Table of Contents
Copyright 1997-2014 the PHP Documentation Group.
PDO_MYSQL is a driver that implements the PHP Data Objects (PDO) interface to enable access from PHP to MySQL 3.x, 4.x and 5.x databases.
PDO_MYSQL will take advantage of native prepared statement support present in MySQL 4.1 and higher. If you're using an older version of the mysql client libraries, PDO will emulate them for you.
Beware: Some MySQL table types (storage engines) do not support transactions. When writing transactional database code using a table type that does not support transactions, MySQL will pretend that a transaction was initiated successfully. In addition, any DDL queries issued will implicitly commit any pending transactions.
The common Unix distributions include binary versions of PHP that can be installed. Although these binary versions are typically built with support for the MySQL extensions, the extension libraries themselves may need to be installed using an additional package. Check the package manager than comes with your chosen distribution for availability.
For example, on Ubuntu the php5-mysql package
installs the ext/mysql, ext/mysqli, and PDO_MYSQL PHP extensions. On
CentOS, the php-mysql package also installs these
three PHP extensions.
Alternatively, you can compile this extension yourself. Building PHP from source allows you to specify the MySQL extensions you want to use, as well as your choice of client library for each extension.
When compiling, use --with-pdo-mysql[=DIR] to
install the PDO MySQL extension, where the optional
[=DIR] is the MySQL base library. As of PHP 5.4,
mysqlnd is the default
library. For details about choosing a library, see
Choosing a MySQL
library.
Optionally, the --with-mysql-sock[=DIR] sets to
location to the MySQL unix socket pointer for all MySQL extensions,
including PDO_MYSQL. If unspecified, the default locations are
searched.
Optionally, the --with-zlib-dir[=DIR] is used to
set the path to the libz install prefix.
$ ./configure --with-pdo-mysql --with-mysql-sock=/var/mysql/mysql.sock
SSL support is enabled using the appropriate
PDO_MySQL
constants, which is equivalent to calling the
MySQL
C API function mysql_ssl_set(). Also, SSL cannot be enabled
with PDO::setAttribute because the connection
already exists. See also the MySQL documentation about
connecting
to MySQL with SSL.
Table 4.1 Changelog
| Version | Description |
|---|---|
| 5.4.0 | mysqlnd became the default MySQL library when compiling PDO_MYSQL. Previously, libmysqlclient was the default MySQL library. |
| 5.4.0 | MySQL client libraries 4.1 and below are no longer supported. |
| 5.3.9 | Added SSL support with mysqlnd and OpenSSL. |
| 5.3.7 | Added SSL support with libmysqlclient and OpenSSL. |
The constants below are defined by
this driver, and will only be available when the extension has been either
compiled into PHP or dynamically loaded at runtime. In addition, these
driver-specific constants should only be used if you are using this driver.
Using driver-specific attributes with another driver may result in
unexpected behaviour. PDO::getAttribute may be used to
obtain the PDO_ATTR_DRIVER_NAME attribute to check the
driver, if your code can run against multiple drivers.
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_USE_BUFFERED_QUERY
(integer)
If this attribute is set to TRUE on a
PDOStatement, the MySQL driver will use the
buffered versions of the MySQL API. If you're writing portable code, you
should use PDOStatement::fetchAll instead.
Example 4.1 Forcing queries to be buffered in mysql
<?php
if ($db->getAttribute(PDO::ATTR_DRIVER_NAME) == 'mysql') {
$stmt = $db->prepare('select * from foo',
array(PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_USE_BUFFERED_QUERY => true));
} else {
die("my application only works with mysql; I should use \$stmt->fetchAll() instead");
}
?>
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_LOCAL_INFILE
(integer)
Enable LOAD LOCAL INFILE.
Note, this constant can only be used in the
driver_options array when constructing
a new database handle.
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_INIT_COMMAND
(integer)
Command to execute when connecting to the MySQL server. Will automatically be re-executed when reconnecting.
Note, this constant can only be used in the
driver_options array when constructing
a new database handle.
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_READ_DEFAULT_FILE
(integer)
Read options from the named option file instead of from
my.cnf. This option is not available if
mysqlnd is used, because mysqlnd does not read the mysql
configuration files.
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_READ_DEFAULT_GROUP
(integer)
Read options from the named group from
my.cnf or the file specified with
MYSQL_READ_DEFAULT_FILE. This option is
not available if mysqlnd is used, because mysqlnd does not
read the mysql configuration files.
