PHP 5 Cookies

PHP 5 Cookies
❮ Previous Next ❯
A cookie is often used to identify a user.

What is a Cookie?
A cookie is often used to identify a user. A cookie is a small file that the server embeds on the user’s computer. Each time the same computer requests a page with a browser, it will send the cookie too. With PHP, you can both create and retrieve cookie values.

Create Cookies With PHP
A cookie is created with the setcookie() function.

Syntax
setcookie(name, value, expire, path, domain, secure, httponly);
Only the name parameter is required. All other parameters are optional.

PHP Create/Retrieve a Cookie
The following example creates a cookie named “user” with the value “John Doe”. The cookie will expire after 30 days (86400 * 30). The “/” means that the cookie is available in entire website (otherwise, select the directory you prefer).

We then retrieve the value of the cookie “user” (using the global variable $_COOKIE). We also use the isset() function to find out if the cookie is set:

Example
<?php
$cookie_name = “user”;
$cookie_value = “John Doe”;
setcookie($cookie_name, $cookie_value, time() + (86400 * 30), “/”); // 86400 = 1 day
?>

<?php
if(!isset($_COOKIE[$cookie_name])) {
    echo “Cookie named ‘” . $cookie_name . “‘ is not set!”;
} else {
    echo “Cookie ‘” . $cookie_name . “‘ is set!
“;
    echo “Value is: ” . $_COOKIE[$cookie_name];
}
?>

Note: The setcookie() function must appear BEFORE the tag.

Note: The value of the cookie is automatically URLencoded when sending the cookie, and automatically decoded when received (to prevent URLencoding, use setrawcookie() instead).

Modify a Cookie Value
To modify a cookie, just set (again) the cookie using the setcookie() function:

Example
<?php
$cookie_name = “user”;
$cookie_value = “Alex Porter”;
setcookie($cookie_name, $cookie_value, time() + (86400 * 30), “/”);
?>

<?php
if(!isset($_COOKIE[$cookie_name])) {
    echo “Cookie named ‘” . $cookie_name . “‘ is not set!”;
} else {
    echo “Cookie ‘” . $cookie_name . “‘ is set!
“;
    echo “Value is: ” . $_COOKIE[$cookie_name];
}
?>

Delete a Cookie
To delete a cookie, use the setcookie() function with an expiration date in the past:

Example
<?php
// set the expiration date to one hour ago
setcookie(“user”, “”, time() – 3600);
?>

<?php
echo “Cookie ‘user’ is deleted.”;
?>

Check if Cookies are Enabled
The following example creates a small script that checks whether cookies are enabled. First, try to create a test cookie with the setcookie() function, then count the $_COOKIE array variable:

Example
<?php
setcookie(“test_cookie”, “test”, time() + 3600, ‘/’);
?>

<?php
if(count($_COOKIE) > 0) {
    echo “Cookies are enabled.”;
} else {
    echo “Cookies are disabled.”;
}
?>

Complete PHP HTTP Reference
For a complete reference of HTTP functions, go to our complete PHP HTTP Reference.

❮ Previous Next ❯

PHP 5 Sessions

PHP 5 Sessions
❮ Previous Next ❯
A session is a way to store information (in variables) to be used across multiple pages.

Unlike a cookie, the information is not stored on the users computer.

What is a PHP Session?
When you work with an application, you open it, do some changes, and then you close it. This is much like a Session. The computer knows who you are. It knows when you start the application and when you end. But on the internet there is one problem: the web server does not know who you are or what you do, because the HTTP address doesn’t maintain state.

Session variables solve this problem by storing user information to be used across multiple pages (e.g. username, favorite color, etc). By default, session variables last until the user closes the browser.

So; Session variables hold information about one single user, and are available to all pages in one application.

Tip: If you need a permanent storage, you may want to store the data in a database.

Start a PHP Session
A session is started with the session_start() function.

Session variables are set with the PHP global variable: $_SESSION.

Now, let’s create a new page called “demo_session1.php”. In this page, we start a new PHP session and set some session variables:

Example
<?php
// Start the session
session_start();
?>

<?php
// Set session variables
$_SESSION[“favcolor”] = “green”;
$_SESSION[“favanimal”] = “cat”;
echo “Session variables are set.”;
?>

Note: The session_start() function must be the very first thing in your document. Before any HTML tags.

Get PHP Session Variable Values
Next, we create another page called “demo_session2.php”. From this page, we will access the session information we set on the first page (“demo_session1.php”).

Notice that session variables are not passed individually to each new page, instead they are retrieved from the session we open at the beginning of each page (session_start()).

