I want to switch my codeigniter multiple database on runtime. My Default database will run thoroughly the page but when I needed to switch to other database based on scenario or requirement then I can do. The common model function will work for the all different databases. So, I want to use same model and same function for multiple database connection using dynamic selector without using session or without passing function variable
To achieve this I set a name in cofig and when I call my model I set the required database name in controller before calling model and then I tried to get the name in model which is set in controller. But unfortunately I'm not getting the name from controller to model.
Database Configuration File -
$db['default'] = array(
'dsn' => '',
'hostname' => 'localhost',
'username' => 'root',
'password' => 'pass'
'database' => 'db1'
.......
);
$db['anotherDB'] = array(
'dsn' => '',
'hostname' => 'localhost',
'username' => 'root',
'password' => 'pass'
'database' => 'db2'
.......
);
Controller -
$this->config->set_item('active_db', 'anotherDB');
$sql = 'select * from user';
$anotherDB_record = $this->model->customQuery($sql);
print_r($anotherDB_record);
$this->config->set_item('active_db', 'default');
$sql = 'select * from customer';
$default_record = $this->model->customQuery($sql);
print_r($default_record);
Mode -
protected $database;
function __construct() {
parent::__construct();
$oDB = $this->config->item('active_db');
$this->database = $this->load->database($oDB, TRUE);
}
function customQuery($sql){
$query = $this->database->query( $sql );
return $query->result();
}
This is the way I have tried to switch my database. If you guys have any other best solution to switch multiple database then please feel free to suggest me.
Try bellow example for dynamically configure another database
common model
function getOtherDB($groupID) {
$getRecord = $this->common_model->getRow('group_master', 'GroupID', $groupID);
if ($getRecord) {
$config['database'] = $getRecord->DBName;
$config['hostname'] = $getRecord->DBHostIP;
$config['username'] = $getRecord->DBHostUName;
$config['password'] = $getRecord->DBHostPassw;
$config['dbdriver'] = "mysqli";
$config['dbprefix'] = "";
$config['pconnect'] = FALSE;
$config['db_debug'] = TRUE;
$DB2 = $this->load->database($config, TRUE);
if ($DB2) {
return $DB2;
}
}
return FALSE;
}
In the above example, I have group_master table which has group wise database details by passing GroupId I fetch the record and set Another database according to group Make sure your all database configuration information stored in the database is encrypted format Use below example to fire query on Other database
$result = $DB2->query("select * from group");
// $DB2 is other database instance you can create multiple db connection using above methos
Related
I would like to use another database connection that queries a database using a hook in my own module called 'connector'. This hook shall take a parameter that is a query which shall be executed using the secondary database before it switches back to the primary Drupal 7-database. The problem seems to be that the query is somehow generated for the (primary) Drupal database (as it's been created before switching to the secondary db), even though the SQL itself looks fine to me. What am I doing wrong here?
Hook:
function connector_api_db($query) {
$result = [];
$database_info = array(
'database' => variable_get('connector_db_name'),
'username' => variable_get('connector_db_user'),
'password' => variable_get('connector_db_pwd'),
'host' => variable_get('connector_db_host'),
'driver' => 'mysql',
);
Database::addConnectionInfo('secondary_db', 'default', $database_info);
db_set_active('secondary_db'); // Initialize the connection
/* This actually works but I can here not use my own query as a parameter in this function. Not what I want. */
//$query = db_select('registration')->fields('registration')
//->condition('id', 46, '=');
echo $query->__toString() . "<br />"; /* Get query string */
var_dump($query->getArguments()); /* Get the arguments passed to the string */
$result = $query->execute()->fetchAssoc();
echo "<pre>";
print_r($result);
echo "</pre>";
db_set_active(); // without the paramater means set back to the default for the site
drupal_set_message(t('The queries have been made.'));
return $result;
}
Invoking the hook:
$query = db_select('registration')
->fields('registration')
->condition('id', 46, '=');
$response = module_invoke('connector', 'api_db', $query);
This results into this:
SELECT registration.* FROM {registration} registration WHERE (id = :db_condition_placeholder_0)
array(1) { [":db_condition_placeholder_0"]=> int(46) }
Additional uncaught exception thrown while handling exception.
Original
PDOException: SQLSTATE[42S02]: Base table or view not found: 1146 Table 'drupal.registration' doesn't exist: SELECT registration.* FROM {registration} registration WHERE (id = :db_condition_placeholder_0) ; Array ( [:db_condition_placeholder_0] => 46 ) in connector_api_db() (line 70 of /<path-to-drupal>/drupal-7.61/modules/connector/connector.main.inc).
This is not an answer, strictly speaking, but rather a suggestion.
The thing is that your hook receives a $query already built with the original database connection, this explains the errors. To be effective, db_set_active() should be called before calling the Query constructor.
Otherwise, you would have to override constructors for both the Select class and its parent class Query, or more precisely "reconstruct" the Query builder instance for Select statements (and probably others too if you need range query etc.).
Also, unless having explicit requirements to provide a dedicated hook in this situation, it is not necessary.
For example it would be simpler to do something like this :
connector.module :
/**
* Implements hook_init()
*
* Adds secondary database connection information.
*/
function connector_init() {
$database_info = array(
'database' => variable_get('connector_db_name'),
'username' => variable_get('connector_db_user'),
'password' => variable_get('connector_db_pwd'),
'host' => variable_get('connector_db_host'),
'driver' => 'mysql',
);
Database::addConnectionInfo('secondary_db', 'default', $database_info);
}
/**
* Switches from primary to secondary database and the other way round.
*/
function connector_switch_db($db_key = 'secondary_db') {
return db_set_active($db_key);
}
Example :
// Set secondary db active.
$primary_db_key = connector_switch_db();
$query = db_select('registration')
->fields('registration')
->condition('id', 46, '=');
$result = $query->execute()->fetchAssoc();
// Switch back to the primary database.
connector_switch_db($primary_db_key);
This softer approach also prevents hardcode like (...)->execute()->fetchAssoc() and let the implementation free to execute and fetch the results as needed.
For future reference, this is what I came up with (caching bits included):
function connector_init() {
foreach([
'connector_db_host',
'connector_db_name',
'connector_db_user',
'connector_db_pwd',
] as $var) {
drupal_static($var, variable_get($var, ''));
}
Database::addConnectionInfo('secondary_db', 'default', [
'host' => drupal_static('connector_db_host'),
'database' => drupal_static('connector_db_name'),
'username' => drupal_static('connector_db_user'),
'password' => drupal_static('connector_db_pwd'),
'driver' => 'mysql',
]);
}
function connector_api_db($query) {
$result = [];
$sql_query = $query->__toString();
$arguments = $query->getArguments();
if (count($arguments) > 0) {
ksort($arguments);
}
$cache_id = 'sql_' . md5($sql_query . '|' . print_r($arguments, 1));
$cache = cache_get($cache_id, 'cache_connector');
if ($cache && $cache->expire >= time()) {
$result = $cache->data;
} else {
db_set_active('secondary_db'); // Switch to secondary db */
$query_failed = FALSE;
try {
$db_result = db_query($sql_query, $arguments);
$db_result = (0 === $db_result->rowCount()) ? [] : $db_result->fetchAssoc();
} catch (\PDOException $e) {
$db_result = [];
$query_failed = TRUE;
} finally {
db_set_active(); /* switch back to default */
}
$result = (object)[
'query' => $sql_query,
'arguments' => $arguments,
'result' => (object)$db_result
];
if (!$query_failed) {
cache_set($cache_id, $result, 'cache_connector', strtotime('+10 minutes'));
}
}
return $result;
}
So I know that in order for a.class.php to be used within b.class.php I would need to have the a class included in the b class file. My question is this.
I have two classes files at the moment within my website platform. db.class.php and account.class.php
db.class.php
<?php
require_once($_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT'].'/settings.php');
class db extends pdo{
//Website Variables
public $sitedb = '';
public $siteconfig;
public $sitesettings = array(
'host' => SITEHOST,
'database' => SITEDB,
'username' => SITEUSER,
'password' => SITEPASS,
);
public $realmdb = '';
public $realmconfig;
public $realmsettings = array(
'host' => REALMHOST,
'database' => REALMDB,
'username' => REALMUSER,
'password' => REALMPASS,
);
public function __construct(){
$this->sitedb = new PDO(
"mysql:host={$this->sitesettings['host']};" .
"dbname={$this->sitesettings['database']};" .
"charset=utf8",
"{$this->sitesettings['username']}",
"{$this->sitesettings['password']}"
);
$this->realmdb = new PDO(
"mysql:host={$this->realmsettings['host']};" .
"dbname={$this->realmsettings['database']};" .
"charset=utf8",
"{$this->realmsettings['username']}",
"{$this->realmsettings['password']}"
);
$this->sitedb->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_DEFAULT_FETCH_MODE, PDO::FETCH_ASSOC);
$this->realmdb->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_DEFAULT_FETCH_MODE, PDO::FETCH_ASSOC);
}
}
$db = new db();
account.class.php
<?php
require_once($_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT'].'/settings.php');
class account extends db {
public function Login() {
$query = <<<SQL
SELECT id
FROM profile
WHERE password = :password
SQL;
$resource = $db->sitedb->prepare ( $query );
$resource->execute( array(
':password' => sha1(strtoupper($_POST['email'].':'.$_POST['password'],
));
$row_count = $resource->rowCount();
echo $row_count;
}
}
$account = new account();
This current format tells me that db cannot be redefined, however if I remove the requirement of including the settings file which has
foreach (glob("functions.d/*.class.php") as $class)
{
include $class;
}
It then tells me that class db cannot be found. What way can I work around to have this work correctly?
Turns out the best way to accomplish this was to keep the includes correctly and have all classes within the same file and within my include page utilizing classes have global $db or global $account depending on what I class function I was calling on.
I have written code to search for the First name and last name and display those particular records if available and perform actions like update and delete on those records , I have written the following code to search , please tell me what is the correct approach to build a search controller .I am getting the following error :
Message: Method "select" does not exist and was not trapped in __call()
The code I have written in the controller is :
public function searchAction($params)
{
$query = $this->select()
->from(
array('EMPLOYEES'),
array('FIRST_NAME','LAST_NAME','SALARY','HIREDATE')
);
$query = $this->_makeParams($query,$params);
return $this->fetchAll($query);
}
private function _makeParams($query, $params)
{
$firstname = isset($params['firstname']) ? trim($params['firstname']) : '';
$lastname = isset($params['lastname']) ? trim($params['lastname']) : '';
$salary = isset($params['salary']) ? trim($params['salary']) : '';
$hiredate= isset($params['hiredate']) ? trim($params['hiredate']) : '';
if($firstname!='')
{
$name = '%'.$this->quote($firstname).'%';//quote is my own function
$query->where("EMPLOYEES.FIRST_NAME LIKE '?'",$firstname);
}
if($lastname!='')
{
$query->where("EMPLOYEES.LAST_NAME =?",$lastname);
}
if($salary!='')
{
$query->where("EMPLOYEES.SALARY=?",$salary);
}
if($hiredate!='')
{
$query->where("EMPLOYEES.HIRE_DATE=?",$hiredate);
}
}
your error comes from the fact that your calling select() against the controller object instead of the database object:
public function searchAction($params)
{
//$this in this context is a Zend_Controller_Action object
//you need to query against your database object.
$db = Zend_Db_Table::getDefaultAdapter();
$query = $db->select()
->from(
array('EMPLOYEES'),
array('FIRST_NAME','LAST_NAME','SALARY','HIREDATE')
);
$query = $this->_makeParams($query,$params);
//again make sure to query against the database object
return $db->fetchAll($query);
}
if you don't have a database object created in your bootstrap.php or application.ini you can create one with the Zend_Db:
$db = Zend_Db::factory('Pdo_Mysql', array(
'host' => '127.0.0.1',
'username' => 'webuser',
'password' => 'xxxxxxxx',
'dbname' => 'test'
));
public function searchAction($params)
{
$db = Zend_Registry :: get('db');
$select = $db->select();
$query = $select->from(
array('EMPLOYEES'),
array('FIRST_NAME','LAST_NAME','SALARY','HIREDATE')
);
$query = $this->_makeParams($query,$params);
return $this->fetchAll($query);
}
You are getting the error because you have not created the object of Zend registry.So copy the function and replace your code
protected function _initDatabase()
{
$params = array(
'host' => '',
'username' => '',
'password' => '',
'dbname' => '',
);
$database = Zend_Db::factory('PDO_MYSQL', $params);
$database->getConnection();
return $database;
}
.
class App_Controller_Plugin_Test extends Zend_Controller_Plugin_Abstract
{
public function preDispatch(Zend_Controller_Request_Http $request)
{
// how i get database?
}
}
You can always get a reference to the front controller:
$front = Zend_Controller_Front::getInstance();
From that you can get the bootstrap:
$bootstrap = $front->getParam("bootstrap");
From the bootstrap you can get bootstrap plugins:
if ($bootstrap->hasPluginResource("database")) {
$dbResource = $bootstrap->getPluginResource("database");
}
$db = $dbResource->getDatabase();
But that's a lot of extra plumbing!