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_MAX_BUFFER_SIZE
(integer)
Maximum buffer size. Defaults to 1 MiB. This constant is not supported when compiled against mysqlnd.
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_DIRECT_QUERY
(integer)
Perform direct queries, don't use prepared statements.
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_FOUND_ROWS
(integer)
Return the number of found (matched) rows, not the number of changed rows.
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_IGNORE_SPACE
(integer)
Permit spaces after function names. Makes all functions names reserved words.
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_COMPRESS
(integer)
Enable network communication compression. This is also supported when compiled against mysqlnd as of PHP 5.3.11.
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_SSL_CA
(integer)
The file path to the SSL certificate authority.
This exists as of PHP 5.3.7.
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_SSL_CAPATH
(integer)
The file path to the directory that contains the trusted SSL CA certificates, which are stored in PEM format.
This exists as of PHP 5.3.7.
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_SSL_CERT
(integer)
The file path to the SSL certificate.
This exists as of PHP 5.3.7.
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_SSL_CIPHER
(integer)
A list of one or more permissible ciphers to use for SSL
encryption, in a format understood by OpenSSL. For example:
DHE-RSA-AES256-SHA:AES128-SHA
This exists as of PHP 5.3.7.
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_SSL_KEY
(integer)
The file path to the SSL key.
This exists as of PHP 5.3.7.
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_MULTI_STATEMENTS
(integer)
Disables multi query execution in both
PDO::prepare
and
PDO::query
when set to FALSE.
Note, this constant can only be used in the
driver_options array when constructing
a new database handle.
This exists as of PHP 5.5.21 and PHP 5.6.5.
The behaviour of these functions is affected by settings in php.ini.
Table 4.2 PDO_MYSQL Configuration Options
| Name | Default | Changeable |
|---|---|---|
| pdo_mysql.default_socket | "/tmp/mysql.sock" | PHP_INI_SYSTEM |
| pdo_mysql.debug | NULL | PHP_INI_SYSTEM |
For further details and definitions of the PHP_INI_* modes, see the
http://www.php.net/manual/en/configuration.changes.modes.
Here's a short explanation of the configuration directives.
pdo_mysql.default_socket
string
Sets a Unix domain socket. This value can either be set at compile time if a domain socket is found at configure. This ini setting is Unix only.
pdo_mysql.debug boolean
Enables debugging for PDO_MYSQL. This setting is only available when PDO_MYSQL is compiled against mysqlnd and in PDO debug mode.
Copyright 1997-2014 the PHP Documentation Group.
PDO_MYSQL DSN
Connecting to MySQL databases
Description
The PDO_MYSQL Data Source Name (DSN) is composed of the following elements:
The DSN prefix is mysql:.
host
The hostname on which the database server resides.
port
The port number where the database server is listening.
dbname
The name of the database.
unix_socket
The MySQL Unix socket (shouldn't be used with
host or port).
charset
The character set. See the character set concepts documentation for more information.
Prior to PHP 5.3.6, this element was silently ignored. The
same behaviour can be partly replicated with the
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_INIT_COMMAND driver
option, as the following example shows.
The method in the below example can only be used with character sets
that share the same lower 7 bit representation as ASCII, such as
ISO-8859-1 and UTF-8. Users using character sets that have different
representations (such as UTF-16 or Big5) must
use the charset option provided in PHP 5.3.6
and later versions.
Example 4.2 Setting the connection character set to UTF-8 prior to PHP 5.3.6
<?php
$dsn = 'mysql:host=localhost;dbname=testdb';
$username = 'username';
$password = 'password';
$options = array(
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_INIT_COMMAND => 'SET NAMES utf8',
);
$dbh = new PDO($dsn, $username, $password, $options);
?>
Changelog
| Version | Description |
|---|---|
| 5.3.6 | Prior to version 5.3.6, charset was ignored. |
Examples
Example 4.3 PDO_MYSQL DSN examples
The following example shows a PDO_MYSQL DSN for connecting to MySQL databases:
mysql:host=localhost;dbname=testdb
More complete examples:
mysql:host=localhost;port=3307;dbname=testdb
mysql:unix_socket=/tmp/mysql.sock;dbname=testdb
Notes
When the host name is set to
"localhost", then the connection to
the server is made thru a domain socket. If PDO_MYSQL is
compiled against libmysqlclient then the location of the socket
file is at libmysqlclient's compiled in location. If
PDO_MYSQL is compiled against mysqlnd a default socket can be
set thru the
pdo_mysql.default_socket setting.