Shows the SQL query constructed by PDO. Seriously. The magic behind: A simple function that combines your parameters and the raw query. Please note that this is just an emulation, not the "real" result of PDO, but it does the job for nearly all common daily tasks. Way better than NOTHING!
- one simple global function
debugPDO($sql, $parameters)
- works with named parameters (like ':param_1') and question-mark-parameters (like '?')
- this repo also contains a demo .sql file for easily testing the example below
Taken from here: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/210564/getting-raw-sql-query-string-from-pdo-prepared-statements, big big big thanks to bigwebguy (http://stackoverflow.com/users/168256/bigwebguy) and Mike (http://stackoverflow.com/users/1083889/mike) for creating the debugQuery() function!
As usual, require this via Composer (require-dev might be more useful as you definitely don't need this in production):
"require-dev": {
"panique/pdo-debug": "0.2"
}
Your PDO block probably looks like this:
$sql = "INSERT INTO test (col1, col2, col3) VALUES (:col1, :col2, :col3)";
and this, right ?
$query->execute(array(':col1' => $param_1, ':col2' => $param_2, ':col3' => $param_3));
To use this PDO logger, you'll have to rebuild the param array a little bit: Create an array that has the identifier as the key and the parameter as the value, like below: WARNING: write this WITHOUT the colon! The keys need to be 'xxx', not ':xxx'!
$parameters = array(
'param1' => 'hello',
'param2' => 123,
'param3' => null
);
Your full PDO block would then look like:
$sql = "INSERT INTO test (col1, col2, col3) VALUES (:param1, :param2, :param3)";
$query = $database_connection->prepare($sql);
$query->execute($parameters);
Now you can debug / log the full SQL statement by using the static method show()
of the PdoDebugger class. Make sure
to pass the raw SQL statement and the parameters array that contains proper keys and values. Future releases might have
a more professional way of handling this.
echo PdoDebugger::show($sql, $parameters);
The result of this example will be:
INSERT INTO test (col1, col2, col3) VALUES ('hello', 123, NULL)
Yeah!
Support the project by renting a server at DigitalOcean or just tipping a coffee at BuyMeACoffee.com. Thanks! :)