QPDB.php
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<?php
/** @file
* This package contains classes for handling database transactions from
* within QueryPath.
*
* The tools here use the PDO (PHP Data Objects) library to execute database
* functions.
*
* Using tools in this package, you can write QueryPath database queries
* that query an RDBMS and then insert the results into the document.
*
* Example:
*
* @code
* <?php
* $template = '<?xml version="1.0"?><tr><td class="colOne"/><td class="colTwo"/><td class="colThree"/></tr>';
* $qp = qp(QueryPath::HTML_STUB, 'body') // Open a stub HTML doc and select <body/>
* ->append('<table><tbody/></table>')
* ->dbInit($this->dsn)
* ->queryInto('SELECT * FROM qpdb_test WHERE 1', array(), $template)
* ->doneWithQuery()
* ->writeHTML();
* ?>
* @endcode
*
* The code above will take the results of a SQL query and insert them into a n
* HTML table.
*
* If you are doing many database operations across multiple QueryPath objects,
* it is better to avoid using {@link QPDB::dbInit()}. Instead, you should
* call the static {@link QPDB::baseDB()} method to configure a single database
* connection that can be shared by all {@link QueryPath} instances.
*
* Thus, we could rewrite the above to look like this:
* @code
* <?php
* QPDB::baseDB($someDN);
*
* $template = '<?xml version="1.0"?><tr><td class="colOne"/><td class="colTwo"/><td class="colThree"/></tr>';
* $qp = qp(QueryPath::HTML_STUB, 'body') // Open a stub HTML doc and select <body/>
* ->append('<table><tbody/></table>')
* ->queryInto('SELECT * FROM qpdb_test WHERE 1', array(), $template)
* ->doneWithQuery()
* ->writeHTML();
* ?>
* @endcode
*
* Note that in this case, the QueryPath object doesn't need to call a method to
* activate the database. There is no call to {@link dbInit()}. Instead, it checks
* the base class to find the shared database.
*
* (Note that if you were to add a dbInit() call to the above, it would create
* a new database connection.)
*
* The result of both of these examples will be identical.
* The output looks something like this:
*
* @code
* <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
* <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
* <head>
* <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"></meta>
* <title>Untitled</title>
* </head>
*<body>
*<table>
* <tbody>
* <tr>
* <td class="colOne">Title 0</td>
* <td class="colTwo">Body 0</td>
* <td class="colThree">Footer 0</td>
* </tr>
* <tr>
* <td class="colOne">Title 1</td>
* <td class="colTwo">Body 1</td>
* <td class="colThree">Footer 1</td>
* </tr>
* <tr>
* <td class="colOne">Title 2</td>
* <td class="colTwo">Body 2</td>
* <td class="colThree">Footer 2</td>
* </tr>
* <tr>
* <td class="colOne">Title 3</td>
* <td class="colTwo">Body 3</td>
* <td class="colThree">Footer 3</td>
* </tr>
* <tr>
* <td class="colOne">Title 4</td>
* <td class="colTwo">Body 4</td>
* <td class="colThree">Footer 4</td>
* </tr>
* </tbody>
*</table>
*</body>
*</html>
* @endcode
*
* Note how the CSS classes are used to correlate DB table names to template
* locations.
*
*
* @author M Butcher <matt@aleph-null.tv>
* @license http://opensource.org/licenses/lgpl-2.1.php LGPL or MIT-like license.
* @see QueryPathExtension
* @see QueryPathExtensionRegistry::extend()
* @see QPDB
*/
/**
* Provide DB access to a QueryPath object.
*
* This extension provides tools for communicating with a database using the
* QueryPath library. It relies upon PDO for underlying database communiction. This
* means that it supports all databases that PDO supports, including MySQL,
* PostgreSQL, and SQLite.
*
* Here is an extended example taken from the unit tests for this library.
