This is an extension for the SQLite Embeddable SQL Database Engine. SQLite is a C library that implements an embeddable SQL database engine. Programs that link with the SQLite library can have SQL database access without running a separate RDBMS process.
SQLite is not a client library used to connect to a big database server. SQLite is the server. The SQLite library reads and writes directly to and from the database files on disk.
Note: For further information see the SQLite Website (» http://sqlite.org/).
Read the INSTALL file, which comes with the package. Or just use the PEAR installer with pecl install sqlite. SQLite itself is already included, You do not need to install any additional software.
Windows users may download the DLL version of the SQLite extension here: (» php_sqlite.dll).
In PHP 5, the SQLite extension and the engine itself are bundled and compiled by default. However, since PHP 5.1.0 you need to manually activate the extension in php.ini (because it is now bundled as shared). Moreover, since PHP 5.1.0 SQLite depends on PDO it must be enabled too, by adding the following lines to php.ini (in order):
extension=php_pdo.dll
extension=php_sqlite.dll
SQLite 3 is supported through PDO SQLite.
Note: Windows installation for unprivileged accounts On Windows operating systems, unprivileged accounts don't have the TMP environment variable set by default. This will make sqlite create temporary files in the windows directory, which is not desirable. So, you should set the TMP environment variable for the web server or the user account the web server is running under. If Apache is your web server, you can accomplish this via a SetEnv directive in your httpd.conf file. For example:
If you are unable to establish this setting at the server level, you can implement the setting in your script:SetEnv TMP c:/temp
The setting must refer to a directory that the web server has permission to create files in and subsequently write to and delete the files it created. Otherwise, you may receive the following error message: malformed database schema - unable to open a temporary database file for storing temporary tablesputenv('TMP=C:/temp');
In order to have these functions available, you must compile PHP with SQLite support, or load the SQLite extension dynamically from your php.ini.
There are two resources used in the SQLite Interface. The first one is the database connection, the second one the result set.
The constants below are defined by this extension, and will only be available when the extension has either been compiled into PHP or dynamically loaded at runtime.
The functions sqlite_fetch_array() and sqlite_current() use a constant for the different types of result arrays. The following constants are defined:
A number of functions may return status codes. The following constants are defined:
Represents an opened SQLite database.
__construct - construct a new SQLiteDatabase object
query - Execute a query
queryExec - Execute a result-less query
arrayQuery - Execute a query and return the result as an array
singleQuery - Execute a query and return either an array for one single column or the value of the first row
unbufferedQuery - Execute an unbuffered query
lastInsertRowid - Returns the rowid of the most recently inserted row
changes - Returns the number of rows changed by the most recent statement
createAggregate - Register an aggregating UDF for use in SQL statements
createFunction - Register a UDF for use in SQL statements
busyTimeout - Sets or disables busy timeout duration
lastError - Returns the last error code of the most recently encountered error
fetchColumnTypes - Return an array of column types from a particular table
Represents a buffered SQLite result set.
fetch - Fetches the next row from the result set as an array
fetchObject - Fetches the next row from the result set as an object
fetchSingle - Fetches the first column from the result set as a string
fetchAll - Fetches all rows from the result set as an array of arrays
column - Fetches a column from the current row of the result set
numFields - Returns the number of fields in the result set
fieldName - Returns the name of a particular field in the result set
current - Fetches the current row from the result set as an array
key - Return the current row index
next - Seek to the next row number
valid - Returns whether more rows are available
rewind - Seek to the first row number of the result set
prev - Seek to the previous row number of the result set
hasPrev - Returns whether or not a previous row is available
numRows - Returns the number of rows in the result set
seek - Seek to a particular row number
Represents an unbuffered SQLite result set. Unbuffered results sets are sequential, forward-seeking only.
fetch - Fetches the next row from the result set as an array
fetchObject - Fetches the next row from the result set as an object
fetchSingle - Fetches the first column from the result set as a string
fetchAll - Fetches all rows from the result set as an array of arrays
column - Fetches a column from the current row of the result set
numFields - Returns the number of fields in the result set
fieldName - Returns the name of a particular field in the result set
current - Fetches the current row from the result set as an array
next - Seek to the next row number
valid - Returns whether more rows are available
The behaviour of these functions is affected by settings in php.ini.
Name | Default | Changeable | Changelog |
---|---|---|---|
sqlite.assoc_case | "0" | PHP_INI_ALL | Available since PHP 5.0.0. |
Here's a short explanation of the configuration directives.
Whether to use mixed case (0), upper case (1) or lower case (2) hash indexes.
This option is primarily useful when you need compatibility with other database systems, where the names of the columns are always returned as uppercase or lowercase, regardless of the case of the actual field names in the database schema.
The SQLite library returns the column names in their natural case (that matches the case you used in your schema). When sqlite.assoc_case is set to 0 the natural case will be preserved. When it is set to 1 or 2, PHP will apply case folding on the hash keys to upper- or lower-case the keys, respectively.
Use of this option incurs a slight performance penalty, but is MUCH faster than performing the case folding yourself using PHP script.