sqlsrv_query

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sqlsrv_queryPrepares and executes a query

Description

sqlsrv_query(
    resource $conn,
    string $sql,
    array $params = ?,
    array $options = ?
): mixed

Prepares and executes a query.

Parameters

conn

A connection resource returned by sqlsrv_connect().

sql

The string that defines the query to be prepared and executed.

params

An array specifying parameter information when executing a parameterized query. Array elements can be any of the following:

  • A literal value
  • A PHP variable
  • An array with this structure: array($value [, $direction [, $phpType [, $sqlType]]])
The following table describes the elements in the array structure above:

Array structure
Element Description
$value A literal value, a PHP variable, or a PHP by-reference variable.
$direction (optional) One of the following SQLSRV constants used to indicate the parameter direction: SQLSRV_PARAM_IN, SQLSRV_PARAM_OUT, SQLSRV_PARAM_INOUT. The default value is SQLSRV_PARAM_IN.
$phpType (optional) A SQLSRV_PHPTYPE_* constant that specifies PHP data type of the returned value.
$sqlType (optional) A SQLSRV_SQLTYPE_* constant that specifies the SQL Server data type of the input value.
options

An array specifying query property options. The supported keys are described in the following table:

Query Options
Key Values Description
QueryTimeout A positive integer value. Sets the query timeout in seconds. By default, the driver will wait indefinitely for results.
SendStreamParamsAtExec true or false (the default is true) Configures the driver to send all stream data at execution (true), or to send stream data in chunks (false). By default, the value is set to true. For more information, see sqlsrv_send_stream_data().
Scrollable SQLSRV_CURSOR_FORWARD, SQLSRV_CURSOR_STATIC, SQLSRV_CURSOR_DYNAMIC, or SQLSRV_CURSOR_KEYSET See » Specifying a Cursor Type and Selecting Rows in the Microsoft SQLSRV documentation.

Return Values

Returns a statement resource on success and false if an error occurred.

Examples

Example #1 sqlsrv_query() example

<?php
$serverName
= "serverName\sqlexpress";
$connectionInfo = array( "Database"=>"dbName", "UID"=>"username", "PWD"=>"password" );
$conn = sqlsrv_connect( $serverName, $connectionInfo);
if(
$conn === false ) {
die(
print_r( sqlsrv_errors(), true));
}

$sql = "INSERT INTO Table_1 (id, data) VALUES (?, ?)";
$params = array(1, "some data");

$stmt = sqlsrv_query( $conn, $sql, $params);
if(
$stmt === false ) {
die(
print_r( sqlsrv_errors(), true));
}
?>

Notes

For statements that you plan to execute only once, use sqlsrv_query(). If you intend to re-execute a statement with different parameter values, use the combination of sqlsrv_prepare() and sqlsrv_execute().

See Also

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User Contributed Notes 6 notes

up
23
bill_spam0001 at yahoo dot com
10 years ago
If you are getting an error while attempting to execute your query, and the output of sqlsrv_errors(SQLSRV_ERR_ERRORS) is this:

SQLSTATE: IMSSP
code: -14
message: An invalid parameter was passed to sqlsrv_query.

You have failed to pass a valid parameter to sqlsrv_query itself, which could be one of three parameters:
Connection: a valid handled for a SQL Server Connection
Query: a valid string containing your query, with placeholders for parameters:"(?)"
Parameters: An Array containing the values for your query parameters.  (optional, but much match the number of placeholders in your Query.

I could not find any information about this error, and it turned out to be a missing connection parameter. In my case I found I had typed "$connn" instead of "$conn" in the code:
if ($stmt=sqlsrv_query($conn, $sql, $params)) { ...

While this seems like a total "noobie" thing to do, the fact of the matter is there is very little information about this SQL Server Error message itself. So, the plain meaning of SQLSTATE "IMSSP", CODE "-14" is that you provided no valid connection object to your sqlsrv_query function.

This message may appear baffling, especially if you have several occurrences of sqlsrv_query on a page, and you may have added a new occurrence after you closed your connection.

Since I wasted an enormous amount of time tracing the normal channels, I thought referencing this error here would provide some help. In was hung up on "parameter" and was thinking it was a bad parameter object, and overlooked passing an undefined connection object to sqlsrv_query
up
11
vavra at 602 dot cz
6 years ago
Attention!
If the sql contains INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE statements, the number of affected rows must be consumed. The sqlsrv_query returns a sql cursor that must be read to finish the transaction, if the result is non false. This same is valid for sqlsrv_execute. In this case the cursor must be also read using the prepared statement handle $smt.

Another solution is to place SET NOCOUNT ON at the top of the sqlsrv statement and all called procedures, functions and triggers.

We've practically observed it with sql statement with 500 inserts but only 368 was inserted without false returned. Prefixing by SET NOCOUNT ON or reading a cursor all rows were inserted.

See Processing Results (ODBC): https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/sql/relational-databases/native-client-odbc-results/processing-results-odbc Each INSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE statement returns a result set containing only the number of rows affected by the modification. This count is made available when application calls SQLRowCount. ODBC 3.x applications must either call SQLRowCount to retrieve the result set or SQLMoreResults to cancel it. When an application executes a batch or stored procedure containing multiple INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE statements, the result set from each modification statement must be processed using SQLRowCount or cancelled using SQLMoreResults. These counts can be cancelled by including a SET NOCOUNT ON statement in the batch or stored procedure.
up
5
bill_spam0001 at yahoo dot com
12 years ago
Tip: It may seem obvious, but you need to trim your strings down to fit in the database field you are saving them to via a parametrized query or a stored procedure. (IE: only submit up to 20 characters to a VARCHAR(20) database field). If you send a larger string to the query then it can handle, you will get an error.

When cleaning up your strings, you will most likely find yourself using the php substr() function. This function will return, as documented, a boolean FALSE value when presented with an empty string. Not minding this boolean FALSE value will cause "0" to be saved in your database tables instead of an empty string.

Since trimming your input is also important, the simple and intuitive solution for this is to trim your substr() output, which will consistently supply and empty string, not boolean FALSE.

So this will always work:
<?php
//trim last returns our empty string as a data type of string
$address_line_2 = trim(substr($_POST['addr2']),0,30));

echo
gettype($address_line_2);  //outputs string

//executing a database query will save "" in field tblAddressBook.addr2
$sql = "update tblAddressBook set name=(?), addr1=(?), addr2=(?),..."
$params = array($name, $address_line_1, $address_line_2, ...)
$sql_srv_query($db_conn, $sql, $params);

?>
This second way will give seemingly unexpected data in your database.
<?php
//if the result of trimming our post variable is "" (empty), substr() will return FALSE
$address_line_2 = substr(trim($_POST['addr2'])),0,30);

//$address_line_2 actually === FALSE, not ""
echo gettype($address_line_2);  //outputs boolean

//executing a database query will save "0" in field tblAddressBook.addr2
$sql = "update tblAddressBook set name=(?), addr1=(?), addr2=(?),..."
$params = array($name, $address_line_1, $address_line_2, ...)
$sql_srv_query($db_conn, $sql, $params);

?>

You can also cast the type as a string using,
which will cast the boolean false back to the expected Empty String.
<?php

$address_line_2
= (string)substr(trim($_POST['addr2'])),0,30);

echo
gettype($address_line_2);  //outputs string

//executing a database query will save "" in field tblAddressBook.addr2
$sql = "update tblAddressBook set name=(?), addr1=(?), addr2=(?),..."
$params = array($name, $address_line_1, $address_line_2, ...)
$sql_srv_query($db_conn, $sql, $params);

?>

I didn't notice this behavior until switching to IIS7, PHP 5.3.8 and SQL Server 2008.  But the behavior also is exhibited with IIS7, PHP 5.2 and SQL Server 2008.
up
1
erikpsundberg at gmail dot com
4 years ago
2 Working Example

print "<h1>SQL Query non PDO</h1>";
print "<h2>Connection</h2>";
$connectionInfo = array( "Database"=>$sql_database, "UID"=>$sql_username, "PWD"=>$sql_password );
$conn = sqlsrv_connect( $sql_server, $connectionInfo);

if( $conn === false ) {
     die( print_r( sqlsrv_errors(), true));
} else {
    print "Good DB Connection: $conn<br>";
}

print "<h2>Query Example 1 | Fetching by Associate Array</h2>";
$sql = "SELECT username, active FROM users WHERE username = '$username'";
print "SQL: $sql\n";
$result = sqlsrv_query($conn, $sql);
if($result === false) {
    die(print_r(sqlsrv_errors(), true));
}
#Fetching Data by array
while($row = sqlsrv_fetch_array($result, SQLSRV_FETCH_ASSOC)) {
    print_r($row);
}

print_line();
print "<h2>Query Example 2 | injection protection | Fetching by Object</h2>";
$sql = "SELECT username, active FROM users WHERE username = ?";
print "SQL: $sql\n";
$result = sqlsrv_query($conn, $sql, array($username));
if($result === false) {
    die(print_r(sqlsrv_errors(), true));
}
#Fetching Data by object
while($row = sqlsrv_fetch_object($result)) {
    print_r($row);
}

--------------------------------------------------
Result

Connection
Good DB Connection: Resource id #2
Query Example 1 | Fetching by Associate Array
SQL: SELECT username, active FROM users WHERE username = 'admin'
Array
(
    [username] => admin
    [active] => 1
)
######################################################################
Query Example 2 | injection protection | Fetching by Object
SQL: SELECT username, active FROM users WHERE username = ?
stdClass Object
(
    [username] => admin
    [active] => 1
)
up
0
oleg at mastak dot fi
11 years ago
If you hit an error "[Microsoft][ODBC Driver Manager] Invalid cursor state " when you specify valid Scrollable cursor, please check following bug report:

https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=63498

There is currently a bug that requires options Scrollable to be specified before QueryTimeout in corresponding array.
up
-1
anon at example dot com
5 years ago
Note that you can get multiple results when executing a single query, for example:

    <?php
    $stmt
= sqlsrv_query($conn, "use dbname; select 1");
   
?>

Running the same query in tsql or management studio works as expected. However, with sqlsrv_* functions, this gives you two result sets -- one for the "use" and one for the "select".

    <?php
   
// Advance the result pointer from "use" to "select"
   
sqlsrv_next_result($stmt);

   
// Now you can read the "1"
   
print_r(sqlsrv_fetch_array($stmt));
   
?>

For a complex query that begins by creating/populating temporary tables, you will need to advance the result pointer past such statements to get data from the final select statement. In older PHP versions (using FreeTDS-based mssql connectivity at least), you'd get only the last result so didn't need to take this into account.
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