rdbms: avoid throwing exceptions in Database::close() on reconnect
[lhc/web/wiklou.git] / includes / libs / rdbms / database / IDatabase.php
1 <?php
2 /**
3 * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
4 * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
5 * the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
6 * (at your option) any later version.
7 *
8 * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
9 * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
10 * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
11 * GNU General Public License for more details.
12 *
13 * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along
14 * with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
15 * 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.
16 * http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html
17 *
18 * @file
19 */
20 namespace Wikimedia\Rdbms;
21
22 use InvalidArgumentException;
23 use Wikimedia\ScopedCallback;
24 use RuntimeException;
25 use UnexpectedValueException;
26 use stdClass;
27
28 /**
29 * @defgroup Database Database
30 * This group deals with database interface functions
31 * and query specifics/optimisations.
32 */
33 /**
34 * Basic database interface for live and lazy-loaded relation database handles
35 *
36 * @note: IDatabase and DBConnRef should be updated to reflect any changes
37 * @ingroup Database
38 */
39 interface IDatabase {
40 /** @var int Callback triggered immediately due to no active transaction */
41 const TRIGGER_IDLE = 1;
42 /** @var int Callback triggered by COMMIT */
43 const TRIGGER_COMMIT = 2;
44 /** @var int Callback triggered by ROLLBACK */
45 const TRIGGER_ROLLBACK = 3;
46
47 /** @var string Transaction is requested by regular caller outside of the DB layer */
48 const TRANSACTION_EXPLICIT = '';
49 /** @var string Transaction is requested internally via DBO_TRX/startAtomic() */
50 const TRANSACTION_INTERNAL = 'implicit';
51
52 /** @var string Transaction operation comes from service managing all DBs */
53 const FLUSHING_ALL_PEERS = 'flush';
54 /** @var string Transaction operation comes from the database class internally */
55 const FLUSHING_INTERNAL = 'flush';
56
57 /** @var string Do not remember the prior flags */
58 const REMEMBER_NOTHING = '';
59 /** @var string Remember the prior flags */
60 const REMEMBER_PRIOR = 'remember';
61 /** @var string Restore to the prior flag state */
62 const RESTORE_PRIOR = 'prior';
63 /** @var string Restore to the initial flag state */
64 const RESTORE_INITIAL = 'initial';
65
66 /** @var string Estimate total time (RTT, scanning, waiting on locks, applying) */
67 const ESTIMATE_TOTAL = 'total';
68 /** @var string Estimate time to apply (scanning, applying) */
69 const ESTIMATE_DB_APPLY = 'apply';
70
71 /** @var int Combine list with comma delimeters */
72 const LIST_COMMA = 0;
73 /** @var int Combine list with AND clauses */
74 const LIST_AND = 1;
75 /** @var int Convert map into a SET clause */
76 const LIST_SET = 2;
77 /** @var int Treat as field name and do not apply value escaping */
78 const LIST_NAMES = 3;
79 /** @var int Combine list with OR clauses */
80 const LIST_OR = 4;
81
82 /** @var int Enable debug logging */
83 const DBO_DEBUG = 1;
84 /** @var int Disable query buffering (only one result set can be iterated at a time) */
85 const DBO_NOBUFFER = 2;
86 /** @var int Ignore query errors (internal use only!) */
87 const DBO_IGNORE = 4;
88 /** @var int Autoatically start transaction on first query (work with ILoadBalancer rounds) */
89 const DBO_TRX = 8;
90 /** @var int Use DBO_TRX in non-CLI mode */
91 const DBO_DEFAULT = 16;
92 /** @var int Use DB persistent connections if possible */
93 const DBO_PERSISTENT = 32;
94 /** @var int DBA session mode; mostly for Oracle */
95 const DBO_SYSDBA = 64;
96 /** @var int Schema file mode; mostly for Oracle */
97 const DBO_DDLMODE = 128;
98 /** @var int Enable SSL/TLS in connection protocol */
99 const DBO_SSL = 256;
100 /** @var int Enable compression in connection protocol */
101 const DBO_COMPRESS = 512;
102
103 /**
104 * A string describing the current software version, and possibly
105 * other details in a user-friendly way. Will be listed on Special:Version, etc.
106 * Use getServerVersion() to get machine-friendly information.
107 *
108 * @return string Version information from the database server
109 */
110 public function getServerInfo();
111
112 /**
113 * Turns buffering of SQL result sets on (true) or off (false). Default is "on".
114 *
115 * Unbuffered queries are very troublesome in MySQL:
116 *
117 * - If another query is executed while the first query is being read
118 * out, the first query is killed. This means you can't call normal
119 * Database functions while you are reading an unbuffered query result
120 * from a normal Database connection.
121 *
122 * - Unbuffered queries cause the MySQL server to use large amounts of
123 * memory and to hold broad locks which block other queries.
124 *
125 * If you want to limit client-side memory, it's almost always better to
126 * split up queries into batches using a LIMIT clause than to switch off
127 * buffering.
128 *
129 * @param null|bool $buffer
130 * @return null|bool The previous value of the flag
131 */
132 public function bufferResults( $buffer = null );
133
134 /**
135 * Gets the current transaction level.
136 *
137 * Historically, transactions were allowed to be "nested". This is no
138 * longer supported, so this function really only returns a boolean.
139 *
140 * @return int The previous value
141 */
142 public function trxLevel();
143
144 /**
145 * Get the UNIX timestamp of the time that the transaction was established
146 *
147 * This can be used to reason about the staleness of SELECT data
148 * in REPEATABLE-READ transaction isolation level.
149 *
150 * @return float|null Returns null if there is not active transaction
151 * @since 1.25
152 */
153 public function trxTimestamp();
154
155 /**
156 * @return bool Whether an explicit transaction or atomic sections are still open
157 * @since 1.28
158 */
159 public function explicitTrxActive();
160
161 /**
162 * Get/set the table prefix.
163 * @param string $prefix The table prefix to set, or omitted to leave it unchanged.
164 * @return string The previous table prefix.
165 */
166 public function tablePrefix( $prefix = null );
167
168 /**
169 * Get/set the db schema.
170 * @param string $schema The database schema to set, or omitted to leave it unchanged.
171 * @return string The previous db schema.
172 */
173 public function dbSchema( $schema = null );
174
175 /**
176 * Get properties passed down from the server info array of the load
177 * balancer.
178 *
179 * @param string $name The entry of the info array to get, or null to get the
180 * whole array
181 *
182 * @return array|mixed|null
183 */
184 public function getLBInfo( $name = null );
185
186 /**
187 * Set the LB info array, or a member of it. If called with one parameter,
188 * the LB info array is set to that parameter. If it is called with two
189 * parameters, the member with the given name is set to the given value.
190 *
191 * @param string $name
192 * @param array $value
193 */
194 public function setLBInfo( $name, $value = null );
195
196 /**
197 * Set a lazy-connecting DB handle to the master DB (for replication status purposes)
198 *
199 * @param IDatabase $conn
200 * @since 1.27
201 */
202 public function setLazyMasterHandle( IDatabase $conn );
203
204 /**
205 * Returns true if this database does an implicit sort when doing GROUP BY
206 *
207 * @return bool
208 * @deprecated Since 1.30; only use grouped or aggregated fields in the SELECT
209 */
210 public function implicitGroupby();
211
212 /**
213 * Returns true if this database does an implicit order by when the column has an index
214 * For example: SELECT page_title FROM page LIMIT 1
215 *
216 * @return bool
217 */
218 public function implicitOrderby();
219
220 /**
221 * Return the last query that went through IDatabase::query()
222 * @return string
223 */
224 public function lastQuery();
225
226 /**
227 * Returns true if the connection may have been used for write queries.
228 * Should return true if unsure.
229 *
230 * @return bool
231 */
232 public function doneWrites();
233
234 /**
235 * Returns the last time the connection may have been used for write queries.
236 * Should return a timestamp if unsure.
237 *
238 * @return int|float UNIX timestamp or false
239 * @since 1.24
240 */
241 public function lastDoneWrites();
242
243 /**
244 * @return bool Whether there is a transaction open with possible write queries
245 * @since 1.27
246 */
247 public function writesPending();
248
249 /**
250 * Returns true if there is a transaction open with possible write
251 * queries or transaction pre-commit/idle callbacks waiting on it to finish.
252 * This does *not* count recurring callbacks, e.g. from setTransactionListener().
