Hi.
I finally found out how to fetch the cursor returned by a PostGreSQL function in my PHP script.
Here from the Postgres archives: http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-php/2002-11/msg00054.php
This is the "head" of function:
--------------
create or replace function match(refcursor,int8) returns
refcursor as ' DECLARE
vid ALIAS FOR $2;
vcursor ALIAS FOR $1;
BEGIN
(...)
return vcursor;
(...)
--------------
And this is php call:
--------------
$conn = pg_pconnect ($conn_string);
$qry = "BEGIN; SELECT
matche('cursorsalida',$identificador); fetch all in cursorsalida; ";
$result = pg_query ($conn, $qry);
$num = pg_num_rows($result);
for ($i=0; $i < $num; $i++) {
$r = pg_fetch_row($result, $i);
(...)
---------------
You have to pass a refcursor as input parameter.
-----Message d'origine-----
De : Andrew J. Kopciuch [mailto:akopciuch@olympusproject.org]
Envoyé : Sunday, October 05, 2003 5:22 PM
À : Rod Taylor
Cc : sebastien.baudry@baudry-engineering.com; Sebastien BAUDRY;
pgsql-php@postgresql.org
Objet : Re: [PHP] How to manipulate a cursor returned by a PL/pgSQL in a
PHP
On Sunday 05 October 2003 06:22, Rod Taylor wrote:
> On Sun, 2003-10-05 at 04:38, Andrew J. Kopciuch wrote:
> > On Sunday 05 October 2003 01:32, Sebastien BAUDRY wrote:
> > > Hi.
> > > My function returns a cursor and I don't know how to
> > > fetch the cursor in my PHP script.
> > > Anybody could help me?
> >
> > PHP does not directly support cursors under PostgreSQL. :-(
>
> Huh? Cursors in PostgreSQL are accessible via the standard query
> interface within PHP.
>
> It's 2 queries, one to create the cursor, one to request the number of
> tuples. PHP does not need any special logic to handle this.
>
> pg_query('DECLARE thecursor CURSOR FOR ....')
>
> pg_query('FETCH ...');
>
> The fetch will act just like a select in regards to returned data.
Yes. I should have elaborated a bit more.
I think this is in reference to his earlier post mentioning a REF CURSOR from
a stored procedure. There is no support for binding a PHP var to a cursor
like the Oracle functions offer. (OCINewCursor, OCIFreeCursor)
You can always manage things directly with the query interface. I think he
wants to manage things with the PHP interface. And you can't with the
PostgreSQL functions provided. AFAIK.
That's all I was saying,
cheers,
Andy