Also notice that all session variable values are stored in the global $_SESSION variable:

Example
<?php
session_start();
?>

<?php
// Echo session variables that were set on previous page
echo “Favorite color is ” . $_SESSION[“favcolor”] . “.
“;
echo “Favorite animal is ” . $_SESSION[“favanimal”] . “.”;
?>

Another way to show all the session variable values for a user session is to run the following code:

Example
<?php
session_start();
?>

<?php
print_r($_SESSION);
?>

How does it work? How does it know it’s me?

Most sessions set a user-key on the user’s computer that looks something like this: 765487cf34ert8dede5a562e4f3a7e12. Then, when a session is opened on another page, it scans the computer for a user-key. If there is a match, it accesses that session, if not, it starts a new session.

Modify a PHP Session Variable
To change a session variable, just overwrite it:

Example
<?php
session_start();
?>

<?php
// to change a session variable, just overwrite it
$_SESSION[“favcolor”] = “yellow”;
print_r($_SESSION);
?>

Destroy a PHP Session
To remove all global session variables and destroy the session, use session_unset() and session_destroy():

Example
<?php
session_start();
?>

<?php
// remove all session variables
session_unset();

// destroy the session
session_destroy();
?>

❮ Previous Next ❯

PHP Filters

PHP Filters
❮ Previous Next ❯
Validating data = Determine if the data is in proper form.

Sanitizing data = Remove any illegal character from the data.

The PHP Filter Extension
PHP filters are used to validate and sanitize external input.

The PHP filter extension has many of the functions needed for checking user input, and is designed to make data validation easier and quicker.

The filter_list() function can be used to list what the PHP filter extension offers:

Example

 

   

   

 

  <?php
  foreach (filter_list() as $id =>$filter) {
      echo ‘

‘;
  }
  ?>

Filter Name Filter ID
‘ . $filter . ‘ ‘ . filter_id($filter) . ‘

Why Use Filters?
Many web applications receive external input. External input/data can be:

User input from a form
Cookies
Web services data
Server variables
Database query results
You should always validate external data!
Invalid submitted data can lead to security problems and break your webpage!
By using PHP filters you can be sure your application gets the correct input!

PHP filter_var() Function
The filter_var() function both validate and sanitize data.

The filter_var() function filters a single variable with a specified filter. It takes two pieces of data:

The variable you want to check
The type of check to use
Sanitize a String
The following example uses the filter_var() function to remove all HTML tags from a string:

Example
<?php
$str = “

Hello World!

“;
$newstr = filter_var($str, FILTER_SANITIZE_STRING);
echo $newstr;
?>
Validate an Integer
The following example uses the filter_var() function to check if the variable $int is an integer. If $int is an integer, the output of the code above will be: “Integer is valid”. If $int is not an integer, the output will be: “Integer is not valid”:

Example
<?php
$int = 100;

if (!filter_var($int, FILTER_VALIDATE_INT) === false) {
    echo(“Integer is valid”);
} else {
    echo(“Integer is not valid”);
}
?>
Tip: filter_var() and Problem With 0
In the example above, if $int was set to 0, the function above will return “Integer is not valid”. To solve this problem, use the code below:

Example
<?php
$int = 0;

if (filter_var($int, FILTER_VALIDATE_INT) === 0 || !filter_var($int, FILTER_VALIDATE_INT) === false) {
    echo(“Integer is valid”);
} else {
    echo(“Integer is not valid”);
}
?>
Validate an IP Address
The following example uses the filter_var() function to check if the variable $ip is a valid IP address:

Example
<?php
$ip = “127.0.0.1”;

if (!filter_var($ip, FILTER_VALIDATE_IP) === false) {
    echo(“$ip is a valid IP address”);
} else {
    echo(“$ip is not a valid IP address”);
}
?>
Sanitize and Validate an Email Address
The following example uses the filter_var() function to first remove all illegal characters from the $email variable, then check if it is a valid email address:

Example
<?php
$email = “john.doe@example.com“;

// Remove all illegal characters from email
$email = filter_var($email, FILTER_SANITIZE_EMAIL);

// Validate e-mail
if (!filter_var($email, FILTER_VALIDATE_EMAIL) === false) {
    echo(“$email is a valid email address”);
} else {
    echo(“$email is not a valid email address”);
}
?>
Sanitize and Validate a URL
The following example uses the filter_var() function to first remove all illegal characters from a URL, then check if $url is a valid URL:

Example
<?php
$url = “https://www.Omega.com“;

// Remove all illegal characters from a url
$url = filter_var($url, FILTER_SANITIZE_URL);

// Validate url
if (!filter_var($url, FILTER_VALIDATE_URL) === false) {
    echo(“$url is a valid URL”);
} else {
    echo(“$url is not a valid URL”);
}
?>
Complete PHP Filter Reference
For a complete reference of all filter functions, go to our complete PHP Filter Reference. Check each filter to see what options and flags are available.

The reference contains a brief description, and examples of use, for each function!

