$uid)); * foreach ($result as $record) { * // Perform operations on $record->title, etc. here. * } * @endcode * * Note that if your query has a string condition, like: * @code * WHERE e.my_field = 'foo' * @endcode * when you convert it to placeholders, omit the quotes: * @code * WHERE e.my_field = :my_field * ... array(':my_field' => 'foo') ... * @endcode * * @section sec_dynamic Dynamic SELECT queries * For SELECT queries where the simple query API described in @ref sec_simple * will not work well, you need to use the dynamic query API. However, you * should still use the Entity Query API if your query involves entities or * fields (see the @link entity_api Entity API topic @endlink for more on * entity queries). * * As a note, db_select() and similar functions are wrappers on connection * object methods. In most classes, you should use dependency injection and the * database connection object instead of these wrappers; See @ref sec_connection * below for details. * * The dynamic query API lets you build up a query dynamically using method * calls. As an illustration, the query example from @ref sec_simple above * would be: * @code * $result = db_select('example', 'e') * ->fields('e', array('id', 'title', 'created')) * ->condition('e.uid', $uid) * ->orderBy('e.created', 'DESC') * ->range(0, 10) * ->execute(); * @endcode * * There are also methods to join to other tables, add fields with aliases, * isNull() to have a @code WHERE e.foo IS NULL @endcode condition, etc. See * https://www.drupal.org/developing/api/database for many more details. * * One note on chaining: It is common in the dynamic database API to chain * method calls (as illustrated here), because most of the query methods modify * the query object and then return the modified query as their return * value. However, there are some important exceptions; these methods (and some * others) do not support chaining: * - join(), innerJoin(), etc.: These methods return the joined table alias. * - addField(): This method returns the field alias. * Check the documentation for the query method you are using to see if it * returns the query or something else, and only chain methods that return the * query. * * @section_insert INSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE queries * INSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE queries need special care in order to behave * consistently across databases; you should never use db_query() to run * an INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE query. Instead, use functions db_insert(), * db_update(), and db_delete() to obtain a base query on your table, and then * add dynamic conditions (as illustrated in @ref sec_dynamic above). * * As a note, db_insert() and similar functions are wrappers on connection * object methods. In most classes, you should use dependency injection and the * database connection object instead of these wrappers; See @ref sec_connection * below for details. * * For example, if your query is: * @code * INSERT INTO example (id, uid, path, name) VALUES (1, 2, 'path', 'Name'); * @endcode * You can execute it via: * @code * $fields = array('id' => 1, 'uid' => 2, 'path' => 'path', 'name' => 'Name'); * db_insert('example') * ->fields($fields) * ->execute(); * @endcode * * @section sec_transaction Transactions * Drupal supports transactions, including a transparent fallback for * databases that do not support transactions. To start a new transaction, * call @code $txn = db_transaction(); @endcode The transaction will * remain open for as long as the variable $txn remains in scope; when $txn is * destroyed, the transaction will be committed. If your transaction is nested * inside of another then Drupal will track each transaction and only commit * the outer-most transaction when the last transaction object goes out out of * scope (when all relevant queries have completed successfully). * * Example: * @code * function my_transaction_function() { * // The transaction opens here. * $txn = db_transaction(); * * try { * $id = db_insert('example') * ->fields(array( * 'field1' => 'mystring', * 'field2' => 5, * )) * ->execute(); * * my_other_function($id); * * return $id; * } * catch (Exception $e) { * // Something went wrong somewhere, so roll back now. * $txn->rollBack(); * // Log the exception to watchdog. * watchdog_exception('type', $e); * } * * // $txn goes out of scope here. Unless the transaction was rolled back, it * // gets automatically committed