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PHP: multiple SQL queries in one mysql_query statement

Tags:

sql

php

mysql

So I have an SQL dump file that needs to be loaded using mysql_query(). Unfortunately, it's not possible to execute multiple queries with it.

-> It cannot be assumed that the mysql command-line client (mysql --help) is installed -- for loading the SQL file directly

-> It cannot be assumed that the mysqli extension is installed

/* contents of dump.sql, including comments */
DELETE FROM t3 WHERE body = 'some text; with semicolons; scattered; throughout';
DELETE FROM t2 WHERE name = 'hello';
DELETE FROM t1 WHERE id = 1;

The explode() below won't work because some of the dump content's values contain semicolons.

$sql = explode(';', file_get_contents('dump.sql'));
foreach ($sql as $key => $val) {
    mysql_query($val);
}

What's the best way to load the SQL without modifying the dump file?

like image 819
Matt Avatar asked Dec 06 '08 00:12

Matt


2 Answers

You have more problem cases than just semicolons within strings.

  • Script builtin commands that cannot be executed by mysql_query(), like USE.
  • Statements that are not terminated with a semicolon, like DELIMITER.
  • Statements that contain semicolons, but not inside quotes, like CREATE PROCEDURE.

I don't know of an easy way to handle this task, without shelling out to the mysql command-line client. I realize you said you can't rely on that client being present, but without that client, you need a large amount of PHP code to parse the script and execute statements appropriately.

You may be able to find such code inside the phpMyAdmin product. However, that product is licensed under the GPL, so if you use any of the code, you must also license your own project under the GPL.


See also my answers to these related questions:

  • Running MySQL *.sql files in PHP
  • Loading .sql files from within PHP
  • is it possible to call a sql script from a stored procedure in another sql script?
like image 162
Bill Karwin Avatar answered Sep 27 '22 23:09

Bill Karwin


Occam's razor strikes again.

The above explode() function wasn't going to work because there are semicolons in the values. However, what I failed to realize (and mention) is that semicolons always preceed newlines in the SQL dump file. Alas,

$sql = explode(";\n", file_get_contents('dump.sql'));
foreach ($sql as $key => $val) {
    mysql_query($val);
}

Also, thanks for your help, Bill.

like image 20
Matt Avatar answered Sep 28 '22 01:09

Matt