❮ Previous Next ❯

PHP Filters Advanced

PHP Filters Advanced
❮ Previous Next ❯
Validate an Integer Within a Range
The following example uses the filter_var() function to check if a variable is both of type INT, and between 1 and 200:

Example
<?php
$int = 122;
$min = 1;
$max = 200;

if (filter_var($int, FILTER_VALIDATE_INT, array(“options” => array(“min_range”=>$min, “max_range”=>$max))) === false) {
    echo(“Variable value is not within the legal range”);
} else {
    echo(“Variable value is within the legal range”);
}
?>
Validate IPv6 Address
The following example uses the filter_var() function to check if the variable $ip is a valid IPv6 address:

Example
<?php
$ip = “2001:0db8:85a3:08d3:1319:8a2e:0370:7334″;

if (!filter_var($ip, FILTER_VALIDATE_IP, FILTER_FLAG_IPV6) === false) {
    echo(“$ip is a valid IPv6 address”);
} else {
    echo(“$ip is not a valid IPv6 address”);
}
?>
Validate URL – Must Contain QueryString
The following example uses the filter_var() function to check if the variable $url is a URL with a querystring:

Example
<?php
$url = “https://www.Omega.com“;

if (!filter_var($url, FILTER_VALIDATE_URL, FILTER_FLAG_QUERY_REQUIRED) === false) {
    echo(“$url is a valid URL”);
} else {
    echo(“$url is not a valid URL”);
}
?>
Remove Characters With ASCII Value > 127
The following example uses the filter_var() function to sanitize a string. It will both remove all HTML tags, and all characters with ASCII value > 127, from the string:

Example
<?php
$str = “

Hello WorldÆØÅ!

“;

$newstr = filter_var($str, FILTER_SANITIZE_STRING, FILTER_FLAG_STRIP_HIGH);
echo $newstr;
?>
Complete PHP Filter Reference
For a complete reference of all filter functions, go to our complete PHP Filter Reference. Check each filter to see what options and flags are available.

The reference contains a brief description, and examples of use, for each function!


❮ Previous Next ❯

PHP Error Handling

PHP Error Handling
❮ Previous Next ❯
The default error handling in PHP is very simple. An error message with filename, line number and a message describing the error is sent to the browser.

PHP Error Handling
When creating scripts and web applications, error handling is an important part. If your code lacks error checking code, your program may look very unprofessional and you may be open to security risks.

This tutorial contains some of the most common error checking methods in PHP.

We will show different error handling methods:

Simple “die()” statements
Custom errors and error triggers
Error reporting
Basic Error Handling: Using the die() function
The first example shows a simple script that opens a text file:

<?php
$file=fopen(“welcome.txt”,”r”);
?>
If the file does not exist you might get an error like this:

Warning: fopen(welcome.txt) [function.fopen]: failed to open stream:
No such file or directory in C:\webfolder\test.php on line 2
To prevent the user from getting an error message like the one above, we test whether the file exist before we try to access it:

<?php
if(!file_exists(“welcome.txt”)) {
  die(“File not found”);
} else {
  $file=fopen(“welcome.txt”,”r”);
}
?>
Now if the file does not exist you get an error like this:

File not found
The code above is more efficient than the earlier code, because it uses a simple error handling mechanism to stop the script after the error.

However, simply stopping the script is not always the right way to go. Let’s take a look at alternative PHP functions for handling errors.

Creating a Custom Error Handler
Creating a custom error handler is quite simple. We simply create a special function that can be called when an error occurs in PHP.

This function must be able to handle a minimum of two parameters (error level and error message) but can accept up to five parameters (optionally: file, line-number, and the error context):

Syntax
error_function(error_level,error_message,
error_file,error_line,error_context)
Parameter Description
error_level Required. Specifies the error report level for the user-defined error. Must be a value number. See table below for possible error report levels
error_message Required. Specifies the error message for the user-defined error
error_file Optional. Specifies the filename in which the error occurred
error_line Optional. Specifies the line number in which the error occurred
error_context Optional. Specifies an array containing every variable, and their values, in use when the error occurred
Error Report levels
These error report levels are the different types of error the user-defined error handler can be used for:

Value Constant Description
2 E_WARNING Non-fatal run-time errors. Execution of the script is not halted
8 E_NOTICE Run-time notices. The script found something that might be an error, but could also happen when running a script normally
256 E_USER_ERROR Fatal user-generated error. This is like an E_ERROR set by the programmer using the PHP function trigger_error()
512 E_USER_WARNING Non-fatal user-generated warning. This is like an E_WARNING set by the programmer using the PHP function trigger_error()
1024 E_USER_NOTICE User-generated notice. This is like an E_NOTICE set by the programmer using the PHP function trigger_error()
4096 E_RECOVERABLE_ERROR Catchable fatal error. This is like an E_ERROR but can be caught by a user defined handle (see also set_error_handler())
8191 E_ALL All errors and warnings (E_STRICT became a part of E_ALL in PHP 5.4)
Now lets create a function to handle errors:

function customError($errno, $errstr) {
  echo “Error: [$errno] $errstr
“;
  echo “Ending Script”;
  die();
}
The code above is a simple error handling function. When it is triggered, it gets the error level and an error message. It then outputs the error level and message and terminates the script.

