Note: master branch is being upgraded for PHP 8.2+
Branch 2.x contains the stable version compatible with PHP 7.2+
This package has two parts and purposes
- Converter of PostgreSQL data types to their PHP equivalents and back and
- An OO wrapper around PHP's native pgsql extension.
While the converter part can be used separately e.g. with PDO, features like transparent conversion of query results work only with the wrapper.
Require the package with composer:
composer require sad_spirit/pg_wrapper
pg_wrapper requires at least PHP 8.2. Native pgsql extension should be enabled to use classes that access the DB (the extension is not a hard requirement).
Minimum supported PostgreSQL version is 9.3
It is highly recommended to use PSR-6 compatible metadata cache in production to prevent possible metadata lookups from database on each page request.
PostgreSQL supports a large (and extensible) set of complex database types: arrays, ranges, geometric and date/time types, composite (row) types, JSON...
create table test (
strings text[],
coords point,
occupied daterange,
age interval,
document json
);
insert into test values (
array['Mary had', 'a little lamb'], point(55.75, 37.61),
daterange('2014-01-13', '2014-09-19'), age('2014-09-19', '2014-01-13'),
'{"title":"pg_wrapper","text":"pg_wrapper is cool"}'
);
Unfortunately neither of PHP extensions for talking to PostgreSQL (pgsql and PDO_pgsql) can map these complex types to their PHP equivalents. They return string representations instead:
var_dump(pg_fetch_assoc(pg_query($conn, 'select * from test')));
yields
array(5) {
'strings' =>
string(28) "{"Mary had","a little lamb"}"
'coords' =>
string(13) "(55.75,37.61)"
'occupied' =>
string(23) "[2014-01-13,2014-09-19)"
'age' =>
string(13) "8 mons 6 days"
'document' =>
string(50) "{"title":"pg_wrapper","text":"pg_wrapper is cool"}"
}
And that is where this library kicks in:
$result = $connection->execute('select * from test');
var_dump($result[0]);
yields
array(5) {
'strings' =>
array(2) {
[0] =>
string(8) "Mary had"
[1] =>
string(13) "a little lamb"
}
'coords' =>
class sad_spirit\pg_wrapper\types\Point#18 (1) {
private $_coordinates =>
array(2) {
'x' =>
double(55.75)
'y' =>
double(37.61)
}
}
'occupied' =>
class sad_spirit\pg_wrapper\types\DateTimeRange#19 (1) {
...
}
'age' =>
class sad_spirit\pg_wrapper\types\DateInterval#22 (16) {
...
}
'document' =>
array(2) {
'title' =>
string(10) "pg_wrapper"
'text' =>
string(18) "pg_wrapper is cool"
}
}
The goal of an abstraction layer is to target the Lowest Common Denominator and thus it intentionally hides some low-level APIs that we can use with the native extension and / or adds another level of complexity.
- PDO does not expose
pg_query_params()
, so you have toprepare()
/execute()
each query even if youexecute()
it only once. Doctrine DBAL hasConnection::executeQuery()
but it usesprepare()
/execute()
under the hood. - Postgres only supports
$1
positional parameters natively, while PDO has positional?
and named:foo
parameters. PDO actually rewrites the query to convert the latter to the former, which (before PHP 7.4) prevented using Postgres operators containing?
with PDO and can still lead to problems when using dollar quoting for strings. - PDO does not expose
pg_field_type_oid()
and itsPDOStatement::getColumnMeta()
returns type name without a schema name and may run a metadata query each time to get that.
Another example: a very common problem for database abstraction is providing a list of parameters to a query with an IN
clause
SELECT * FROM stuff WHERE id IN (?)
where ?
actually represents a variable number of parameters.
On the one hand, if you don't need the abstraction, then Postgres has native array types, and this can be easily achieved with the following query
-- in case of using PDO just replace $1 with a PDO-compatible placeholder
SELECT * FROM stuff WHERE id = ANY($1::INTEGER[])
passing an array literal as its parameter value
use sad_spirit\pg_wrapper\converters\DefaultTypeConverterFactory;
$arrayLiteral = (new DefaultTypeConverterFactory())
->getConverterForTypeSpecification('INTEGER[]')
->output([1, 2, 3]);
On the other hand, Doctrine DBAL has its own solution for parameter lists
which once again depends on rewriting SQL and does not work with prepare()
/ execute()
. It also has "support" for array
types,
but that just (un)serializes PHP arrays rather than converts them from/to native DB representation,
which will obviously not work with the above query.
Is in the wiki
Type conversion:
TypeConverter
interface and its implementationsTypeConverterFactory
interface and its default implementation
Working with PostgreSQL: