = new BufferedPSRLogger();
$connection->addLogger($buffer);
// ... execute queries ...
$buffer->flushTo($psr_logger);
Where $psr_logger
is a Psr\Log\LoggerInterface
implementation of your choosing.
You may want to check out kodus/chrome-logger
, which can be
used to render an SQL query-log via ChromeLogger in tabular format.
Plenty fast.
A simple benchmark of query-builder performance is included - a simple SELECT
with
ORDER
and LIMIT
clauses builds in ~0.1 msec, and a more complex SELECT
with two JOIN
clauses and a
bunch of conditions and parameters builds in ~0.5 msec. (on my Windows 10 laptop running PHP 7)
This section contains notes for inquisitive minds.
The overall architecture consists of high-level Query
models and a low-level PreparedStatement
abstraction.
At the Query
layer, values are managed as native PHP values. Simple values, such as int
, float
, string
,
bool
, null
, are internally managed, and the use of arrays is managed by expanding PDO-style placeholders.
The Query
models implement either Executable
or ReturningExecutable
, depending on whether the type of
query returns records (SELECT
, INSERT..RETURNING
, etc.) or not. (INSERT
, DELETE
, etc.)
The Connection
abstraction prepares a Statement
and generates a PreparedStatement
instance - at this
layer, the abstraction is connection-dependent, and only scalar values are supported.
The idea of internally managing the creation of the PDOStatement
instance was considered, but this would block
the consumer from making potential optimizations by repeatedly executing the same prepared statement. By hiding
the creation of PDOStatement
from the consumer (e.g. by implicitly preparing the statement again if a non-scalar
type is used) the performance implications would have been hidden - in other words, the PreparedStatement
model,
with it's inability to bind anything other than scalar values, accurately reflects the real-world limitations
and performance implications of prepared statements in PDO.