Now that we have created an error handling function we need to decide when it should be triggered.

Set Error Handler
The default error handler for PHP is the built in error handler. We are going to make the function above the default error handler for the duration of the script.

It is possible to change the error handler to apply for only some errors, that way the script can handle different errors in different ways. However, in this example we are going to use our custom error handler for all errors:

set_error_handler(“customError”);
Since we want our custom function to handle all errors, the set_error_handler() only needed one parameter, a second parameter could be added to specify an error level.

Example
Testing the error handler by trying to output variable that does not exist:

<?php
//error handler function
function customError($errno, $errstr) {
  echo “Error: [$errno] $errstr”;
}

//set error handler
set_error_handler(“customError”);

//trigger error
echo($test);
?>
The output of the code above should be something like this:

Error: [8] Undefined variable: test
Trigger an Error
In a script where users can input data it is useful to trigger errors when an illegal input occurs. In PHP, this is done by the trigger_error() function.

Example
In this example an error occurs if the “test” variable is bigger than “1”:

<?php
$test=2;
if ($test>=1) {
  trigger_error(“Value must be 1 or below”);
}
?>
The output of the code above should be something like this:

Notice: Value must be 1 or below
in C:\webfolder\test.php on line 6
An error can be triggered anywhere you wish in a script, and by adding a second parameter, you can specify what error level is triggered.

Possible error types:

E_USER_ERROR – Fatal user-generated run-time error. Errors that can not be recovered from. Execution of the script is halted
E_USER_WARNING – Non-fatal user-generated run-time warning. Execution of the script is not halted
E_USER_NOTICE – Default. User-generated run-time notice. The script found something that might be an error, but could also happen when running a script normally
Example
In this example an E_USER_WARNING occurs if the “test” variable is bigger than “1”. If an E_USER_WARNING occurs we will use our custom error handler and end the script:

<?php
//error handler function
function customError($errno, $errstr) {
  echo “Error: [$errno] $errstr
“;
  echo “Ending Script”;
  die();
}

//set error handler
set_error_handler(“customError”,E_USER_WARNING);

//trigger error
$test=2;
if ($test>=1) {
  trigger_error(“Value must be 1 or below”,E_USER_WARNING);
}
?>
The output of the code above should be something like this:

Error: [512] Value must be 1 or below
Ending Script
Now that we have learned to create our own errors and how to trigger them, lets take a look at error logging.

Error Logging
By default, PHP sends an error log to the server’s logging system or a file, depending on how the error_log configuration is set in the php.ini file. By using the error_log() function you can send error logs to a specified file or a remote destination.

Sending error messages to yourself by e-mail can be a good way of getting notified of specific errors.

Send an Error Message by E-Mail
In the example below we will send an e-mail with an error message and end the script, if a specific error occurs:

<?php
//error handler function
function customError($errno, $errstr) {
  echo “Error: [$errno] $errstr
“;
  echo “Webmaster has been notified”;
  error_log(“Error: [$errno] $errstr”,1,
  “someone@example.com“,”From: webmaster@example.com“);
}

//set error handler
set_error_handler(“customError”,E_USER_WARNING);

//trigger error
$test=2;
if ($test>=1) {
  trigger_error(“Value must be 1 or below”,E_USER_WARNING);
}
?>
The output of the code above should be something like this:

Error: [512] Value must be 1 or below
Webmaster has been notified
And the mail received from the code above looks like this:

Error: [512] Value must be 1 or below
This should not be used with all errors. Regular errors should be logged on the server using the default PHP logging system.

❮ Previous Next ❯

PHP Exception Handling

Toggle navigation
TUTORIAL HOME
PHP Exception Handling
❮ Previous Next ❯
Exceptions are used to change the normal flow of a script if a specified error occurs.

What is an Exception
With PHP 5 came a new object oriented way of dealing with errors.

Exception handling is used to change the normal flow of the code execution if a specified error (exceptional) condition occurs. This condition is called an exception.

This is what normally happens when an exception is triggered:

The current code state is saved
The code execution will switch to a predefined (custom) exception handler function
Depending on the situation, the handler may then resume the execution from the saved code state, terminate the script execution or continue the script from a different location in the code
We will show different error handling methods:

Basic use of Exceptions
Creating a custom exception handler
Multiple exceptions
Re-throwing an exception
Setting a top level exception handler
Note: Exceptions should only be used with error conditions, and should not be used to jump to another place in the code at a specified point.