here. * } * * function my_other_function($id) { * // The transaction is still open here. * * if ($id % 2 == 0) { * db_update('example') * ->condition('id', $id) * ->fields(array('field2' => 10)) * ->execute(); * } * } * @endcode * * @section sec_connection Database connection objects * The examples here all use functions like db_select() and db_query(), which * can be called from any Drupal method or function code. In some classes, you * may already have a database connection object in a member variable, or it may * be passed into a class constructor via dependency injection. If that is the * case, you can look at the code for db_select() and the other functions to see * how to get a query object from your connection variable. For example: * @code * $query = $connection->select('example', 'e'); * @endcode * would be the equivalent of * @code * $query = db_select('example', 'e'); * @endcode * if you had a connection object variable $connection available to use. See * also the @link container Services and Dependency Injection topic. @endlink * * @see https://www.drupal.org/developing/api/database * @see entity_api * @see schemaapi * * @} */ /** * @defgroup schemaapi Schema API * @{ * API to handle database schemas. * * A Drupal schema definition is an array structure representing one or * more tables and their related keys and indexes. A schema is defined by * hook_schema(), which usually lives in a modulename.install file. * * By implementing hook_schema() and specifying the tables your module * declares, you can easily create and drop these tables on all * supported database engines. You don't have to deal with the * different SQL dialects for table creation and alteration of the * supported database engines. * * hook_schema() should return an array with a key for each table that * the module defines. * * The following keys are defined: * - 'description': A string in non-markup plain text describing this table * and its purpose. References to other tables should be enclosed in * curly-brackets. For example, the node_field_revision table * description field might contain "Stores per-revision title and * body data for each {node}." * - 'fields': An associative array ('fieldname' => specification) * that describes the table's database columns. The specification * is also an array. The following specification parameters are defined: * - 'description': A string in non-markup plain text describing this field * and its purpose. References to other tables should be enclosed in * curly-brackets. For example, the node table vid field * description might contain "Always holds the largest (most * recent) {node_field_revision}.vid value for this nid." * - 'type': The generic datatype: 'char', 'varchar', 'text', 'blob', 'int', * 'float', 'numeric', or 'serial'. Most types just map to the according * database engine specific datatypes. Use 'serial' for auto incrementing * fields. This will expand to 'INT auto_increment' on MySQL. * A special 'varchar_ascii' type is also available for limiting machine * name field to US ASCII characters. * - 'mysql_type', 'pgsql_type', 'sqlite_type', etc.: If you need to * use a record type not included in the officially supported list * of types above, you can specify a type for each database * backend. In this case, you can leave out the type parameter, * but be advised that your schema will fail to load on backends that * do not have a type specified. A possible solution can be to * use the "text" type as a fallback. * - 'serialize': A boolean indicating whether the field will be stored as * a serialized string. * - 'size': The data size: 'tiny', 'small', 'medium', 'normal', * 'big'. This is a hint about the largest value the field will * store and determines which of the database engine specific * datatypes will be used (e.g. on MySQL, TINYINT vs. INT vs. BIGINT). * 'normal', the default, selects the base type (e.g. on MySQL, * INT, VARCHAR, BLOB, etc.). * Not all sizes are available for all data types. See * DatabaseSchema::getFieldTypeMap() for possible combinations. * - 'not null': If true, no NULL values will be allowed in this * database column. Defaults to false. * - 'default': The field's default value. The PHP type of the * value matters: '', '0', and 0 are all different. If you * specify '0' as the default value for a type 'int' field it * will not work because '0' is a string containing the * character "zero", not an integer. * - 'length': The maximal length of a type 