Honestly, you'd be better off storing the database adapter object in the registry during your bootstrap:
protected function _initDatabase()
{
$params = array(
'host' => '',
'username' => '',
'password' => '',
'dbname' => '',
);
$database = Zend_Db::factory('PDO_MYSQL', $params);
$database->getConnection();
Zend_Registry::set("database", $database);
return $database;
}
Then you can get the database adapter anywhere:
Zend_Registry::get("database");
See also my answer to What is the “right” Way to Provide a Zend Application With a Database Handler
Too bad there's nothing like Zend_Controller_Action's getInvokeArg("bootstrap") in a plugin. You could always get the bootstrap reference through the front controller:
$db = Zend_Controller_Front::getInstance()->getParam("bootstrap")->getResource("database");
But what I usually do is
Zend_Registry::set('database', $database);
and then in your plugin:
try
{
$db = Zend_Registry::get('database');
}
catch (Zend_Exception $e)
{
// do stuff
}
Easier, and database can be retrieved pretty much anywhere in the application.
[I need to check this against some working code on another machine. I believe it's something like this...]
$db = Zend_Controller_Front::getInstance()->getParam('bootstrap')->getResource('db');
$db = Zend_Db_Table::getDefaultAdapter();
I am trying to understand how to use Zend_DB in my program but I have some problems. The class below (DatabaseService) works when I pass it a simple query. However, if I pass it a query with a join clause my page just hangs and no error is returned. I cut and paste the qry in a query browser and it is valid
Any help would be great
$SQL = "select name from mytable"
$db = new DatabaseService($dbinfo)
$db ->fetchall($SQL ) // works
-----------------------------------------------------------
$SQL = "select count(*) as cnt from EndPoints join CallID on EndPoints.`CallID` = CallID.CallID where EndPoints.LastRegister >= '2010-04-21 00:00:01' and EndPoints.LastRegister <= '2010-04-21 23:59:59' "
$db = new DatabaseService($dbinfo)
$db ->fetchall($SQL ) // DOES NO WORK
class DatabaseService
{
function DatabaseService($dbinfo,$dbname="")
{
try
{
$dbConfig = array(
'host' => $this->host,
'username' => $this->username,
'password' => $password,
'dbname' => $this->dbname );
$this->db = Zend_Db::factory($this->adapter, $dbConfig);
Zend_Db_Table::setDefaultAdapter($this->db);
}
catch(Zend_Exception $e)
{
$this->error = $e->getMessage();
Helper::log($this->error);
return false;
}
}
public function connnect()
{
if($this->db !=null)
{
try
{
$this->db->getConnection();
return true;
}
catch (Zend_Exception $e)
{
$err = "FAILED ::".$e->getMessage()." <br />";
}
}
return false;
}
public function fetchall($sql)
{
$res= $this->db->fetchAll($sql);
return $res;
}
}
I can't see why that wouldn't work. It could be a bug in a particular release of ZF but as far as I can tell there are no SQL syntax errors. What you could do is Bootstrap the Zend_Db class somewhere in your system like in the index.php file just as you were doing in your DatabaseService class:
$dbConfig = array(
'host' => 'hostname',
'username' => 'username',
'password' => 'password',
'dbname' => 'dbname'
);
$db = Zend_Db::factory('mysqli', $dbConfig);
$db->setFetchMode(Zend_Db::FETCH_OBJ);
Zend_Db_Table::setDefaultAdapter($db);
And then Zend Framework should handle the connection process for you. Then instead of having a DatabaseService class you just create a model for each table you need like so:
<?php
class EndPoints extends Zend_Db_Table_Abstract
{
protected $_name = 'EndPoints';
/**
* the default is 'id'. So if your table's primary key field name is 'id' you
* will not be required to set this. If your primary key is something like
* 'EndPointsID' you MUST set this.
* #var primary key field name
*/
protected $_primary = 'EndPointsID';
}
Doing this will automagically give you access to functions such as fetchRow(), fetchAll(), find(), etc. Then you can also use Zend_Db_Table_Select for your queries which can be quite useful. Like so:
<?php
$endPointsModel = new EndPoints();
$callIdCount = $endPointsModel->getCallIdCount('2010-04-21 00:00:01', '2010-04-21 00:00:01');
Then in your EndPoints model you would create that function like so:
...
public function getCallIdCount($fromDate, $toDate)
{
$cols = array('cnt' => 'count(*)');
$select = $this->select->setIntegrityCheck(false) // this is crucial
->from($this->_name, $cols)
->join('CallID', "{$this->_name}.CallID = CallID.CallID", array())
->where("{$this->_name}.LastRegister >= ?", $fromDate)
->where("{$this->_name}.LastRegister <= ?", $toDate);
// if you need to see what the whole query will look like you can do this:
// echo $select->__toString();
return $this->fetchAll($select);
{