Basic Use of Exceptions
When an exception is thrown, the code following it will not be executed, and PHP will try to find the matching “catch” block.

If an exception is not caught, a fatal error will be issued with an “Uncaught Exception” message.

Lets try to throw an exception without catching it:

<?php
//create function with an exception
function checkNum($number) {
  if($number>1) {
    throw new Exception(“Value must be 1 or below”);
  }
  return true;
}

//trigger exception
checkNum(2);
?>
The code above will get an error like this:

Fatal error: Uncaught exception ‘Exception’
with message ‘Value must be 1 or below’ in C:\webfolder\test.php:6
Stack trace: #0 C:\webfolder\test.php(12):
checkNum(28) #1 {main} thrown in C:\webfolder\test.php on line 6
Try, throw and catch
To avoid the error from the example above, we need to create the proper code to handle an exception.

Proper exception code should include:

Try – A function using an exception should be in a “try” block. If the exception does not trigger, the code will continue as normal. However if the exception triggers, an exception is “thrown”
Throw – This is how you trigger an exception. Each “throw” must have at least one “catch”
Catch – A “catch” block retrieves an exception and creates an object containing the exception information
Lets try to trigger an exception with valid code:

<?php
//create function with an exception
function checkNum($number) {
  if($number>1) {
    throw new Exception(“Value must be 1 or below”);
  }
  return true;
}

//trigger exception in a “try” block
try {
  checkNum(2);
  //If the exception is thrown, this text will not be shown
  echo ‘If you see this, the number is 1 or below’;
}

//catch exception
catch(Exception $e) {
  echo ‘Message: ‘ .$e->getMessage();
}
?>
The code above will get an error like this:

Message: Value must be 1 or below
Example explained:
The code above throws an exception and catches it:

The checkNum() function is created. It checks if a number is greater than 1. If it is, an exception is thrown
The checkNum() function is called in a “try” block
The exception within the checkNum() function is thrown
The “catch” block retrieves the exception and creates an object ($e) containing the exception information
The error message from the exception is echoed by calling $e->getMessage() from the exception object
However, one way to get around the “every throw must have a catch” rule is to set a top level exception handler to handle errors that slip through.

Creating a Custom Exception Class
To create a custom exception handler you must create a special class with functions that can be called when an exception occurs in PHP. The class must be an extension of the exception class.

The custom exception class inherits the properties from PHP’s exception class and you can add custom functions to it.

Lets create an exception class:

<?php
class customException extends Exception {
  public function errorMessage() {
    //error message
    $errorMsg = ‘Error on line ‘.$this->getLine().’ in ‘.$this->getFile()
    .’: ‘.$this->getMessage().’ is not a valid E-Mail address’;
    return $errorMsg;
  }
}

$email = “someone@example…com”;

try {
  //check if
  if(filter_var($email, FILTER_VALIDATE_EMAIL) === FALSE) {
    //throw exception if email is not valid
    throw new customException($email);
  }
}

catch (customException $e) {
  //display custom message
  echo $e->errorMessage();
}
?>
The new class is a copy of the old exception class with an addition of the errorMessage() function. Since it is a copy of the old class, and it inherits the properties and methods from the old class, we can use the exception class methods like getLine() and getFile() and getMessage().

Example explained:
The code above throws an exception and catches it with a custom exception class:

The customException() class is created as an extension of the old exception class. This way it inherits all methods and properties from the old exception class
The errorMessage() function is created. This function returns an error message if an e-mail address is invalid
The $email variable is set to a string that is not a valid e-mail address
The “try” block is executed and an exception is thrown since the e-mail address is invalid
The “catch” block catches the exception and displays the error message
Multiple Exceptions
It is possible for a script to use multiple exceptions to check for multiple conditions.

It is possible to use several if..else blocks, a switch, or nest multiple exceptions. These exceptions can use different exception classes and return different error messages:

<?php
class customException extends Exception {
  public function errorMessage() {
    //error message
    $errorMsg = ‘Error on line ‘.$this->getLine().’ in ‘.$this->getFile()
    .’: ‘.$this->getMessage().’ is not a valid E-Mail address’;
    return $errorMsg;
  }
}

$email = “someone@example.com“;

try {
  //check if
  if(filter_var($email, FILTER_VALIDATE_EMAIL) === FALSE) {
    //throw exception if email is not valid
    throw new customException($email);
  }
  //check for “example” in mail address
  if(strpos($email, “example”) !== FALSE) {
    throw new Exception(“$email is an example e-mail”);
  }
}

catch (customException $e) {
  echo $e->errorMessage();
}

catch(Exception $e) {
  echo $e->getMessage();
}
?>
Example explained:
The code above tests two conditions and throws an exception if any of the conditions are not met:

The customException() class is created as an extension of the old exception class. This way it inherits all methods and properties from the old exception class
The errorMessage() function is created. This function returns an error message if an e-mail address is invalid
The $email variable is set to a string that is a valid e-mail address, but contains the string “example”
The “try” block is executed and an exception is not thrown on the first condition
The second condition triggers an exception since the e-mail contains the string “example”
The “catch” block catches the exception and displays the correct error message
If the exception thrown were of the class customException and there were no customException catch, only the base exception catch, the exception would be handled there.

Re-throwing Exceptions
Sometimes, when an exception is thrown, you may wish to handle it differently than the standard way. It is possible to throw an exception a second time within a “catch” block.

A script should hide system errors from users. System errors may be important for the coder, but are of no interest to the user. To make things easier for the user you can re-throw the exception with a user friendly message:

<?php
class customException extends Exception {
  public function errorMessage() {
    //error message
    $errorMsg = $this->getMessage().’ is not a valid E-Mail address.’;
    return $errorMsg;
  }
}

$email = “someone@example.com“;

try {
  try {
    //check for “example” in mail address
    if(strpos($email, “example”) !== FALSE) {
      //throw exception if email is not valid
      throw new Exception($email);
    }
  }
  catch(Exception $e) {
    //re-throw exception
    throw new customException($email);
  }
}

catch (customException $e) {
  //display custom message
  echo $e->errorMessage();
}
?>
Example explained:
The code above tests if the email-address contains the string “example” in it, if it does, the exception is re-thrown:

The customException() class is created as an extension of the old exception class. This way it inherits all methods and properties from the old exception class
The errorMessage() function is created. This function returns an error message if an e-mail address is invalid
The $email variable is set to a string that is a valid e-mail address, but contains the string “example”
The “try” block contains another “try” block to make it possible to re-throw the exception
The exception is triggered since the e-mail contains the string “example”
The “catch” block catches the exception and re-throws a “customException”
The “customException” is caught and displays an error message
If the exception is not caught in its current “try” block, it will search for a catch block on “higher levels”.

Set a Top Level Exception Handler
The set_exception_handler() function sets a user-defined function to handle all uncaught exceptions.

<?php
function myException($exception) {
  echo “Exception: ” . $exception->getMessage();
}

set_exception_handler(‘myException’);

throw new Exception(‘Uncaught Exception occurred’);
?>
The output of the code above should be something like this:

Exception: Uncaught Exception occurred
In the code above there was no “catch” block. Instead, the top level exception handler triggered. This function should be used to catch uncaught exceptions.
Rules for exceptions
Code may be surrounded in a try block, to help catch potential exceptions
Each try block or “throw” must have at least one corresponding catch block
Multiple catch blocks can be used to catch different classes of exceptions
Exceptions can be thrown (or re-thrown) in a catch block within a try block
A simple rule: If you throw something, you have to catch it.

❮ Previous Next ❯

PHP MySQL Database

TUTORIAL HOME
PHP MySQL Database
❮ Previous Next ❯
With PHP, you can connect to and manipulate databases.

MySQL is the most popular database system used with PHP.

What is MySQL?
MySQL is a database system used on the web
MySQL is a database system that runs on a server
MySQL is ideal for both small and large applications
MySQL is very fast, reliable, and easy to use
MySQL uses standard SQL
MySQL compiles on a number of platforms
MySQL is free to download and use
MySQL is developed, distributed, and supported by Oracle Corporation
MySQL is named after co-founder Monty Widenius’s daughter: My
The data in a MySQL database are stored in tables. A table is a collection of related data, and it consists of columns and rows.

Databases are useful for storing information categorically. A company may have a database with the following tables:

Employees
Products
Customers
Orders
PHP + MySQL Database System
PHP combined with MySQL are cross-platform (you can develop in Windows and serve on a Unix platform)
Database Queries
A query is a question or a request.

We can query a database for specific information and have a recordset returned.

Look at the following query (using standard SQL):

SELECT LastName FROM Employees
The query above selects all the data in the “LastName” column from the “Employees” table.

To learn more about SQL, please visit our SQL tutorial.

Download MySQL Database
If you don’t have a PHP server with a MySQL Database, you can download it for free here: http://www.mysql.com
Facts About MySQL Database
MySQL is the de-facto standard database system for web sites with HUGE volumes of both data and end-users (like Facebook, Twitter, and Wikipedia).

Another great thing about MySQL is that it can be scaled down to support embedded database applications.

Look at http://www.mysql.com/customers/ for an overview of companies using MySQL.

❮ Previous Next ❯

PHP Connect to MySQL

PHP Connect to MySQL
❮ Previous Next ❯
PHP 5 and later can work with a MySQL database using:

MySQLi extension (the “i” stands for improved)
PDO (PHP Data Objects)
Earlier versions of PHP used the MySQL extension. However, this extension was deprecated in 2012.

Should I Use MySQLi or PDO?
If you need a short answer, it would be “Whatever you like”.

Both MySQLi and PDO have their advantages:

PDO will work on 12 different database systems, where as MySQLi will only work with MySQL databases.

So, if you have to switch your project to use another database, PDO makes the process easy. You only have to change the connection string and a few queries. With MySQLi, you will need to rewrite the entire code – queries included.

Both are object-oriented, but MySQLi also offers a procedural API.

Both support Prepared Statements. Prepared Statements protect from SQL injection, and are very important for web application security.

MySQL Examples in Both MySQLi and PDO Syntax
In this, and in the following chapters we demonstrate three ways of working with PHP and MySQL:

MySQLi (object-oriented)
MySQLi (procedural)
PDO
MySQLi Installation
For Linux and Windows: The MySQLi extension is automatically installed in most cases, when php5 mysql package is installed.

For installation details, go to: http://php.net/manual/en/mysqli.installation.php

PDO Installation
For installation details, go to: http://php.net/manual/en/pdo.installation.php

Open a Connection to MySQL
Before we can access data in the MySQL database, we need to be able to connect to the server:

Example (MySQLi Object-Oriented)
<?php
$servername = “localhost”;
$username = “username”;
$password = “password”;

// Create connection
$conn = new mysqli($servername, $username, $password);

// Check connection
if ($conn->connect_error) {
    die(“Connection failed: ” . $conn->connect_error);
}
echo “Connected successfully”;
?>

PHP is an amazing and popular language!

Note on the object-oriented example above: $connect_error was broken until PHP 5.2.9 and 5.3.0. If you need to ensure compatibility with PHP versions prior to 5.2.9 and 5.3.0, use the following code instead:

// Check connection
if (mysqli_connect_error()) {
    die(“Database connection failed: ” . mysqli_connect_error());
}

Example (MySQLi Procedural)
<?php
$servername = “localhost”;
$username = “username”;
$password = “password”;

// Create connection
$conn = mysqli_connect($servername, $username, $password);

// Check connection
if (!$conn) {
    die(“Connection failed: ” . mysqli_connect_error());
}
echo “Connected successfully”;
?>

Example (PDO)
<?php
$servername = “localhost”;
$username = “username”;
$password = “password”;

try {
    $conn = new PDO(“mysql:host=$servername;dbname=myDB”, $username, $password);
    // set the PDO error mode to exception
    $conn->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE, PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION);
    echo “Connected successfully”;
    }
catch(PDOException $e)
    {
    echo “Connection failed: ” . $e->getMessage();
    }
?>

Notice that in the PDO example above we have also specified a database (myDB). PDO require  a valid database to connect to. If no database is specified, an exception is thrown.

Tip: A great benefit of PDO is that it has an exception class to handle any problems that may occur in our database queries. If an exception is thrown within the try{ } block, the script stops executing and flows directly to the first catch(){ } block.

Close the Connection
The connection will be closed automatically when the script ends. To close the connection before, use the following:

Example (MySQLi Object-Oriented)
$conn->close();

Example (MySQLi Procedural)
mysqli_close($conn);

Example (PDO)
$conn = null;

❮ Previous Next ❯

PHP Create a MySQL Database

PHP Create a MySQL Database
❮ Previous Next ❯
A database consists of one or more tables.

You will need special CREATE privileges to create or to delete a MySQL database.

Create a MySQL Database Using MySQLi and PDO
The CREATE DATABASE statement is used to create a database in MySQL.

The following examples create a database named “myDB”:

Example (MySQLi Object-oriented)
<?php
$servername = “localhost”;
$username = “username”;
$password = “password”;

// Create connection
$conn = new mysqli($servername, $username, $password);
// Check connection
if ($conn->connect_error) {
    die(“Connection failed: ” . $conn->connect_error);


// Create database
$sql = “CREATE DATABASE myDB”;
if ($conn->query($sql) === TRUE) {
    echo “Database created successfully”;
} else {
    echo “Error creating database: ” . $conn->error;
}

$conn->close();
?>

Note: When you create a new database, you must only specify the first three arguments to the mysqli object (servername, username and password).