253 *
254 * @return bool
255 */
256 public function writesOrCallbacksPending();
257
258 /**
259 * Get the time spend running write queries for this transaction
260 *
261 * High times could be due to scanning, updates, locking, and such
262 *
263 * @param string $type IDatabase::ESTIMATE_* constant [default: ESTIMATE_ALL]
264 * @return float|bool Returns false if not transaction is active
265 * @since 1.26
266 */
267 public function pendingWriteQueryDuration( $type = self::ESTIMATE_TOTAL );
268
269 /**
270 * Get the list of method names that did write queries for this transaction
271 *
272 * @return array
273 * @since 1.27
274 */
275 public function pendingWriteCallers();
276
277 /**
278 * Get the number of affected rows from pending write queries
279 *
280 * @return int
281 * @since 1.30
282 */
283 public function pendingWriteRowsAffected();
284
285 /**
286 * Is a connection to the database open?
287 * @return bool
288 */
289 public function isOpen();
290
291 /**
292 * Set a flag for this connection
293 *
294 * @param int $flag DBO_* constants from Defines.php:
295 * - DBO_DEBUG: output some debug info (same as debug())
296 * - DBO_NOBUFFER: don't buffer results (inverse of bufferResults())
297 * - DBO_TRX: automatically start transactions
298 * - DBO_DEFAULT: automatically sets DBO_TRX if not in command line mode
299 * and removes it in command line mode
300 * - DBO_PERSISTENT: use persistant database connection
301 * @param string $remember IDatabase::REMEMBER_* constant [default: REMEMBER_NOTHING]
302 */
303 public function setFlag( $flag, $remember = self::REMEMBER_NOTHING );
304
305 /**
306 * Clear a flag for this connection
307 *
308 * @param int $flag DBO_* constants from Defines.php:
309 * - DBO_DEBUG: output some debug info (same as debug())
310 * - DBO_NOBUFFER: don't buffer results (inverse of bufferResults())
311 * - DBO_TRX: automatically start transactions
312 * - DBO_DEFAULT: automatically sets DBO_TRX if not in command line mode
313 * and removes it in command line mode
314 * - DBO_PERSISTENT: use persistant database connection
315 * @param string $remember IDatabase::REMEMBER_* constant [default: REMEMBER_NOTHING]
316 */
317 public function clearFlag( $flag, $remember = self::REMEMBER_NOTHING );
318
319 /**
320 * Restore the flags to their prior state before the last setFlag/clearFlag call
321 *
322 * @param string $state IDatabase::RESTORE_* constant. [default: RESTORE_PRIOR]
323 * @since 1.28
324 */
325 public function restoreFlags( $state = self::RESTORE_PRIOR );
326
327 /**
328 * Returns a boolean whether the flag $flag is set for this connection
329 *
330 * @param int $flag DBO_* constants from Defines.php:
331 * - DBO_DEBUG: output some debug info (same as debug())
332 * - DBO_NOBUFFER: don't buffer results (inverse of bufferResults())
333 * - DBO_TRX: automatically start transactions
334 * - DBO_PERSISTENT: use persistant database connection
335 * @return bool
336 */
337 public function getFlag( $flag );
338
339 /**
340 * @return string
341 */
342 public function getDomainID();
343
344 /**
345 * Alias for getDomainID()
346 *
347 * @return string
348 * @deprecated 1.30
349 */
350 public function getWikiID();
351
352 /**
353 * Get the type of the DBMS, as it appears in $wgDBtype.
354 *
355 * @return string
356 */
357 public function getType();
358
359 /**
360 * Open a new connection to the database (closing any existing one)
361 *
362 * @param string $server Database server host
363 * @param string $user Database user name
364 * @param string $password Database user password
365 * @param string $dbName Database name
366 * @return bool
367 * @throws DBConnectionError
368 */
369 public function open( $server, $user, $password, $dbName );
370
371 /**
372 * Fetch the next row from the given result object, in object form.
373 * Fields can be retrieved with $row->fieldname, with fields acting like
374 * member variables.
375 * If no more rows are available, false is returned.
376 *
377 * @param IResultWrapper|stdClass $res Object as returned from IDatabase::query(), etc.
378 * @return stdClass|bool
379 * @throws DBUnexpectedError Thrown if the database returns an error
380 */
381 public function fetchObject( $res );
382
383 /**
384 * Fetch the next row from the given result object, in associative array
385 * form. Fields are retrieved with $row['fieldname'].
386 * If no more rows are available, false is returned.
387 *
388 * @param IResultWrapper $res Result object as returned from IDatabase::query(), etc.
389 * @return array|bool
390 * @throws DBUnexpectedError Thrown if the database returns an error
391 */
392 public function fetchRow( $res );
393
394 /**
395 * Get the number of rows in a result object
396 *
397 * @param mixed $res A SQL result
398 * @return int
399 */
400 public function numRows( $res );
401
402 /**
403 * Get the number of fields in a result object
404 * @see https://secure.php.net/mysql_num_fields
405 *
406 * @param mixed $res A SQL result
407 * @return int
408 */
409 public function numFields( $res );
410
411 /**
412 * Get a field name in a result object
413 * @see https://secure.php.net/mysql_field_name
414 *
415 * @param mixed $res A SQL result
416 * @param int $n
417 * @return string
418 */
419 public function fieldName( $res, $n );
420
421 /**
422 * Get the inserted value of an auto-increment row
423 *
424 * This should only be called after an insert that used an auto-incremented
425 * value. If no such insert was previously done in the current database
426 * session, the return value is undefined.
427 *
428 * @return int
429 */
430 public function insertId();
431
432 /**
433 * Change the position of the cursor in a result object
434 * @see https://secure.php.net/mysql_data_seek
435 *
436 * @param mixed $res A SQL result
437 * @param int $row
438 */
439 public function dataSeek( $res, $row );
440
441 /**
442 * Get the last error number
443 * @see https://secure.php.net/mysql_errno
444 *
445 * @return int
446 */
447 public function lastErrno();
448
449 /**
450 * Get a description of the last error
451 * @see https://secure.php.net/mysql_error
452 *
453 * @return string
454 */
455 public function lastError();
456
457 /**
458 * mysql_fetch_field() wrapper
459 * Returns false if the field doesn't exist
460 *
461 * @param string $table Table name
462 * @param string $field Field name
463 *
464 * @return Field
465 */
466 public function fieldInfo( $table, $field );
467
468 /**
469 * Get the number of rows affected by the last write query
470 * @see https://secure.php.net/mysql_affected_rows
471 *
472 * @return int
473 */
474 public function affectedRows();
475
476 /**
477 * Returns a wikitext link to the DB's website, e.g.,
478 * return "[https://www.mysql.com/ MySQL]";
479 * Should at least contain plain text, if for some reason
480 * your database has no website.
481 *
482 * @return string Wikitext of a link to the server software's web site
483 */
484 public function getSoftwareLink();
485
486 /**
487 * A string describing the current software version, like from
488 * mysql_get_server_info().
489 *
490 * @return string Version information from the database server.
491 */
492 public function getServerVersion();
493
494 /**
495 * Close the database connection
496 *
497 * This should only be called after any transactions have been resolved,
498 * aside from read-only transactions (assuming no callbacks are registered).
499 * If a transaction is still open anyway, it will be committed if possible.
500 *
501 * @throws DBError
502 * @return bool Operation success. true if already closed.
503 */
504 public function close();
505
506 /**
507 * @param string $error Fallback error message, used if none is given by DB
508 * @throws DBConnectionError
509 */
510 public function reportConnectionError( $error = 'Unknown error' );
511
512 /**
513 * Run an SQL query and return the result. Normally throws a DBQueryError
514 * on failure. If errors are ignored, returns false instead.
515 *
516 * In new code, the query wrappers select(), insert(), update(), delete(),
517 * etc. should be used where possible, since they give much better DBMS
518 * independence and automatically quote or validate user input in a variety
519 * of contexts. This function is generally only useful for queries which are
520 * explicitly DBMS-dependent and are unsupported by the query wrappers, such
521 * as CREATE TABLE.
522 *
523 * However, the query wrappers themselves should call this function.
524 *
525 * @param string $sql SQL query
526 * @param string $fname Name of the calling function, for profiling/SHOW PROCESSLIST
527 * comment (you can use __METHOD__ or add some extra info)
528 * @param bool $tempIgnore Whether to avoid throwing an exception on errors...
529 * maybe best to catch the exception instead?
530 * @return bool|IResultWrapper True for a successful write query, IResultWrapper object
531 * for a successful read query, or false on failure if $tempIgnore set
532 * @throws DBError
533 */
534 public function query( $sql, $fname = __METHOD__, $tempIgnore = false );
535
536 /**
537 * Report a query error. Log the error, and if neither the object ignore
538 * flag nor the $tempIgnore flag is set, throw a DBQueryError.
