after setting all config file and runtime options for charset that i can find to utf-8, new mysqli connections made with php still has its charset set to latin1, which effectively means that i have to call $mysqli->set_charset('utf8')
each time i connect.
$mysqli = new mysqli(DB_HOST, DB_USER, DB_PASS, DB_NAME);
if ($mysqli->connect_error)
err_handle("mysql connect error({$mysqli->connect_errno}).");
if (!$mysqli->set_charset("utf8"))
err_handle("db error({$mysqli->errno}).");
i wonder if there is a permanent way of doing this?
similar problem was encountered in this post.
a "show variables like 'character_set%'
" query on the mysql server before calling $mysqli->set_charset('utf8')
shows:
(this part was ambiguous in previous revs)
character_set_client latin1
character_set_connection latin1
character_set_database utf8
character_set_filesystem binary
character_set_results latin1
character_set_server utf8
character_set_system utf8
the client, connection and results charset can only be changed to utf8 with $mysqli->set_charset('utf8')
at runtime. after that it shows:
character_set_client utf8
character_set_connection utf8
character_set_database utf8
character_set_filesystem binary
character_set_results utf8
character_set_server utf8
character_set_system utf8
i have
default_charset = "utf-8"
set in php.ini, and
[client]
default-character-set=utf8
...
[mysqld]
## This option is deprecated in favor of --character-set-server.
#default-character-set=utf8
set in my.cnf.
the default charset for my tables is also utf8.
seems like the "[client]" options only affect the cmd "mysql" tool and have nothing to do with php.
the return value of $mysqli->character_set_name()
is always latin1 no matter what i do, until $mysqli->set_charset('utf8')
is called.
i guess "latin1" is a mysql thing, since i cant recall anything else that defaults to "latin1" on my system.
^update: according to mysql manual 9.1.4, 9.1.5 and 5.1.3, character_set_client
should be provided by the client. i guess php doesn't provide it upon connection and mysql uses the fall-back charset latin1.
i'm running php 5.3 on debian wheezy with mysql 5.1.
any suggestion?
updated with info from comments:
i forgot to mention the skip-character-set-client-handshake
directive and why i was reluctant to use it.
upon first sight i thought ignoring the handshake might result in the situation that the client talks latin1 while the server talks utf8. how does the server convert the string from charset character_set_client
to character_set_server
without knowing the charset currently in use?
correct me if i'm wrong, plz. i will experiment with this setting later today to see if it works.
Updated with workaroud:
make sure everything works under utf-8 (or any preferable charset). then add the skip-character-set-client-handshake
line to my.cnf
.
this works for me so far. i experimented with some double-width utf-8 characters. both insert
and select
succeeded and displayed properly in the browser.
what skipping the handshake means is still unclear. and the mysql server now becomes uncapable of using any charset except utf-8, whick makes this workaround quite impractical since i simply cant apply this setting to all the servers that my website runs on.
so i'm not adopting this workaround. further comments and answers are much appreciated.
You have diagnosed the basic problem correctly: While you can change the default MySQL client charset in the client machine's my.cnf
or .my.cnf
, these files are not used by PHP.
If you think about how PHP's MySQLi/MySQL extensions work, this will make sense -- they have nothing to do with the mysql
client program and aren't going to crawl your filesystem for config files, because they use libmysql
directly.
To change libmysql's actual default charset, you'll just need to rebuild libmysql. That may not be an answer you like (since you're using precompiled MySQL binaries), but it is the actual answer. The defaults are set at compile time, and then can be overridden at runtime.
If you don't want to do this and calling set_charset() annoys you, my suggestion would be to simply extend the MySQLi class and use that class in place of mysqli. i.e.:
class MyDB extends mysqli {
// (You could set defaults for the params here if you want
// i.e. $host = 'myserver', $dbname = 'myappsdb' etc.)
public function __construct($host = NULL, $username = NULL, $dbname = NULL, $port = NULL, $socket = NULL) {
parent::__construct($host, $username, $dbname, $port, $socket);
$this->set_charset("utf8");
}
}
Typically in an application you'll have some kind of database abstraction layer anyway, so you can either have this layer use MyDB instead of mysqli, or you can have this layer be MyDB and add or override any methods you want (I've done this with simple ORM-less apps).
It's a good practice to always have some kind of database abstraction layer, even if it starts as just class MyDB extends mysqli {}
because then you'll never have to search/replace your entire codebase to make small changes.
RE: your workaround, as you explain, this essentially hardcodes your entire db server to UTF-8 regardless of what clients request. Instead of having multiple databases, each with its own charset, the server only works with UTF-8 and may silently mangle data if clients connect with another charset. This is fundamentally wrong because you've effectively moved one aspect of your application's configuration (database charset) from the app/client machine to the database server where it doesn't really belong.
If you think about the application stack's layers,
[server] <=> [network] <=> [client libmysql] <=> [PHP binary] <=> [app]
then you'll understand that the "correct" place for an app-specific configuration like this is in the app itself, not elsewhere in the stack. You may not like having to specify your database's charset in PHP, but if you think about it, that's really where it belongs, because it's also where you're specifying the database itself that you want to connect to -- it's a connection parameter, not a server configuration issue. Hardcoding the charset anywhere else makes your application non-portable.
according to the following posts from MySQL
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/charset-connection.html http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/charset-applications.html
your settings are not completely right i.e.
use
[mysqld]
character-set-server=utf8
collation-server=utf8_general_ci
instead of
[mysqld]
default-character-set=utf8
for the client I only found
[mysql]
default-character-set=utf8
not
[client]
default-character-set=utf8
try and give me some feedback.
I can remember that I once read about a setting var to switch off the ability for a client to change the character setting. But I can't find the ref in mysql documentation now. If I find it I let you know.
Hope that helps.
Regards
UPDATE
@Unisland BTW I found this thread http://www.webmasterworld.com/php/3553642.htm where a similar problem is discussed
Try either
So you may try to add a:
[mysqld]
init-connect='SET NAMES utf8'
or
[client]
default-character-set=utf8[mysqld]
character-set-server=utf8
default-character-set=utf8
default-collation=utf8_unicode_ci
character-set-client = utf8
to set this as a default for all connections, or start with these queries after your specific script connects to the database before sending other queries: SET NAMES utf8; SET CHARACTER_SET utf8;
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With