Tip: If you have to use a specific port, add an empty string for the database-name argument, like this: new mysqli(“localhost”, “username”, “password”, “”, port)

Example (MySQLi Procedural)
<?php
$servername = “localhost”;
$username = “username”;
$password = “password”;

// Create connection
$conn = mysqli_connect($servername, $username, $password);
// Check connection
if (!$conn) {
    die(“Connection failed: ” . mysqli_connect_error());
}

// Create database
$sql = “CREATE DATABASE myDB”;
if (mysqli_query($conn, $sql)) {
    echo “Database created successfully”;
} else {
    echo “Error creating database: ” . mysqli_error($conn);
}

mysqli_close($conn);
?>

Note: The following PDO example create a database named “myDBPDO”:

Example (PDO)
<?php
$servername = “localhost”;
$username = “username”;
$password = “password”;

try {
    $conn = new PDO(“mysql:host=$servername;dbname=myDB”, $username, $password);
    // set the PDO error mode to exception
    $conn->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE, PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION);
    $sql = “CREATE DATABASE myDBPDO”;
    // use exec() because no results are returned
    $conn->exec($sql);
    echo “Database created successfully
“;

    }
catch(PDOException $e)
    {
    echo $sql . “
” . $e->getMessage();

    }

$conn = null;
?>

Tip: A great benefit of PDO is that it has exception class to handle any problems that may occur in our database queries. If an exception is thrown within the try{ } block, the script stops executing and flows directly to the first catch(){ } block. In the catch block above we echo the SQL statement and the generated error message.


❮ Previous Next ❯

PHP Create MySQL Tables

Toggle navigation
TUTORIAL HOME
PHP Create MySQL Tables
❮ Previous Next ❯
A database table has its own unique name and consists of columns and rows.

Create a MySQL Table Using MySQLi and PDO
The CREATE TABLE statement is used to create a table in MySQL.

We will create a table named “MyGuests”, with five columns: “id”, “firstname”, “lastname”, “email” and “reg_date”:

CREATE TABLE MyGuests (
id INT(6) UNSIGNED AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
firstname VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL,
lastname VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL,
email VARCHAR(50),
reg_date TIMESTAMP
)
Notes on the table above:

The data type specifies what type of data the column can hold. For a complete reference of all the available data types, go to our Data Types reference.

After the data type, you can specify other optional attributes for each column:

NOT NULL – Each row must contain a value for that column, null values are not allowed
DEFAULT value – Set a default value that is added when no other value is passed
UNSIGNED – Used for number types, limits the stored data to positive numbers and zero
AUTO INCREMENT – MySQL automatically increases the value of the field by 1 each time a new record is added
PRIMARY KEY – Used to uniquely identify the rows in a table. The column with PRIMARY KEY setting is often an ID number, and is often used with AUTO_INCREMENT
Each table should have a primary key column (in this case: the “id” column). Its value must be unique for each record in the table.

The following examples shows how to create the table in PHP:

Example (MySQLi Object-oriented)
<?php
$servername = “localhost”;
$username = “username”;
$password = “password”;
$dbname = “myDB”;

// Create connection
$conn = new mysqli($servername, $username, $password, $dbname);
// Check connection
if ($conn->connect_error) {
    die(“Connection failed: ” . $conn->connect_error);
}

// sql to create table
$sql = “CREATE TABLE MyGuests (
id INT(6) UNSIGNED AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
firstname VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL,
lastname VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL,
email VARCHAR(50),
reg_date TIMESTAMP
)”;

if ($conn->query($sql) === TRUE) {
    echo “Table MyGuests created successfully”;
} else {
    echo “Error creating table: ” . $conn->error;
}

$conn->close();
?>

Example (MySQLi Procedural)
<?php
$servername = “localhost”;
$username = “username”;
$password = “password”;
$dbname = “myDB”;

// Create connection
$conn = mysqli_connect($servername, $username, $password, $dbname);
// Check connection
if (!$conn) {
    die(“Connection failed: ” . mysqli_connect_error());
}

// sql to create table
$sql = “CREATE TABLE MyGuests (
id INT(6) UNSIGNED AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
firstname VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL,
lastname VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL,
email VARCHAR(50),
reg_date TIMESTAMP
)”;

if (mysqli_query($conn, $sql)) {
    echo “Table MyGuests created successfully”;
} else {
    echo “Error creating table: ” . mysqli_error($conn);
}

mysqli_close($conn);
?>

Example (PDO)
<?php
$servername = “localhost”;
$username = “username”;
$password = “password”;
$dbname = “myDBPDO”;

try {
    $conn = new PDO(“mysql:host=$servername;dbname=$dbname”, $username, $password);
    // set the PDO error mode to exception
    $conn->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE, PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION);

    // sql to create table
    $sql = “CREATE TABLE MyGuests (
    id INT(6) UNSIGNED AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
    firstname VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL,
    lastname VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL,
    email VARCHAR(50),
    reg_date TIMESTAMP
    )”;

    // use exec() because no results are returned
    $conn->exec($sql);
    echo “Table MyGuests created successfully”;
    }
catch(PDOException $e)
    {
    echo $sql . “
” . $e->getMessage();
    }

$conn = null;
?>

❮ Previous Next ❯