'char', 'varchar' or 'text' * field. Ignored for other field types. * - 'unsigned': A boolean indicating whether a type 'int', 'float' * and 'numeric' only is signed or unsigned. Defaults to * FALSE. Ignored for other field types. * - 'precision', 'scale': For type 'numeric' fields, indicates * the precision (total number of significant digits) and scale * (decimal digits right of the decimal point). Both values are * mandatory. Ignored for other field types. * - 'binary': A boolean indicating that MySQL should force 'char', * 'varchar' or 'text' fields to use case-sensitive binary collation. * This has no effect on other database types for which case sensitivity * is already the default behavior. * All parameters apart from 'type' are optional except that type * 'numeric' columns must specify 'precision' and 'scale', and type * 'varchar' must specify the 'length' parameter. * - 'primary key': An array of one or more key column specifiers (see below) * that form the primary key. * - 'unique keys': An associative array of unique keys ('keyname' => * specification). Each specification is an array of one or more * key column specifiers (see below) that form a unique key on the table. * - 'foreign keys': An associative array of relations ('my_relation' => * specification). Each specification is an array containing the name of * the referenced table ('table'), and an array of column mappings * ('columns'). Column mappings are defined by key pairs ('source_column' => * 'referenced_column'). This key is for documentation purposes only; foreign * keys are not created in the database, nor are they enforced by Drupal. * - 'indexes': An associative array of indexes ('indexname' => * specification). Each specification is an array of one or more * key column specifiers (see below) that form an index on the * table. * * A key column specifier is either a string naming a column or an * array of two elements, column name and length, specifying a prefix * of the named column. * * As an example, here is a SUBSET of the schema definition for * Drupal's 'node' table. It show four fields (nid, vid, type, and * title), the primary key on field 'nid', a unique key named 'vid' on * field 'vid', and two indexes, one named 'nid' on field 'nid' and * one named 'node_title_type' on the field 'title' and the first four * bytes of the field 'type': * * @code * $schema['node'] = array( * 'description' => 'The base table for nodes.', * 'fields' => array( * 'nid' => array('type' => 'serial', 'unsigned' => TRUE, 'not null' => TRUE), * 'vid' => array('type' => 'int', 'unsigned' => TRUE, 'not null' => TRUE,'default' => 0), * 'type' => array('type' => 'varchar','length' => 32,'not null' => TRUE, 'default' => ''), * 'language' => array('type' => 'varchar','length' => 12,'not null' => TRUE,'default' => ''), * 'title' => array('type' => 'varchar','length' => 255,'not null' => TRUE, 'default' => ''), * 'uid' => array('type' => 'int', 'not null' => TRUE, 'default' => 0), * 'status' => array('type' => 'int', 'not null' => TRUE, 'default' => 1), * 'created' => array('type' => 'int', 'not null' => TRUE, 'default' => 0), * 'changed' => array('type' => 'int', 'not null' => TRUE, 'default' => 0), * 'comment' => array('type' => 'int', 'not null' => TRUE, 'default' => 0), * 'promote' => array('type' => 'int', 'not null' => TRUE, 'default' => 0), * 'moderate' => array('type' => 'int', 'not null' => TRUE,'default' => 0), * 'sticky' => array('type' => 'int', 'not null' => TRUE, 'default' => 0), * 'translate' => array('type' => 'int', 'not null' => TRUE, 'default' => 0), * ), * 'indexes' => array( * 'node_changed' => array('changed'), * 'node_created' => array('created'), * 'node_moderate' => array('moderate'), * 'node_frontpage' => array('promote', 'status', 'sticky', 'created'), * 'node_status_type' => array('status', 'type', 'nid'), * 'node_title_type' => array('title', array('type', 4)), * 'node_type' => array(array('type', 4)), * 'uid' => array('uid'), * 'translate' => array('translate'), * ), * 'unique keys' => array( * 'vid' => array('vid'), * ), * // For documentation purposes only; foreign keys are not created in the * // database. * 'foreign keys' => array( * 'node_revision' => array( * 'table' => 'node_field_revision', * 'columns' => array('vid' => 'vid'), * ), * 'node_author' => array( * 'table' => 'users', * 'columns' => array('uid' => 'uid'), * ), * ), * 'primary key' => array('nid'), * ); * @endcode * * @see drupal_install_schema() * * @} */ /** * @addtogroup hooks * @{ */ /** * Perform alterations to a structured query. * * Structured (aka dynamic) queries that have tags associated may be altered by any module * before the query is executed. * * @param $query * A Query object describing the composite parts of a SQL query. * * @see hook_query_TAG_alter() * @see node_query_node_access_alter() * @see AlterableInterface * @see SelectInterface * * @ingroup database */ function hook_query_alter(Drupal\Core\Database\Query\AlterableInterface $query) { if ($query->hasTag('micro_limit')) { $query->range(0, 2); } } /** * Perform alterations to a structured query for a given tag. * * @param $query * An Query object describing the composite parts of a SQL query. * * @see hook_query_alter() * @see node_query_node_access_alter() * @see AlterableInterface * @see SelectInterface * * @ingroup database */ function hook_query_TAG_alter(Drupal\Core\Database\Query\AlterableInterface $query) { // Skip the extra expensive alterations if site has no node access control modules. if (!node_access_view_all_nodes()) { // Prevent duplicates records. $query->distinct(); // The recognized operations are 'view', 'update', 'delete'. if (!$op = $query->getMetaData('op')) { $op = 'view'; } // Skip the extra joins and conditions for node admins. if (!\Drupal::currentUser()->hasPermission('bypass node access')) { // The node_access table has the access grants for any given node. $access_alias = $query->join('node_access', 'na', '%alias.nid = n.nid'); $or = new Condition('OR'); // If any grant exists for the specified user, then user has access to the node for the specified operation. foreach (node_access_grants($op, $query->getMetaData('account')) as $realm => $gids) { foreach ($gids as $gid) { $or->condition((new Condition('AND')) ->condition($access_alias . '.gid', $gid) ->condition($access_alias . '.realm', $realm) ); } } if (count($or->conditions())) { $query->condition($or); } $query->condition($access_alias . 'grant_' . $op, 1, '>='); } } } /** * Define the current version of the database schema. * * A Drupal schema definition is an array structure representing one or more * tables and their related keys and indexes. A schema is defined by * hook_schema() which must live in your module's .install file. * * The tables declared by this hook will be automatically created when the * module is installed, and removed when the module is uninstalled. This happens * before hook_install() is invoked, and after hook_uninstall() is invoked, * respectively. * * By declaring the tables used by your module via an implementation of * hook_schema(), these tables will be available on all supported database * engines. You don't have to deal with the different SQL dialects for table * creation and alteration of the supported database engines. * * See the Schema API Handbook at https://www.drupal.org/node/146843 for details * on schema definition structures. Note that foreign key definitions are for * documentation purposes only; foreign keys are not created in the database, * nor are they enforced by Drupal. * * @return array * A schema definition structure array. For each element of the * array, the key is a table name and the value is a table structure * definition. * * @ingroup schemaapi */ function hook_schema() { $schema['node'] = [ // Example (partial) specification for table "node". 'description' => 'The base table for nodes.', 'fields' => [ 'nid' => [ 'description' => 'The primary identifier for a node.', 'type' => 'serial', 'unsigned' => TRUE, 'not null' => TRUE, ], 'vid' => [ 'description' => 'The current {node_field_revision}.vid version identifier.', 'type' => 'int', 'unsigned' => TRUE, 'not null' => TRUE, 'default' => 0, ], 'type' => [ 'description' => 'The type of this node.', 'type' => 'varchar', 'length' => 32, 'not null' => TRUE, 'default' => '', ], 'title' => [ 'description' => 'The node title.', 'type' => 'varchar', 'length' => 255, 'not null' => TRUE, 'default' => '', ], ], 'indexes' => [ 'node_changed' => ['changed'], 'node_created' => ['created'], ], 'unique keys' => [ 'nid_vid' => ['nid', 'vid'], 'vid' => ['vid'], ], // For documentation purposes only; foreign keys are not created in the // database. 'foreign keys' => [ 'node_revision' => [ 'table' => 'node_field_revision', 'columns' => ['vid' => 'vid'], ], 'node_author' => [ 'table' => 'users', 'columns' => ['uid' => 'uid'], ], ], 'primary key' => ['nid'], ]; return $schema; } /** * @} End of "addtogroup hooks". */