539 *
540 * @param string $error
541 * @param int $errno
542 * @param string $sql
543 * @param string $fname
544 * @param bool $tempIgnore
545 * @throws DBQueryError
546 */
547 public function reportQueryError( $error, $errno, $sql, $fname, $tempIgnore = false );
548
549 /**
550 * Free a result object returned by query() or select(). It's usually not
551 * necessary to call this, just use unset() or let the variable holding
552 * the result object go out of scope.
553 *
554 * @param mixed $res A SQL result
555 */
556 public function freeResult( $res );
557
558 /**
559 * A SELECT wrapper which returns a single field from a single result row.
560 *
561 * Usually throws a DBQueryError on failure. If errors are explicitly
562 * ignored, returns false on failure.
563 *
564 * If no result rows are returned from the query, false is returned.
565 *
566 * @param string|array $table Table name. See IDatabase::select() for details.
567 * @param string $var The field name to select. This must be a valid SQL
568 * fragment: do not use unvalidated user input.
569 * @param string|array $cond The condition array. See IDatabase::select() for details.
570 * @param string $fname The function name of the caller.
571 * @param string|array $options The query options. See IDatabase::select() for details.
572 * @param string|array $join_conds The query join conditions. See IDatabase::select() for details.
573 *
574 * @return mixed The value from the field
575 * @throws DBError
576 */
577 public function selectField(
578 $table, $var, $cond = '', $fname = __METHOD__, $options = [], $join_conds = []
579 );
580
581 /**
582 * A SELECT wrapper which returns a list of single field values from result rows.
583 *
584 * Usually throws a DBQueryError on failure. If errors are explicitly
585 * ignored, returns false on failure.
586 *
587 * If no result rows are returned from the query, false is returned.
588 *
589 * @param string|array $table Table name. See IDatabase::select() for details.
590 * @param string $var The field name to select. This must be a valid SQL
591 * fragment: do not use unvalidated user input.
592 * @param string|array $cond The condition array. See IDatabase::select() for details.
593 * @param string $fname The function name of the caller.
594 * @param string|array $options The query options. See IDatabase::select() for details.
595 * @param string|array $join_conds The query join conditions. See IDatabase::select() for details.
596 *
597 * @return array The values from the field
598 * @throws DBError
599 * @since 1.25
600 */
601 public function selectFieldValues(
602 $table, $var, $cond = '', $fname = __METHOD__, $options = [], $join_conds = []
603 );
604
605 /**
606 * Execute a SELECT query constructed using the various parameters provided.
607 * See below for full details of the parameters.
608 *
609 * @param string|array $table Table name
610 * @param string|array $vars Field names
611 * @param string|array $conds Conditions
612 * @param string $fname Caller function name
613 * @param array $options Query options
614 * @param array $join_conds Join conditions
615 *
616 *
617 * @param string|array $table
618 *
619 * May be either an array of table names, or a single string holding a table
620 * name. If an array is given, table aliases can be specified, for example:
621 *
622 * [ 'a' => 'user' ]
623 *
624 * This includes the user table in the query, with the alias "a" available
625 * for use in field names (e.g. a.user_name).
626 *
627 * Joins using parentheses for grouping (since MediaWiki 1.31) may be
628 * constructed using nested arrays. For example,
629 *
630 * [ 'tableA', 'nestedB' => [ 'tableB', 'b2' => 'tableB2' ] ]
631 *
632 * along with `$join_conds` like
633 *
634 * [ 'b2' => [ 'JOIN', 'b_id = b2_id' ], 'nestedB' => [ 'LEFT JOIN', 'b_a = a_id' ] ]
635 *
636 * will produce SQL something like
637 *
638 * FROM tableA LEFT JOIN (tableB JOIN tableB2 AS b2 ON (b_id = b2_id)) ON (b_a = a_id)
639 *
640 * All of the table names given here are automatically run through
641 * Database::tableName(), which causes the table prefix (if any) to be
642 * added, and various other table name mappings to be performed.
643 *
644 * Do not use untrusted user input as a table name. Alias names should
645 * not have characters outside of the Basic multilingual plane.
646 *
647 * @param string|array $vars
648 *
649 * May be either a field name or an array of field names. The field names
650 * can be complete fragments of SQL, for direct inclusion into the SELECT
651 * query. If an array is given, field aliases can be specified, for example:
652 *
653 * [ 'maxrev' => 'MAX(rev_id)' ]
654 *
655 * This includes an expression with the alias "maxrev" in the query.
656 *
657 * If an expression is given, care must be taken to ensure that it is
658 * DBMS-independent.
659 *
660 * Untrusted user input must not be passed to this parameter.
661 *
662 * @param string|array $conds
663 *
664 * May be either a string containing a single condition, or an array of
665 * conditions. If an array is given, the conditions constructed from each
666 * element are combined with AND.
667 *
668 * Array elements may take one of two forms:
669 *
670 * - Elements with a numeric key are interpreted as raw SQL fragments.
671 * - Elements with a string key are interpreted as equality conditions,
672 * where the key is the field name.
673 * - If the value of such an array element is a scalar (such as a
674 * string), it will be treated as data and thus quoted appropriately.
675 * If it is null, an IS NULL clause will be added.
676 * - If the value is an array, an IN (...) clause will be constructed
677 * from its non-null elements, and an IS NULL clause will be added
678 * if null is present, such that the field may match any of the
679 * elements in the array. The non-null elements will be quoted.
680 *
681 * Note that expressions are often DBMS-dependent in their syntax.
682 * DBMS-independent wrappers are provided for constructing several types of
683 * expression commonly used in condition queries. See:
684 * - IDatabase::buildLike()
685 * - IDatabase::conditional()
686 *
687 * Untrusted user input is safe in the values of string keys, however untrusted
688 * input must not be used in the array key names or in the values of numeric keys.
689 * Escaping of untrusted input used in values of numeric keys should be done via
690 * IDatabase::addQuotes()
691 *
692 * @param string|array $options
693 *
694 * Optional: Array of query options. Boolean options are specified by
695 * including them in the array as a string value with a numeric key, for
696 * example:
697 *
698 * [ 'FOR UPDATE' ]
699 *
700 * The supported options are:
701 *
702 * - OFFSET: Skip this many rows at the start of the result set. OFFSET
703 * with LIMIT can theoretically be used for paging through a result set,
704 * but this is discouraged for performance reasons.
705 *
706 * - LIMIT: Integer: return at most this many rows. The rows are sorted
707 * and then the first rows are taken until the limit is reached. LIMIT
708 * is applied to a result set after OFFSET.
709 *
710 * - FOR UPDATE: Boolean: lock the returned rows so that they can't be
711 * changed until the next COMMIT.
712 *
713 * - DISTINCT: Boolean: return only unique result rows.
714 *
715 * - GROUP BY: May be either an SQL fragment string naming a field or
716 * expression to group by, or an array of such SQL fragments.
717 *
718 * - HAVING: May be either an string containing a HAVING clause or an array of
719 * conditions building the HAVING clause. If an array is given, the conditions
720 * constructed from each element are combined with AND.
721 *
722 * - ORDER BY: May be either an SQL fragment giving a field name or
723 * expression to order by, or an array of such SQL fragments.
724 *
725 * - USE INDEX: This may be either a string giving the index name to use
726 * for the query, or an array. If it is an associative array, each key
727 * gives the table name (or alias), each value gives the index name to
728 * use for that table. All strings are SQL fragments and so should be
729 * validated by the caller.
730 *
731 * - EXPLAIN: In MySQL, this causes an EXPLAIN SELECT query to be run,
732 * instead of SELECT.
733 *
734 * And also the following boolean MySQL extensions, see the MySQL manual
735 * for documentation:
736 *
737 * - LOCK IN SHARE MODE
738 * - STRAIGHT_JOIN
739 * - HIGH_PRIORITY
740 * - SQL_BIG_RESULT
741 * - SQL_BUFFER_RESULT
742 * - SQL_SMALL_RESULT
743 * - SQL_CALC_FOUND_ROWS
744 * - SQL_CACHE
745 * - SQL_NO_CACHE
746 *
747 *
748 * @param string|array $join_conds
749 *
750 * Optional associative array of table-specific join conditions. In the
751 * most common case, this is unnecessary, since the join condition can be
752 * in $conds. However, it is useful for doing a LEFT JOIN.
753 *
754 * The key of the array contains the table name or alias. The value is an
755 * array with two elements, numbered 0 and 1. The first gives the type of
756 * join, the second is the same as the $conds parameter. Thus it can be
757 * an SQL fragment, or an array where the string keys are equality and the
758 * numeric keys are SQL fragments all AND'd together. For example:
759 *
760 * [ 'page' => [ 'LEFT JOIN', 'page_latest=rev_id' ] ]
761 *
762 * @return IResultWrapper Resulting rows
763 * @throws DBError
764 */
765 public function select(
766 $table, $vars, $conds = '', $fname = __METHOD__,
767 $options = [], $join_conds = []
768 );
769
770 /**
771 * The equivalent of IDatabase::select() except that the constructed SQL
772 * is returned, instead of being immediately executed. This can be useful for
773 * doing UNION queries, where the SQL text of each query is needed. In general,
774 * however, callers outside of Database classes should just use select().
775 *
776 * @param string|array $table Table name
777 * @param string|array $vars Field names
778 * @param string|array $conds Conditions
779 * @param string $fname Caller function name
780 * @param string|array $options Query options
781 * @param string|array $join_conds Join conditions
782 *
783 * @return string SQL query string.
784 * @see IDatabase::select()
785 */
786 public function selectSQLText(
787 $table, $vars, $conds = '', $fname = __METHOD__,
788 $options = [], $join_conds = []
789 );
790
791 /**
792 * Single row SELECT wrapper. Equivalent to IDatabase::select(), except
793 * that a single row object is returned. If the query returns no rows,
794 * false is returned.
795 *
796 * @param string|array $table Table name
797 * @param string|array $vars Field names
798 * @param array $conds Conditions
799 * @param string $fname Caller function name
800 * @param string|array $options Query options
801 * @param array|string $join_conds Join conditions
802 *
803 * @return stdClass|bool
804 * @throws DBError
805 */
806 public function selectRow( $table, $vars, $conds, $fname = __METHOD__,
807 $options = [], $join_conds = []
808 );
809
810 /**
811 * Estimate the number of rows in dataset
812 *
813 * MySQL allows you to estimate the number of rows that would be returned
814 * by a SELECT query, using EXPLAIN SELECT. The estimate is provided using
815 * index cardinality statistics, and is notoriously inaccurate, especially
816 * when large numbers of rows have recently been added or deleted.
817 *
818 * For DBMSs that don't support fast result size estimation, this function
819 * will actually perform the SELECT COUNT(*).
820 *
821 * Takes the same arguments as IDatabase::select().
822 *
823 * @param string $table Table name
824 * @param string $vars Unused
825 * @param array|string $conds Filters on the table
826 * @param string $fname Function name for profiling
827 * @param array $options Options for select
828 * @return int Row count
829 * @throws DBError
830 */
831 public function estimateRowCount(
832 $table, $vars = '*', $conds = '', $fname = __METHOD__, $options = []
833 );
834
835 /**
836 * Get the number of rows in dataset
837 *
838 * This is useful when trying to do COUNT(*) but with a LIMIT for performance.
839 *
840 * Takes the same arguments as IDatabase::select().
841 *
842 * @since 1.27 Added $join_conds parameter
843 *
844 * @param array|string $tables Table names
845 * @param string $vars Unused
846 * @param array|string $conds Filters on the table
847 * @param string $fname Function name for profiling
848 * @param array $options Options for select
849 * @param array $join_conds Join conditions (since 1.27)
850 * @return int Row count
851 * @throws DBError
852 */
853 public function selectRowCount(
854 $tables, $vars = '*', $conds = '', $fname = __METHOD__, $options = [], $join_conds = []
855 );
856
857 /**
858 * Determines whether a field exists in a table
859 *
860 * @param string $table Table name
861 * @param string $field Filed to check on that table
862 * @param string $fname Calling function name (optional)
863 * @return bool Whether $table has filed $field
864 * @throws DBError
865 */
866 public function fieldExists( $table, $field, $fname = __METHOD__ );
867
868 /**
869 * Determines whether an index exists
870 * Usually throws a DBQueryError on failure
871 * If errors are explicitly ignored, returns NULL on failure
872 *
873 * @param string $table
874 * @param string $index
875 * @param string $fname
876 * @return bool|null
877 * @throws DBError
878 */
879 public function indexExists( $table, $index, $fname = __METHOD__ );
880
881 /**
882 * Query whether a given table exists
883 *
884 * @param string $table
885 * @param string $fname
886 * @return bool
887 * @throws DBError
888 */
889 public function tableExists( $table, $fname = __METHOD__ );
890
891 /**
892 * Determines if a given index is unique
893 *
894 * @param string $table
895 * @param string $index
896 *
897 * @return bool
898 */
899 public function indexUnique( $table, $index );
900
901 /**
902 * INSERT wrapper, inserts an array into a table.
903 *
904 * $a may be either:
905 *
906 * - A single associative array. The array keys are the field names, and
907 * the values are the values to insert. The values are treated as data
908 * and will be quoted appropriately. If NULL is inserted, this will be
909 * converted to a database NULL.
910 * - An array with numeric keys, holding a list of associative arrays.
911 * This causes a multi-row INSERT on DBMSs that support it. The keys in
912 * each subarray must be identical to each other, and in the same order.
913 *
914 * Usually throws a DBQueryError on failure. If errors are explicitly ignored,
915 * returns success.
916 *
917 * $options is an array of options, with boolean options encoded as values
918 * with numeric keys, in the same style as $options in
919 * IDatabase::select(). Supported options are:
920 *
921 * - IGNORE: Boolean: if present, duplicate key errors are ignored, and
922 * any rows which cause duplicate key errors are not inserted. It's
923 * possible to determine how many rows were successfully inserted using
924 * IDatabase::affectedRows().
925 *
926 * @param string $table Table name. This will be passed through
927 * Database::tableName().
928 * @param array $a Array of rows to insert
929 * @param string $fname Calling function name (use __METHOD__) for logs/profiling
930 * @param array $options Array of options
931 *
932 * @return bool
933 * @throws DBError
934 */
935 public function insert( $table, $a, $fname = __METHOD__, $options = [] );
936
937 /**
938 * UPDATE wrapper. Takes a condition array and a SET array.
939 *
940 * @param string $table Name of the table to UPDATE. This will be passed through
941 * Database::tableName().
942 * @param array $values An array of values to SET. For each array element,
943 * the key gives the field name, and the value gives the data to set
944 * that field to. The data will be quoted by IDatabase::addQuotes().
945 * Values with integer keys form unquoted SET statements, which can be used for
946 * things like "field = field + 1" or similar computed values.
947 * @param array $conds An array of conditions (WHERE). See
948 * IDatabase::select() for the details of the format of condition
949 * arrays. Use '*' to update all rows.
950 * @param string $fname The function name of the caller (from __METHOD__),
951 * for logging and profiling.
952 * @param array $options An array of UPDATE options, can be:
953 * - IGNORE: Ignore unique key conflicts
954 * - LOW_PRIORITY: MySQL-specific, see MySQL manual.
955 * @return bool
956 * @throws DBError
957 */
958 public function update( $table, $values, $conds, $fname = __METHOD__, $options = [] );
959
960 /**
961 * Makes an encoded list of strings from an array
962 *
963 * These can be used to make conjunctions or disjunctions on SQL condition strings
964 * derived from an array (see IDatabase::select() $conds documentation).
965 *
966 * Example usage:
967 * @code
968 * $sql = $db->makeList( [
969 * 'rev_page' => $id,
970 * $db->makeList( [ 'rev_minor' => 1, 'rev_len' < 500 ], $db::LIST_OR ] )
971 * ], $db::LIST_AND );
972 * @endcode
973 * This would set $sql to "rev_page = '$id' AND (rev_minor = '1' OR rev_len < '500')"
974 *
975 * @param array $a Containing the data
976 * @param int $mode IDatabase class constant:
977 * - IDatabase::LIST_COMMA: Comma separated, no field names
978 * - IDatabase::LIST_AND: ANDed WHERE clause (without the WHERE).
979 * - IDatabase::LIST_OR: ORed WHERE clause (without the WHERE)
980 * - IDatabase::LIST_SET: Comma separated with field names, like a SET clause
981 * - IDatabase::LIST_NAMES: Comma separated field names
982 * @throws DBError
983 * @return string
984 */
985 public function makeList( $a, $mode = self::LIST_COMMA );
986
987 /**
988 * Build a partial where clause from a 2-d array such as used for LinkBatch.
989 * The keys on each level may be either integers or strings.
990 *
991 * @param array $data Organized as 2-d
992 * [ baseKeyVal => [ subKeyVal => [ignored], ... ], ... ]
993 * @param string $baseKey Field name to match the base-level keys to (eg 'pl_namespace')
994 * @param string $subKey Field name to match the sub-level keys to (eg 'pl_title')
995 * @return string|bool SQL fragment, or false if no items in array
996 */
997 public function makeWhereFrom2d( $data, $baseKey, $subKey );
998
999 /**
1000 * Return aggregated value alias
1001 *
1002 * @param array $valuedata
1003 * @param string $valuename
1004 *
1005 * @return string
1006 */
1007 public function aggregateValue( $valuedata, $valuename = 'value' );
1008
1009 /**
1010 * @param string $field
1011 * @return string
1012 */
1013 public function bitNot( $field );
1014
1015 /**
1016 * @param string $fieldLeft
1017 * @param string $fieldRight
1018 * @return string
1019 */
1020 public function bitAnd( $fieldLeft, $fieldRight );
1021
1022 /**
1023 * @param string $fieldLeft
1024 * @param string $fieldRight
1025 * @return string
1026 */
1027 public function bitOr( $fieldLeft, $fieldRight );
1028
1029 /**
1030 * Build a concatenation list to feed into a SQL query
1031 * @param array $stringList List of raw SQL expressions; caller is
1032 * responsible for any quoting
1033 * @return string
1034 */
1035 public function buildConcat( $stringList );
1036
1037 /**
1038 * Build a GROUP_CONCAT or equivalent statement for a query.
1039 *
1040 * This is useful for combining a field for several rows into a single string.
1041 * NULL values will not appear in the output, duplicated values will appear,
1042 * and the resulting delimiter-separated values have no defined sort order.
1043 * Code using the results may need to use the PHP unique() or sort() methods.
1044 *
1045 * @param string $delim Glue to bind the results together
1046 * @param string|array $table Table name
1047 * @param string $field Field name
1048 * @param string|array $conds Conditions
1049 * @param string|array $join_conds Join conditions
1050 * @return string SQL text
1051 * @since 1.23
1052 */
1053 public function buildGroupConcatField(
1054 $delim, $table, $field, $conds = '', $join_conds = []
1055 );
1056
1057 /**
1058 * Build a SUBSTRING function.
1059 *
1060 * Behavior for non-ASCII values is undefined.
1061 *
1062 * @param string $input Field name
1063 * @param int $startPosition Positive integer
1064 * @param int|null $length Non-negative integer length or null for no limit
1065 * @throws InvalidArgumentException
1066 * @return string SQL text
1067 * @since 1.31
1068 */
1069 public function buildSubString( $input, $startPosition, $length = null );
1070
1071 /**
1072 * @param string $field Field or column to cast
1073 * @return string
1074 * @since 1.28
1075 */
1076 public function buildStringCast( $field );
1077
1078 /**
1079 * @param string $field Field or column to cast
1080 * @return string
1081 * @since 1.31
1082 */
1083 public function buildIntegerCast( $field );
1084
1085 /**
1086 * Returns true if DBs are assumed to be on potentially different servers
1087 *
1088 * In systems like mysql/mariadb, different databases can easily be referenced on a single
1089 * connection merely by name, even in a single query via JOIN. On the other hand, Postgres
1090 * treats databases as fully separate, only allowing mechanisms like postgres_fdw to
1091 * effectively "mount" foreign DBs. This is true even among DBs on the same server.
1092 *
1093 * @return bool
1094 * @since 1.29
1095 */
1096 public function databasesAreIndependent();
1097
1098 /**
1099 * Change the current database
1100 *
1101 * @param string $db
1102 * @return bool Success or failure
1103 * @throws DBConnectionError If databasesAreIndependent() is true and an error occurs
1104 */
1105 public function selectDB( $db );
1106
1107 /**
1108 * Get the current DB name
1109 * @return string
1110 */
1111 public function getDBname();
1112
1113 /**
1114 * Get the server hostname or IP address
1115 * @return string
1116 */
1117 public function getServer();
1118
1119 /**
1120 * Adds quotes and backslashes.
1121 *
1122 * @param string|int|null|bool|Blob $s
1123 * @return string|int
1124 */
1125 public function addQuotes( $s );
1126
1127 /**
1128 * LIKE statement wrapper, receives a variable-length argument list with
1129 * parts of pattern to match containing either string literals that will be
1130 * escaped or tokens returned by anyChar() or anyString(). Alternatively,
1131 * the function could be provided with an array of aforementioned
1132 * parameters.
1133 *
1134 * Example: $dbr->buildLike( 'My_page_title/', $dbr->anyString() ) returns
1135 * a LIKE clause that searches for subpages of 'My page title'.
1136 * Alternatively:
1137 * $pattern = [ 'My_page_title/', $dbr->anyString() ];
1138 * $query .= $dbr->buildLike( $pattern );
1139 *
1140 * @since 1.16
1141 * @return string Fully built LIKE statement
1142 */
1143 public function buildLike();
1144
1145 /**
1146 * Returns a token for buildLike() that denotes a '_' to be used in a LIKE query
1147 *
1148 * @return LikeMatch
1149 */
1150 public function anyChar();
1151
1152 /**
1153 * Returns a token for buildLike() that denotes a '%' to be used in a LIKE query
1154 *
1155 * @return LikeMatch
1156 */
1157 public function anyString();
1158
1159 /**
1160 * Deprecated method, calls should be removed.
1161 *
1162 * This was formerly used for PostgreSQL and Oracle to handle
1163 * self::insertId() auto-incrementing fields. It is no longer necessary
1164 * since DatabasePostgres::insertId() has been reimplemented using
1165 * `lastval()` and Oracle has been reimplemented using triggers.
1166 *
1167 * Implementations should return null if inserting `NULL` into an
1168 * auto-incrementing field works, otherwise it should return an instance of
1169 * NextSequenceValue and filter it on calls to relevant methods.
1170 *
1171 * @deprecated since 1.30, no longer needed
1172 * @param string $seqName
1173 * @return null|NextSequenceValue
1174 */
1175 public function nextSequenceValue( $seqName );
1176
1177 /**
1178 * REPLACE query wrapper.
1179 *
1180 * REPLACE is a very handy MySQL extension, which functions like an INSERT
1181 * except that when there is a duplicate key error, the old row is deleted
1182 * and the new row is inserted in its place.
1183 *
1184 * We simulate this with standard SQL with a DELETE followed by INSERT. To
1185 * perform the delete, we need to know what the unique indexes are so that
1186 * we know how to find the conflicting rows.
1187 *
1188 * It may be more efficient to leave off unique indexes which are unlikely
1189 * to collide. However if you do this, you run the risk of encountering
1190 * errors which wouldn't have occurred in MySQL.
1191 *
1192 * @param string $table The table to replace the row(s) in.
1193 * @param array $uniqueIndexes Is an array of indexes. Each element may be either
1194 * a field name or an array of field names
1195 * @param array $rows Can be either a single row to insert, or multiple rows,
1196 * in the same format as for IDatabase::insert()
1197 * @param string $fname Calling function name (use __METHOD__) for logs/profiling
1198 * @throws DBError
1199 */
1200 public function replace( $table, $uniqueIndexes, $rows, $fname = __METHOD__ );
1201
1202 /**
1203 * INSERT ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE wrapper, upserts an array into a table.
1204 *
1205 * This updates any conflicting rows (according to the unique indexes) using
1206 * the provided SET clause and inserts any remaining (non-conflicted) rows.
1207 *
1208 * $rows may be either:
1209 * - A single associative array. The array keys are the field names, and
1210 * the values are the values to insert. The values are treated as data
1211 * and will be quoted appropriately. If NULL is inserted, this will be
1212 * converted to a database NULL.
1213 * - An array with numeric keys, holding a list of associative arrays.
1214 * This causes a multi-row INSERT on DBMSs that support it. The keys in
1215 * each subarray must be identical to each other, and in the same order.
1216 *
1217 * It may be more efficient to leave off unique indexes which are unlikely
1218 * to collide. However if you do this, you run the risk of encountering
1219 * errors which wouldn't have occurred in MySQL.
1220 *
1221 * Usually throws a DBQueryError on failure. If errors are explicitly ignored,
1222 * returns success.
1223 *
1224 * @since 1.22
1225 *
1226 * @param string $table Table name. This will be passed through Database::tableName().
1227 * @param array $rows A single row or list of rows to insert
1228 * @param array $uniqueIndexes List of single field names or field name tuples
1229 * @param array $set An array of values to SET. For each array element, the
1230 * key gives the field name, and the value gives the data to set that
1231 * field to. The data will be quoted by IDatabase::addQuotes().
1232 * Values with integer keys form unquoted SET statements, which can be used for
1233 * things like "field = field + 1" or similar computed values.
1234 * @param string $fname Calling function name (use __METHOD__) for logs/profiling
1235 * @throws DBError
1236 * @return bool
1237 */
1238 public function upsert(
1239 $table, array $rows, array $uniqueIndexes, array $set, $fname = __METHOD__
1240 );
1241
1242 /**
1243 * DELETE where the condition is a join.
1244 *
1245 * MySQL overrides this to use a multi-table DELETE syntax, in other databases
1246 * we use sub-selects
1247 *
1248 * For safety, an empty $conds will not delete everything. If you want to
1249 * delete all rows where the join condition matches, set $conds='*'.
1250 *
1251 * DO NOT put the join condition in $conds.
1252 *
1253 * @param string $delTable The table to delete from.
1254 * @param string $joinTable The other table.
1255 * @param string $delVar The variable to join on, in the first table.
1256 * @param string $joinVar The variable to join on, in the second table.
1257 * @param array $conds Condition array of field names mapped to variables,
1258 * ANDed together in the WHERE clause
1259 * @param string $fname Calling function name (use __METHOD__) for logs/profiling
1260 * @throws DBError
1261 */
1262 public function deleteJoin( $delTable, $joinTable, $delVar, $joinVar, $conds,
1263 $fname = __METHOD__
1264 );
1265
1266 /**
1267 * DELETE query wrapper.
1268 *
1269 * @param string $table Table name
1270 * @param string|array $conds Array of conditions. See $conds in IDatabase::select()
1271 * for the format. Use $conds == "*" to delete all rows
1272 * @param string $fname Name of the calling function
1273 * @throws DBUnexpectedError
1274 * @return bool|IResultWrapper
1275 * @throws DBError
1276 */
1277 public function delete( $table, $conds, $fname = __METHOD__ );
1278
1279 /**
1280 * INSERT SELECT wrapper. Takes data from a SELECT query and inserts it
1281 * into another table.
1282 *
1283 * @warning If the insert will use an auto-increment or sequence to
1284 * determine the value of a column, this may break replication on
1285 * databases using statement-based replication if the SELECT is not
1286 * deterministically ordered.
1287 *
1288 * @param string $destTable The table name to insert into
1289 * @param string|array $srcTable May be either a table name, or an array of table names
1290 * to include in a join.
1291 *
1292 * @param array $varMap Must be an associative array of the form
1293 * [ 'dest1' => 'source1', ... ]. Source items may be literals
1294 * rather than field names, but strings should be quoted with
1295 * IDatabase::addQuotes()
1296 *
1297 * @param array $conds Condition array. See $conds in IDatabase::select() for
1298 * the details of the format of condition arrays. May be "*" to copy the
1299 * whole table.
1300 *
1301 * @param string $fname The function name of the caller, from __METHOD__
1302 *
1303 * @param array $insertOptions Options for the INSERT part of the query, see
1304 * IDatabase::insert() for details. Also, one additional option is
1305 * available: pass 'NO_AUTO_COLUMNS' to hint that the query does not use
1306 * an auto-increment or sequence to determine any column values.
1307 * @param array $selectOptions Options for the SELECT part of the query, see
1308 * IDatabase::select() for details.
1309 * @param array $selectJoinConds Join conditions for the SELECT part of the query, see
1310 * IDatabase::select() for details.
1311 *
1312 * @return bool
1313 * @throws DBError
1314 */
1315 public function insertSelect( $destTable, $srcTable, $varMap, $conds,
1316 $fname = __METHOD__,
1317 $insertOptions = [], $selectOptions = [], $selectJoinConds = []
1318 );
1319
1320 /**
1321 * Returns true if current database backend supports ORDER BY or LIMIT for separate subqueries
1322 * within the UNION construct.
1323 * @return bool
1324 */
1325 public function unionSupportsOrderAndLimit();
1326
1327 /**
1328 * Construct a UNION query
1329 * This is used for providing overload point for other DB abstractions
1330 * not compatible with the MySQL syntax.
1331 * @param array $sqls SQL statements to combine
1332 * @param bool $all Use UNION ALL
1333 * @return string SQL fragment
1334 */
1335 public function unionQueries( $sqls, $all );
1336
1337 /**
1338 * Construct a UNION query for permutations of conditions
1339 *
1340 * Databases sometimes have trouble with queries that have multiple values
1341 * for multiple condition parameters combined with limits and ordering.
1342 * This method constructs queries for the Cartesian product of the
1343 * conditions and unions them all together.
1344 *
1345 * @see IDatabase::select()
1346 * @since 1.30
1347 * @param string|array $table Table name
1348 * @param string|array $vars Field names
1349 * @param array $permute_conds Conditions for the Cartesian product. Keys
1350 * are field names, values are arrays of the possible values for that
1351 * field.
1352 * @param string|array $extra_conds Additional conditions to include in the
1353 * query.
1354 * @param string $fname Caller function name
1355 * @param string|array $options Query options. In addition to the options
1356 * recognized by IDatabase::select(), the following may be used:
1357 * - NOTALL: Set to use UNION instead of UNION ALL.
1358 * - INNER ORDER BY: If specified and supported, subqueries will use this
1359 * instead of ORDER BY.
1360 * @param string|array $join_conds Join conditions
1361 * @return string SQL query string.
1362 */
1363 public function unionConditionPermutations(
1364 $table, $vars, array $permute_conds, $extra_conds = '', $fname = __METHOD__,
1365 $options = [], $join_conds = []
1366 );
1367
1368 /**
1369 * Returns an SQL expression for a simple conditional. This doesn't need
1370 * to be overridden unless CASE isn't supported in your DBMS.
1371 *
1372 * @param string|array $cond SQL expression which will result in a boolean value
1373 * @param string $trueVal SQL expression to return if true
1374 * @param string $falseVal SQL expression to return if false
1375 * @return string SQL fragment
1376 */
1377 public function conditional( $cond, $trueVal, $falseVal );
1378
1379 /**
1380 * Returns a command for str_replace function in SQL query.
1381 * Uses REPLACE() in MySQL
1382 *
1383 * @param string $orig Column to modify
1384 * @param string $old Column to seek
1385 * @param string $new Column to replace with
1386 *
1387 * @return string
1388 */
1389 public function strreplace( $orig, $old, $new );
1390
1391 /**
1392 * Determines how long the server has been up
1393 *
1394 * @return int
1395 * @throws DBError
1396 */
1397 public function getServerUptime();
1398
1399 /**
1400 * Determines if the last failure was due to a deadlock
1401 *
1402 * @return bool
1403 */
1404 public function wasDeadlock();
1405
1406 /**
1407 * Determines if the last failure was due to a lock timeout
1408 *
1409 * @return bool
1410 */
1411 public function wasLockTimeout();
1412
1413 /**
1414 * Determines if the last query error was due to a dropped connection and should
1415 * be dealt with by pinging the connection and reissuing the query.
1416 *
1417 * @return bool
1418 */
1419 public function wasErrorReissuable();
1420
1421 /**
1422 * Determines if the last failure was due to the database being read-only.
1423 *
1424 * @return bool
1425 */
1426 public function wasReadOnlyError();
1427
1428 /**
1429 * Wait for the replica DB to catch up to a given master position
1430 *
1431 * @param DBMasterPos $pos
1432 * @param int $timeout The maximum number of seconds to wait for synchronisation
1433 * @return int|null Zero if the replica DB was past that position already,
1434 * greater than zero if we waited for some period of time, less than
1435 * zero if it timed out, and null on error
1436 * @throws DBError
1437 */
1438 public function masterPosWait( DBMasterPos $pos, $timeout );
1439
1440 /**
1441 * Get the replication position of this replica DB
1442 *
1443 * @return DBMasterPos|bool False if this is not a replica DB
1444 * @throws DBError
1445 */
1446 public function getReplicaPos();
1447
1448 /**
1449 * Get the position of this master
1450 *
1451 * @return DBMasterPos|bool False if this is not a master
1452 * @throws DBError
1453 */
1454 public function getMasterPos();
1455
1456 /**
1457 * @return bool Whether the DB is marked as read-only server-side
1458 * @since 1.28
1459 */
1460 public function serverIsReadOnly();
1461
1462 /**
1463 * Run a callback as soon as the current transaction commits or rolls back.
1464 * An error is thrown if no transaction is pending. Queries in the function will run in
1465 * AUTO-COMMIT mode unless there are begin() calls. Callbacks must commit any transactions
1466 * that they begin.
1467 *
1468 * This is useful for combining cooperative locks and DB transactions.
1469 *
1470 * The callback takes one argument:
1471 * - How the transaction ended (IDatabase::TRIGGER_COMMIT or IDatabase::TRIGGER_ROLLBACK)
1472 *
1473 * @param callable $callback
1474 * @param string $fname Caller name
1475 * @return mixed
1476 * @since 1.28
1477 */
1478 public function onTransactionResolution( callable $callback, $fname = __METHOD__ );
1479
1480 /**
1481 * Run a callback as soon as there is no transaction pending.
1482 * If there is a transaction and it is rolled back, then the callback is cancelled.
1483 * Queries in the function will run in AUTO-COMMIT mode unless there are begin() calls.
1484 * Callbacks must commit any transactions that they begin.
1485 *
1486 * This is useful for updates to different systems or when separate transactions are needed.
1487 * For example, one might want to enqueue jobs into a system outside the database, but only
1488 * after the database is updated so that the jobs will see the data when they actually run.
1489 * It can also be used for updates that easily cause deadlocks if locks are held too long.
1490 *
1491 * Updates will execute in the order they were enqueued.
1492 *
1493 * The callback takes one argument:
1494 * - How the transaction ended (IDatabase::TRIGGER_COMMIT or IDatabase::TRIGGER_IDLE)
1495 *
1496 * @param callable $callback
1497 * @param string $fname Caller name
1498 * @since 1.20
1499 */
1500 public function onTransactionIdle( callable $callback, $fname = __METHOD__ );
1501
1502 /**
1503 * Run a callback before the current transaction commits or now if there is none.
1504 * If there is a transaction and it is rolled back, then the callback is cancelled.
1505 * Callbacks must not start nor commit any transactions. If no transaction is active,
1506 * then a transaction will wrap the callback.
1507 *
1508 * This is useful for updates that easily cause deadlocks if locks are held too long
1509 * but where atomicity is strongly desired for these updates and some related updates.
1510 *
1511 * Updates will execute in the order they were enqueued.
1512 *
1513 * @param callable $callback
1514 * @param string $fname Caller name
1515 * @since 1.22
1516 */
1517 public function onTransactionPreCommitOrIdle( callable $callback, $fname = __METHOD__ );
1518
1519 /**
1520 * Run a callback each time any transaction commits or rolls back
1521 *
1522 * The callback takes two arguments:
1523 * - IDatabase::TRIGGER_COMMIT or IDatabase::TRIGGER_ROLLBACK
1524 * - This IDatabase object
1525 * Callbacks must commit any transactions that they begin.
1526 *
1527 * Registering a callback here will not affect writesOrCallbacks() pending
1528 *
1529 * @param string $name Callback name
1530 * @param callable|null $callback Use null to unset a listener
1531 * @return mixed
1532 * @since 1.28
1533 */
1534 public function setTransactionListener( $name, callable $callback = null );
1535
1536 /**
1537 * Begin an atomic section of statements
1538 *
1539 * If a transaction has been started already, just keep track of the given
1540 * section name to make sure the transaction is not committed pre-maturely.
1541 * This function can be used in layers (with sub-sections), so use a stack
1542 * to keep track of the different atomic sections. If there is no transaction,
1543 * start one implicitly.
1544 *
1545 * The goal of this function is to create an atomic section of SQL queries
1546 * without having to start a new transaction if it already exists.
1547 *
1548 * All atomic levels *must* be explicitly closed using IDatabase::endAtomic(),
1549 * and any database transactions cannot be began or committed until all atomic
1550 * levels are closed. There is no such thing as implicitly opening or closing
1551 * an atomic section.
1552 *
1553 * @since 1.23
1554 * @param string $fname
1555 * @throws DBError
1556 */
1557 public function startAtomic( $fname = __METHOD__ );
1558
1559 /**
1560 * Ends an atomic section of SQL statements
1561 *
1562 * Ends the next section of atomic SQL statements and commits the transaction
1563 * if necessary.
1564 *
1565 * @since 1.23
1566 * @see IDatabase::startAtomic
1567 * @param string $fname
1568 * @throws DBError
1569 */
1570 public function endAtomic( $fname = __METHOD__ );
1571
1572 /**
1573 * Run a callback to do an atomic set of updates for this database
1574 *
1575 * The $callback takes the following arguments:
1576 * - This database object
1577 * - The value of $fname
1578 *
1579 * If any exception occurs in the callback, then rollback() will be called and the error will
1580 * be re-thrown. It may also be that the rollback itself fails with an exception before then.
1581 * In any case, such errors are expected to terminate the request, without any outside caller
1582 * attempting to catch errors and commit anyway. Note that any rollback undoes all prior
1583 * atomic section and uncommitted updates, which trashes the current request, requiring an
1584 * error to be displayed.
1585 *
1586 * This can be an alternative to explicit startAtomic()/endAtomic() calls.
1587 *
1588 * @see Database::startAtomic
1589 * @see Database::endAtomic
1590 *
1591 * @param string $fname Caller name (usually __METHOD__)
1592 * @param callable $callback Callback that issues DB updates
1593 * @return mixed $res Result of the callback (since 1.28)
1594 * @throws DBError
1595 * @throws RuntimeException
1596 * @throws UnexpectedValueException
1597 * @since 1.27
1598 */
1599 public function doAtomicSection( $fname, callable $callback );
1600
1601 /**
1602 * Begin a transaction. If a transaction is already in progress,
1603 * that transaction will be committed before the new transaction is started.
1604 *
1605 * Only call this from code with outer transcation scope.
1606 * See https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Database_transactions for details.
1607 * Nesting of transactions is not supported.
1608 *
1609 * Note that when the DBO_TRX flag is set (which is usually the case for web
1610 * requests, but not for maintenance scripts), any previous database query
1611 * will have started a transaction automatically.
1612 *
1613 * Nesting of transactions is not supported. Attempts to nest transactions
1614 * will cause a warning, unless the current transaction was started
1615 * automatically because of the DBO_TRX flag.
1616 *
1617 * @param string $fname Calling function name
1618 * @param string $mode A situationally valid IDatabase::TRANSACTION_* constant [optional]
1619 * @throws DBError
1620 */
1621 public function begin( $fname = __METHOD__, $mode = self::TRANSACTION_EXPLICIT );
1622
1623 /**
1624 * Commits a transaction previously started using begin().
1625 * If no transaction is in progress, a warning is issued.
1626 *
1627 * Only call this from code with outer transcation scope.
1628 * See https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Database_transactions for details.
1629 * Nesting of transactions is not supported.
1630 *
1631 * @param string $fname
1632 * @param string $flush Flush flag, set to situationally valid IDatabase::FLUSHING_*
1633 * constant to disable warnings about explicitly committing implicit transactions,
1634 * or calling commit when no transaction is in progress.
1635 *
1636 * This will trigger an exception if there is an ongoing explicit transaction.
1637 *
1638 * Only set the flush flag if you are sure that these warnings are not applicable,
1639 * and no explicit transactions are open.
1640 *
1641 * @throws DBError
1642 */
1643 public function commit( $fname = __METHOD__, $flush = '' );
1644
1645 /**
1646 * Rollback a transaction previously started using begin().
1647 * If no transaction is in progress, a warning is issued.
1648 *
1649 * Only call this from code with outer transcation scope.
1650 * See https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Database_transactions for details.
1651 * Nesting of transactions is not supported. If a serious unexpected error occurs,
1652 * throwing an Exception is preferrable, using a pre-installed error handler to trigger
1653 * rollback (in any case, failure to issue COMMIT will cause rollback server-side).
1654 *
1655 * Query, connection, and onTransaction* callback errors will be suppressed and logged.
1656 *
1657 * @param string $fname Calling function name
1658 * @param string $flush Flush flag, set to a situationally valid IDatabase::FLUSHING_*
1659 * constant to disable warnings about calling rollback when no transaction is in
1660 * progress. This will silently break any ongoing explicit transaction. Only set the
1661 * flush flag if you are sure that it is safe to ignore these warnings in your context.
1662 * @throws DBError
1663 * @since 1.23 Added $flush parameter
1664 */
1665 public function rollback( $fname = __METHOD__, $flush = '' );
1666
1667 /**
1668 * Commit any transaction but error out if writes or callbacks are pending
1669 *
1670 * This is intended for clearing out REPEATABLE-READ snapshots so that callers can
1671 * see a new point-in-time of the database. This is useful when one of many transaction
1672 * rounds finished and significant time will pass in the script's lifetime. It is also
1673 * useful to call on a replica DB after waiting on replication to catch up to the master.
1674 *
1675 * @param string $fname Calling function name
1676 * @throws DBError
1677 * @since 1.28
1678 */
1679 public function flushSnapshot( $fname = __METHOD__ );
1680
1681 /**
1682 * List all tables on the database
1683 *
1684 * @param string $prefix Only show tables with this prefix, e.g. mw_
1685 * @param string $fname Calling function name
1686 * @throws DBError
1687 * @return array
1688 */
1689 public function listTables( $prefix = null, $fname = __METHOD__ );
1690
1691 /**
1692 * Convert a timestamp in one of the formats accepted by wfTimestamp()
1693 * to the format used for inserting into timestamp fields in this DBMS.
1694 *
1695 * The result is unquoted, and needs to be passed through addQuotes()
1696 * before it can be included in raw SQL.
1697 *
1698 * @param string|int $ts
1699 *
1700 * @return string
1701 */
1702 public function timestamp( $ts = 0 );
1703
1704 /**
1705 * Convert a timestamp in one of the formats accepted by wfTimestamp()
1706 * to the format used for inserting into timestamp fields in this DBMS. If
1707 * NULL is input, it is passed through, allowing NULL values to be inserted
1708 * into timestamp fields.
1709 *
1710 * The result is unquoted, and needs to be passed through addQuotes()
1711 * before it can be included in raw SQL.
1712 *
1713 * @param string|int $ts
1714 *
1715 * @return string
1716 */
1717 public function timestampOrNull( $ts = null );
1718
1719 /**
1720 * Ping the server and try to reconnect if it there is no connection
1721 *
1722 * @param float|null &$rtt Value to store the estimated RTT [optional]
1723 * @return bool Success or failure
1724 */
1725 public function ping( &$rtt = null );
1726
1727 /**
1728 * Get replica DB lag. Currently supported only by MySQL.
1729 *
1730 * Note that this function will generate a fatal error on many
1731 * installations. Most callers should use LoadBalancer::safeGetLag()
1732 * instead.
1733 *
1734 * @return int|bool Database replication lag in seconds or false on error
1735 * @throws DBError
1736 */
1737 public function getLag();
1738
1739 /**
1740 * Get the replica DB lag when the current transaction started
1741 * or a general lag estimate if not transaction is active
1742 *
1743 * This is useful when transactions might use snapshot isolation
1744 * (e.g. REPEATABLE-READ in innodb), so the "real" lag of that data
1745 * is this lag plus transaction duration. If they don't, it is still
1746 * safe to be pessimistic. In AUTO-COMMIT mode, this still gives an
1747 * indication of the staleness of subsequent reads.
1748 *
1749 * @return array ('lag': seconds or false on error, 'since': UNIX timestamp of BEGIN)
1750 * @throws DBError
1751 * @since 1.27
1752 */
1753 public function getSessionLagStatus();
1754
1755 /**
1756 * Return the maximum number of items allowed in a list, or 0 for unlimited.
1757 *
1758 * @return int
1759 */
1760 public function maxListLen();
1761
1762 /**
1763 * Some DBMSs have a special format for inserting into blob fields, they
1764 * don't allow simple quoted strings to be inserted. To insert into such
1765 * a field, pass the data through this function before passing it to
1766 * IDatabase::insert().
1767 *
1768 * @param string $b
1769 * @return string|Blob
1770 */
1771 public function encodeBlob( $b );
1772
1773 /**
1774 * Some DBMSs return a special placeholder object representing blob fields
1775 * in result objects. Pass the object through this function to return the
1776 * original string.
1777 *
1778 * @param string|Blob $b
1779 * @return string
1780 */
1781 public function decodeBlob( $b );
1782
1783 /**
1784 * Override database's default behavior. $options include:
1785 * 'connTimeout' : Set the connection timeout value in seconds.
1786 * May be useful for very long batch queries such as
1787 * full-wiki dumps, where a single query reads out over
1788 * hours or days.
1789 *
1790 * @param array $options
1791 * @return void
1792 * @throws DBError
1793 */
1794 public function setSessionOptions( array $options );
1795
1796 /**
1797 * Set variables to be used in sourceFile/sourceStream, in preference to the
1798 * ones in $GLOBALS. If an array is set here, $GLOBALS will not be used at
1799 * all. If it's set to false, $GLOBALS will be used.
1800 *
1801 * @param bool|array $vars Mapping variable name to value.
1802 */
1803 public function setSchemaVars( $vars );
1804
1805 /**
1806 * Check to see if a named lock is not locked by any thread (non-blocking)
1807 *
1808 * @param string $lockName Name of lock to poll
1809 * @param string $method Name of method calling us
1810 * @return bool
1811 * @throws DBError
1812 * @since 1.20
1813 */
1814 public function lockIsFree( $lockName, $method );
1815
1816 /**
1817 * Acquire a named lock
1818 *
1819 * Named locks are not related to transactions
1820 *
1821 * @param string $lockName Name of lock to aquire
1822 * @param string $method Name of the calling method
1823 * @param int $timeout Acquisition timeout in seconds
1824 * @return bool
1825 * @throws DBError
1826 */
1827 public function lock( $lockName, $method, $timeout = 5 );
1828
1829 /**
1830 * Release a lock
1831 *
1832 * Named locks are not related to transactions
1833 *
1834 * @param string $lockName Name of lock to release
1835 * @param string $method Name of the calling method
1836 *
1837 * @return int Returns 1 if the lock was released, 0 if the lock was not established
1838 * by this thread (in which case the lock is not released), and NULL if the named lock
1839 * did not exist
1840 *
1841 * @throws DBError
1842 */
1843 public function unlock( $lockName, $method );
1844
1845 /**
1846 * Acquire a named lock, flush any transaction, and return an RAII style unlocker object
1847 *
1848 * Only call this from outer transcation scope and when only one DB will be affected.
1849 * See https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Database_transactions for details.
1850 *
1851 * This is suitiable for transactions that need to be serialized using cooperative locks,
1852 * where each transaction can see each others' changes. Any transaction is flushed to clear
1853 * out stale REPEATABLE-READ snapshot data. Once the returned object falls out of PHP scope,
1854 * the lock will be released unless a transaction is active. If one is active, then the lock
1855 * will be released when it either commits or rolls back.
1856 *
1857 * If the lock acquisition failed, then no transaction flush happens, and null is returned.
1858 *
1859 * @param string $lockKey Name of lock to release
1860 * @param string $fname Name of the calling method
1861 * @param int $timeout Acquisition timeout in seconds
1862 * @return ScopedCallback|null
1863 * @throws DBError
1864 * @since 1.27
1865 */
1866 public function getScopedLockAndFlush( $lockKey, $fname, $timeout );
1867
1868 /**
1869 * Check to see if a named lock used by lock() use blocking queues
1870 *
1871 * @return bool
1872 * @since 1.26
1873 */
1874 public function namedLocksEnqueue();
1875
1876 /**
1877 * Find out when 'infinity' is. Most DBMSes support this. This is a special
1878 * keyword for timestamps in PostgreSQL, and works with CHAR(14) as well
1879 * because "i" sorts after all numbers.
1880 *
1881 * @return string
1882 */
1883 public function getInfinity();
1884
1885 /**
1886 * Encode an expiry time into the DBMS dependent format
1887 *
1888 * @param string $expiry Timestamp for expiry, or the 'infinity' string
1889 * @return string
1890 */
1891 public function encodeExpiry( $expiry );
1892
1893 /**
1894 * Decode an expiry time into a DBMS independent format
1895 *
1896 * @param string $expiry DB timestamp field value for expiry
1897 * @param int $format TS_* constant, defaults to TS_MW
1898 * @return string
1899 */
1900 public function decodeExpiry( $expiry, $format = TS_MW );
1901
1902 /**
1903 * Allow or deny "big selects" for this session only. This is done by setting
1904 * the sql_big_selects session variable.
1905 *
1906 * This is a MySQL-specific feature.
1907 *
1908 * @param bool|string $value True for allow, false for deny, or "default" to
1909 * restore the initial value
1910 */
1911 public function setBigSelects( $value = true );
1912
1913 /**
1914 * @return bool Whether this DB is read-only
1915 * @since 1.27
1916 */
1917 public function isReadOnly();
1918
1919 /**
1920 * Make certain table names use their own database, schema, and table prefix
1921 * when passed into SQL queries pre-escaped and without a qualified database name
1922 *
1923 * For example, "user" can be converted to "myschema.mydbname.user" for convenience.
1924 * Appearances like `user`, somedb.user, somedb.someschema.user will used literally.
1925 *
1926 * Calling this twice will completely clear any old table aliases. Also, note that
1927 * callers are responsible for making sure the schemas and databases actually exist.
1928 *
1929 * @param array[] $aliases Map of (table => (dbname, schema, prefix) map)
1930 * @since 1.28
1931 */
1932 public function setTableAliases( array $aliases );
1933 }
1934
1935 class_alias( IDatabase::class, 'IDatabase' );