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odbc_setoption

(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

odbc_setoptionAdjust ODBC settings

Description

odbc_setoption(
    Odbc\Connection|Odbc\Result $odbc,
    int $which,
    int $option,
    int $value
): bool

This function allows fiddling with the ODBC options for a particular connection or query result. It was written to help find work around to problems in quirky ODBC drivers. You should probably only use this function if you are an ODBC programmer and understand the effects the various options will have. You will certainly need a good ODBC reference to explain all the different options and values that can be used. Different driver versions support different options.

Because the effects may vary depending on the ODBC driver, use of this function in scripts to be made publicly available is strongly discouraged. Also, some ODBC options are not available to this function because they must be set before the connection is established or the query is prepared. However, if on a particular job it can make PHP work so your boss doesn't tell you to use a commercial product, that's all that really matters.

Parameters

odbc

Is a connection id or result id on which to change the settings. For SQLSetConnectOption(), this is a connection id. For SQLSetStmtOption(), this is a result id.

which

Is the ODBC function to use. The value should be 1 for SQLSetConnectOption() and 2 for SQLSetStmtOption().

option

The option to set.

value

The value for the given option.

Return Values

Returns true on success or false on failure.

Changelog

Version Description
8.4.0 odbc expects an Odbc\Connection or an Odbc\Result instance now; previously, a resource was expected.

Examples

Example #1 odbc_setoption() examples

<?php
// 1. Option 102 of SQLSetConnectOption() is SQL_AUTOCOMMIT.
// Value 1 of SQL_AUTOCOMMIT is SQL_AUTOCOMMIT_ON.
// This example has the same effect as
// odbc_autocommit($conn, true);

odbc_setoption($conn, 1, 102, 1);

// 2. Option 0 of SQLSetStmtOption() is SQL_QUERY_TIMEOUT.
// This example sets the query to timeout after 30 seconds.

$result = odbc_prepare($conn, $sql);
odbc_setoption($result, 2, 0, 30);
odbc_execute($result);
?>

add a note

User Contributed Notes 1 note

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-1
egil at wp dot pl
15 years ago
Some options for Microsoft SQL Server ODBC:
1 - (SQL_MAX_ROWS) show top x rows
6 - (SQL_CURSOR_TYPE) zmiana kursora - ma działać dopiero w PHP 5.3

You can "translate" constant names (found on e.g. Microsoft website) to appropriate values using this page:
http://www.freepascal.org/docs-html/packages/odbcsql/index-2.html

BTW. If anyone is banging his head about "cursor type changed" warning while using execute with ORDER BY clause, then just use exec for now (remember to addslashes for yourself). In PHP 5.3 a Bug #43668 will be fixed and it will allow you to change a cursor type to SQL_CUR_USE_ODBC.

Note that you could also try to select a cursor type in odbc_connect, but that didn't work for me (much more problems appeared then it solved).
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