*
* Let's say we create a database with code like this:
* @code
*<?php
* public function setUp() {
* $this->db = new PDO($this->dsn);
* $this->db->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE, PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION);
* $this->db->exec('CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS qpdb_test (colOne, colTwo, colThree)');
*
* $stmt = $this->db->prepare(
* 'INSERT INTO qpdb_test (colOne, colTwo, colThree) VALUES (:one, :two, :three)'
* );
*
* for ($i = 0; $i < 5; ++$i) {
* $vals = array(':one' => 'Title ' . $i, ':two' => 'Body ' . $i, ':three' => 'Footer ' . $i);
* $stmt->execute($vals);
* $stmt->closeCursor();
* }
* }
* ?>
* @endcode
*
* From QueryPath with QPDB, we can now do very elaborate DB chains like this:
*
* @code
* <?php
* $sql = 'SELECT * FROM qpdb_test';
* $args = array();
* $qp = qp(QueryPath::HTML_STUB, 'body') // Open a stub HTML doc and select <body/>
* ->append('<h1></h1>') // Add <h1/>
* ->children() // Select the <h1/>
* ->dbInit($this->dsn) // Connect to the database
* ->query($sql, $args) // Execute the SQL query
* ->nextRow() // Select a row. By default, no row is selected.
* ->appendColumn('colOne') // Append Row 1, Col 1 (Title 0)
* ->parent() // Go back to the <body/>
* ->append('<p/>') // Append a <p/> to the body
* ->find('p') // Find the <p/> we just created.
* ->nextRow() // Advance to row 2
* ->prependColumn('colTwo') // Get row 2, col 2. (Body 1)
* ->columnAfter('colThree') // Get row 2 col 3. (Footer 1)
* ->doneWithQuery() // Let QueryPath clean up. YOU SHOULD ALWAYS DO THIS.
* ->writeHTML(); // Write the output as HTML.
* ?>
* @endcode
*
* With the code above, we step through the document, selectively building elements
* as we go, and then populating this elements with data from our initial query.
*
* When the last command, {@link QueryPath:::writeHTML()}, is run, we will get output
* like this:
*
* @code
* <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
* <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
* <head>
* <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" />
* <title>Untitled</title>
* </head>
* <body>
* <h1>Title 0</h1>
* <p>Body 1</p>
* Footer 1</body>
* </html>
* @endcode
*
* Notice the body section in particular. This is where the data has been
* inserted.
*
* Sometimes you want to do something a lot simpler, like give QueryPath a
* template and have it navigate a query, inserting the data into a template, and
* then inserting the template into the document. This can be done simply with
* the {@link queryInto()} function.
*
* Here's an example from another unit test:
*
* @code
* <?php
* $template = '<?xml version="1.0"?><li class="colOne"/>';
* $sql = 'SELECT * FROM qpdb_test';
* $args = array();
* $qp = qp(QueryPath::HTML_STUB, 'body')
* ->append('<ul/>') // Add a new <ul/>
* ->children() // Select the <ul/>
* ->dbInit($this->dsn) // Initialize the DB
* // BIG LINE: Query the results, run them through the template, and insert them.
* ->queryInto($sql, $args, $template)
* ->doneWithQuery()
* ->writeHTML(); // Write the results as HTML.
* ?>
* @endcode
*
* The simple code above puts the first column of the select statement
* into an unordered list. The example output looks like this:
*
* @code
* <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
* <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
* <head>
* <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"></meta>
* <title>Untitled</title>
* </head>
* <body>
* <ul>
* <li class="colOne">Title 0</li>
* <li class="colOne">Title 1</li>
* <li class="colOne">Title 2</li>
* <li class="colOne">Title 3</li>
* <li class="colOne">Title 4</li>
* </ul>
* </body>
* </html>
* @endcode
*
* Typical starting methods for this class are {@link QPDB::baseDB()},
* {@link QPDB::query()}, and {@link QPDB::queryInto()}.
*
* @ingroup querypath_extensions
*/
class QPDB implements QueryPathExtension {
protected $qp;
protected $dsn;
protected $db;
protected $opts;
protected $row = NULL;
protected $stmt = NULL;
protected static $con = NULL;
/**
* Create a new database instance for all QueryPath objects to share.
*
* This method need be called only once. From there, other QPDB instances
* will (by default) share the same database instance.
*
* Normally, a DSN should be passed in. Username, password, and db params
* are all passed in using the options array.
*
* On rare occasions, it may be more fitting to pass in an existing database
* connection (which must be a {@link PDO} object). In such cases, the $dsn
* parameter can take a PDO object instead of a DSN string. The standard options
* will be ignored, though.
*
* <b>Warning:</b> If you pass in a PDO object that is configured to NOT throw
* exceptions, you will need to handle error checking differently.
*
* <b>Remember to always use {@link QPDB::doneWithQuery()} when you are done
* with a query. It gives PDO a chance to clean up open connections that may
* prevent other instances from accessing or modifying data.</b>
*
* @param string $dsn
* The DSN of the database to connect to. You can also pass in a PDO object, which
* will set the QPDB object's database to the one passed in.
* @param array $options
* An array of configuration options. The following options are currently supported:
* - username => (string)
* - password => (string)
* - db params => (array) These will be passed into the new PDO object.
* See the PDO documentation for a list of options. By default, the
* only flag set is {@link PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE}, which is set to
* {@link PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION}.
* @throws PDOException
* An exception may be thrown if the connection cannot be made.
*/
static function baseDB($dsn, $options = array()) {
$opts = $options + array(
'username' => NULL,
'password' => NULL,
'db params' => array(PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE => PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION),
);
// Allow this to handle the case where an outside
// connection does the initialization.
if ($dsn instanceof PDO) {
self::$con = $dsn;
return;
}
self::$con = new PDO($dsn, $opts['username'], $opts['password'], $opts['db params']);
}
/**
*
* This method may be used to share the connection with other,
* non-QueryPath objects.
*/
static function getBaseDB() {return self::$con;}
/**
* Used to control whether or not all rows in a result should be cycled through.
*/
protected $cycleRows = FALSE;
/**
* Construct a new QPDB object. This is usually done by QueryPath itself.
*/
public function __construct(QueryPath $qp) {
$this->qp = $qp;
// By default, we set it up to use the base DB.
$this->db = self::$con;
}
/**
* Create a new connection to the database. Use the PDO DSN syntax for a
* connection string.
*
* This creates a database connection that will last for the duration of
* the QueryPath object. This method ought to be used only in two cases:
* - When you will only run a couple of queries during the life of the
* process.
* - When you need to connect to a database that will only be used for
* a few things.
* Otherwise, you should use {@link QPDB::baseDB} to configure a single
* database connection that all of {@link QueryPath} can share.
*
* <b>Remember to always use {@link QPDB::doneWithQuery()} when you are done
* with a query. It gives PDO a chance to clean up open connections that may
* prevent other instances from accessing or modifying data.</b>
*
* @param string $dsn
* The PDO DSN connection string.
* @param array $options
* Connection options. The following options are supported:
* - username => (string)
* - password => (string)
* - db params => (array) These will be passed into the new PDO object.
* See the PDO documentation for a list of options. By default, the
* only flag set is {@link PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE}, which is set to
* {@link PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION}.
* @return QueryPath
* The QueryPath object.
* @throws PDOException
* The PDO library is configured to throw exceptions, so any of the
* database functions may throw a PDOException.
*/
public function dbInit($dsn, $options = array()) {
$this->opts = $options + array(
'username' => NULL,
'password' => NULL,
'db params' => array(PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE => PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION),
);
$this->dsn = $dsn;
$this->db = new PDO($dsn, $this->opts['username'], $this->opts['password'], $this->opts['db params']);
/*
foreach ($this->opts['db params'] as $key => $val)
$this->db->setAttribute($key, $val);
*/
return $this->qp;
}
/**
* Execute a SQL query, and store the results.
*
* This will execute a SQL query (as a prepared statement), and then store
* the results internally for later use. The data can be iterated using
* {@link nextRow()}. QueryPath can also be instructed to do internal iteration
* using the {@link withEachRow()} method. Finally, on the occasion that the
* statement itself is needed, {@link getStatement()} can be used.
*
* Use this when you need to access the results of a query, or when the
* parameter to a query should be escaped. If the query takes no external
* parameters and does not return results, you may wish to use the
* (ever so slightly faster) {@link exec()} function instead.
*
* Make sure you use {@link doneWithQuery()} after finishing with the database
* results returned by this method.
*
* <b>Usage</b>
*
* Here is a simple example:
* <code>
* <?php
* QPQDB::baseDB($someDSN);
*
* $args = array(':something' => 'myColumn');
* qp()->query('SELECT :something FROM foo', $args)->doneWithQuery();
* ?>
* </code>
*
* The above would execute the given query, substituting myColumn in place of
* :something before executing the query The {@link doneWithQuery()} method
* indicates that we are not going to use the results for anything. This method
* discards the results.
*
* A more typical use of the query() function would involve inserting data
* using {@link appendColumn()}, {@link prependColumn()}, {@link columnBefore()},
* or {@link columnAfter()}. See the main documentation for {@link QPDB} to view
* a more realistic example.
