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MySQL Database Handling in PHP

Mark_Smith
04-01-2007, 12:34 PM
Most interactive websites nowadays require data to be presented dynamically and interactively based on input from the user. For example, a customer may need to log into a retail website to check his purchasing history. In this instance, the website would have stored two types of data in order for the customer to perform the check – the customer’s personal login details; and the customer’s purchased items. This data can be stored in two types of storage – flat files or databases.

Flat files are only feasible in very low to low volume websites as flat files have

3 inherent weaknesses:


1. The inability to index the data. This makes it necessary to potentially read

ALL the data sequentially. This is a major problem if there are a lot of records in

the flat file because the time required to read the flat file is proportionate to

the number of records in the flat file.

2. The inability to efficiently control access by users to the data

3. The inefficient storage of the data. In most cases, the data would not be

encrypted or compressed as this would exacerbate the problem no. 1 above


The alternative which is, in my opinion, the only feasible method, is to store the

data in a database. One of the most prevalent databases in use is MySQL. Data that

is stored in a database can easily be indexed, managed and stored efficiently.

Besides that, most databases also provide a suite of accompanying utilities that

allow the database administrator to maintain the database – for example, backup and

restore, etc.

Websites scripted using PHP are very well suited for the MySQL database as PHP has

a custom and integrated MySQL module that communicates very efficiently with MySQL.

PHP can also communicate with MySQL through the standard ODBC as MySQL is ODBC-

compliant, However, this will not be as efficient as using the custom MySQL module

for PHP.

The rest of this article is a tutorial on how to use PHP to:


1. Connect to a MySQL database

2. Execute standard SQL statements against the MySQL database


Starting a Session with MySQL

Before the PHP script can communicate with the database to query, insert or update

the database, the PHP script will first need to connect to the MySQL server and

specify which database in the MySQL server to operate on.

The mysql_connect() and mysql_select_db() functions are provided for this purpose.

In order to connect to the MySQL server, the server name/address; a username; and a

valid password is required. Once a connection is successful, the database needs to

be specified.

The following 2 code excerpts illustrate how to perform the server connection and database selection:

@mysql_connect("[servername]", "[username]", "[password]") or die("Cannot connect

to DB!");

@mysql_select_db("[databasename]") or die("Cannot select DB!");

The @ operator is used to suppress any error messages that mysql_connect() and

mysql_select_db() functions may produce if an error occurred. The die() function is

used to end the script execution and display a custom error message.

Executing SQL Statements against a MySQL database

Once the connection and database selection is successfully performed, the PHP

script can now proceed to operate on the database using standard SQL statements.

The mysql_query() function is used for executing standard SQL statements against

the database. In the following example, the PHP script queries a table called

tbl_login in the previously selected database to determine if a username/password

pair provided by the user is valid.

Assumption:

The tbl_login table has 3 columns named login, password, last_logged_in. The

last_logged_in column stores the time that the user last logged into the system.

// The $username and $passwd variable should rightly be set by the login form

// through the POST method. For the purpose of this example, we’re manually coding

it.

$username = “john”;

$passwd = “mypassword”;



// We generate a SELECT SQL statement for execution.

$sql="SELECT * FROM tbl_login WHERE login = '".$username."' AND password =

'".$passwd."'";



// Execute the SQL statement against the currently selected database.

// The results will be stored in the $r variable.

$r = mysql_query($sql);



// After the mysql_query() command executes, the $r variable is examined to

// determine of the mysql_query() was successfully executed.

if(!$r) {

$err=mysql_error();

print $err;

exit();

}



// If everything went well, check if the query returned a result – i.e. if the

username/password

// pair was found in the database. The mysql_affected_rows() function is used for

this purpose.

// mysql_affected_rows() will return the number of rows in the database table that

was affected

// by the last query

if(mysql_affected_rows()==0){

print "Username/password pair is invalid. Please try again.";

}

else {



// If successful, read out the last logged in time into a $last variable for

display to the user

$row=mysql_fetch_array($r);

$last=$row["last_logged_in"];

print “Login successful. You last logged in at ”.$last.”.”;



}


The above example demonstrated how a SELECT SQL statement is executed against the selected database. The same method is used to execute other SQL statements (e.g. UPDATE, INSERT, DELETE, etc.) against the database using the mysql_query() and mysql_affected_rows() functions.

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