*
* @param string $sql
* The query to be executed.
* @param array $args
* An associative array of substitutions to make.
* @throws PDOException
* Throws an exception if the query cannot be executed.
*/
public function query($sql, $args = array()) {
$this->stmt = $this->db->prepare($sql);
$this->stmt->execute($args);
return $this->qp;
}
/**
* Query and append the results.
*
* Run a query and inject the results directly into the
* elements in the QueryPath object.
*
* If the third argument is empty, the data will be inserted directly into
* the QueryPath elements unaltered. However, if a template is provided in
* the third parameter, the query data will be merged into that template
* and then be added to each QueryPath element.
*
* The template will be merged once for each row, even if no row data is
* appended into the template.
*
* A template is simply a piece of markup labeled for insertion of
* data. See {@link QPTPL} and {@link QPTPL.php} for more information.
*
* Since this does not use a stanard {@link query()}, there is no need
* to call {@link doneWithQuery()} after this method.
*
* @param string $sql
* The SQL query to execute. In this context, the query is typically a
* SELECT statement.
* @param array $args
* An array of arguments to be substituted into the query. See {@link query()}
* for details.
* @param mixed $template
* A template into which query results will be merged prior to being appended
* into the QueryPath. For details on the template, see {@link QPTPL::tpl()}.
* @see QPTPL.php
* @see QPTPL::tpl()
* @see query()
*/
public function queryInto($sql, $args = array(), $template = NULL) {
$stmt = $this->db->prepare($sql);
$stmt->setFetchMode(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC);
$stmt->execute($args);
// If no template, put all values in together.
if (empty($template)) {
foreach ($stmt as $row) foreach ($row as $datum) $this->qp->append($datum);
}
// Otherwise, we run the results through a template, and then append.
else {
foreach ($stmt as $row) $this->qp->tpl($template, $row);
}
$stmt->closeCursor();
return $this->qp;
}
/**
* Free up resources when a query is no longer used.
*
* This function should <i>always</i> be called when the database
* results for a query are no longer needed. This frees up the
* database cursor, discards the data, and resets resources for future
* use.
*
* If this method is not called, some PDO database drivers will not allow
* subsequent queries, while others will keep tables in a locked state where
* writes will not be allowed.
*
* @return QueryPath
* The QueryPath object.
*/
public function doneWithQuery() {
if (isset($this->stmt) && $this->stmt instanceof PDOStatement) {
// Some drivers choke if results haven't been iterated.
//while($this->stmt->fetch()) {}
$this->stmt->closeCursor();
}
unset($this->stmt);
$this->row = NULL;
$this->cycleRows = FALSE;
return $this->qp;
}
/**
* Execute a SQL query, but expect no value.
*
* If your SQL query will have parameters, you are encouraged to
* use {@link query()}, which includes built-in SQL Injection
* protection.
*
* @param string $sql
* A SQL statement.
* @throws PDOException
* An exception will be thrown if a query cannot be executed.
*/
public function exec($sql) {
$this->db->exec($sql);
return $this->qp;
}
/**
* Advance the query results row cursor.
*
* In a result set where more than one row was returned, this will
* move the pointer to the next row in the set.
*
* The PDO library does not have a consistent way of determining how many
* rows a result set has. The suggested technique is to first execute a
* COUNT() SQL query and get the data from that.
*
* The {@link withEachRow()} method will begin at the next row after the
* currently selected one.
*
* @return QueryPath
* The QueryPath object.
*/
public function nextRow() {
$this->row = $this->stmt->fetch(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC);
return $this->qp;
}
/**
* Set the object to use each row, instead of only one row.
*
* This is used primarily to instruct QPDB to iterate through all of the
* rows when appending, prepending, inserting before, or inserting after.
*
* @return QueryPath
* The QueryPath object.
* @see appendColumn()
* @see prependColumn()
* @see columnBefore()
* @see columnAfter()
*/
public function withEachRow() {
$this->cycleRows = TRUE;
return $this->qp;
}
/**
* This is the implementation behind the append/prepend and before/after methods.
*
* @param mixed $columnName
* The name of the column whose data should be added to the currently selected
* elements. This can be either a string or an array of strings.
* @param string $qpFunc
* The name of the QueryPath function that should be executed to insert data
* into the object.
* @param string $wrap
* The HTML/XML markup that will be used to wrap around the column data before
* the data is inserted into the QueryPath object.
*/
protected function addData($columnName, $qpFunc = 'append', $wrap = NULL) {
$columns = is_array($columnName) ? $columnName : array($columnName);
$hasWrap = !empty($wrap);
if ($this->cycleRows) {
while (($row = $this->stmt->fetch(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC)) !== FALSE) {
foreach ($columns as $col) {
if (isset($row[$col])) {
$data = $row[$col];
if ($hasWrap)
$data = qp()->append($wrap)->deepest()->append($data)->top();
$this->qp->$qpFunc($data);
}
}
}
$this->cycleRows = FALSE;
$this->doneWithQuery();
}
else {
if ($this->row !== FALSE) {
foreach ($columns as $col) {
if (isset($this->row[$col])) {
$data = $this->row[$col];
if ($hasWrap)
$data = qp()->append($wrap)->deepest()->append($data)->top();
$this->qp->$qpFunc($data);
}
}
}
}
return $this->qp;
}
/**
* Get back the raw PDOStatement object after a {@link query()}.
*
* @return PDOStatement
* Return the PDO statement object. If this is called and no statement
* has been executed (or the statement has already been cleaned up),
* this will return NULL.
*/
public function getStatement() {
return $this->stmt;
}
/**
* Get the last insert ID.
*
* This will only return a meaningful result when used after an INSERT.
*
* @return mixed
* Return the ID from the last insert. The value and behavior of this
* is database-dependent. See the official PDO driver documentation for
* the database you are using.
* @since 1.3
*/
public function getLastInsertID() {
$con = self::$con;
return $con->lastInsertId();
}
/**
* Append the data in the given column(s) to the QueryPath.
*
* This appends data to every item in the current QueryPath. The data will
* be retrieved from the database result, using $columnName as the key.
*
* @param mixed $columnName
* Either a string or an array of strings. The value(s) here should match
* one or more column headers from the current SQL {@link query}'s results.
* @param string $wrap
* IF this is supplied, then the value or values retrieved from the database
* will be wrapped in this HTML/XML before being inserted into the QueryPath.
* @see QueryPath::wrap()
* @see QueryPath::append()
*/
public function appendColumn($columnName, $wrap = NULL) {
return $this->addData($columnName, 'append', $wrap);
}
/**
* Prepend the data from the given column into the QueryPath.
*
* This takes the data from the given column(s) and inserts it into each
* element currently found in the QueryPath.
* @param mixed $columnName
* Either a string or an array of strings. The value(s) here should match
* one or more column headers from the current SQL {@link query}'s results.
* @param string $wrap
* IF this is supplied, then the value or values retrieved from the database
* will be wrapped in this HTML/XML before being inserted into the QueryPath.
* @see QueryPath::wrap()
* @see QueryPath::prepend()
*/
public function prependColumn($columnName, $wrap = NULL) {
return $this->addData($columnName, 'prepend', $wrap);
}
/**
* Insert the data from the given column before each element in the QueryPath.
*
* This inserts the data before each element in the currently matched QueryPath.
*
* @param mixed $columnName
* Either a string or an array of strings. The value(s) here should match
* one or more column headers from the current SQL {@link query}'s results.
* @param string $wrap
* IF this is supplied, then the value or values retrieved from the database
* will be wrapped in this HTML/XML before being inserted into the QueryPath.
* @see QueryPath::wrap()
* @see QueryPath::before()
* @see prependColumn()
*/
public function columnBefore($columnName, $wrap = NULL) {
return $this->addData($columnName, 'before', $wrap);
}
/**
* Insert data from the given column(s) after each element in the QueryPath.
*
* This inserts data from the given columns after each element in the QueryPath
* object. IF HTML/XML is given in the $wrap parameter, then the column data
* will be wrapped in that markup before being inserted into the QueryPath.
*
* @param mixed $columnName
* Either a string or an array of strings. The value(s) here should match
* one or more column headers from the current SQL {@link query}'s results.
* @param string $wrap
* IF this is supplied, then the value or values retrieved from the database
* will be wrapped in this HTML/XML before being inserted into the QueryPath.
* @see QueryPath::wrap()
* @see QueryPath::after()
* @see appendColumn()
*/
public function columnAfter($columnName, $wrap = NULL) {
return $this->addData($columnName, 'after', $wrap);
}
}
// The define allows another class to extend this.
if (!defined('QPDB_OVERRIDE'))
QueryPathExtensionRegistry::extend('QPDB');