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Database basics

Yii has a database access layer built on top of PHP's PDO. It provides uniform API and solves some inconsistencies between different DBMS. By default Yii supports the following DBMS:

Configuration

In order to start using database you need to configure database connection component first by adding db component to application configuration (for "basic" web application it's config/web.php) like the following:

return [
	// ...
	'components' => [
		// ...
		'db' => [
			'class' => 'yii\db\Connection',
			'dsn' => 'mysql:host=localhost;dbname=mydatabase', // MySQL, MariaDB
			//'dsn' => 'sqlite:/path/to/database/file', // SQLite
			//'dsn' => 'pgsql:host=localhost;port=5432;dbname=mydatabase', // PostgreSQL
			//'dsn' => 'cubrid:dbname=demodb;host=localhost;port=33000', // CUBRID
			//'dsn' => 'sqlsrv:Server=localhost;Database=mydatabase', // MS SQL Server, sqlsrv driver
			//'dsn' => 'dblib:host=localhost;dbname=mydatabase', // MS SQL Server, dblib driver
			//'dsn' => 'mssql:host=localhost;dbname=mydatabase', // MS SQL Server, mssql driver
			//'dsn' => 'oci:dbname=//localhost:1521/mydatabase', // Oracle
			'username' => 'root',
			'password' => '',
			'charset' => 'utf8',
		],
	],
	// ...
];

Please refer to the PHP manual for more details on the format of the DSN string.

After the connection component is configured you can access it using the following syntax:

$connection = \Yii::$app->db;

You can refer to \yii\db\Connection for a list of properties you can configure. Also note that you can define more than one connection component and use both at the same time if needed:

$primaryConnection = \Yii::$app->db;
$secondaryConnection = \Yii::$app->secondDb;

If you don't want to define the connection as an application component you can instantiate it directly:

$connection = new \yii\db\Connection([
	'dsn' => $dsn,
 	'username' => $username,
 	'password' => $password,
]);
$connection->open();

Basic SQL queries

Once you have a connection instance you can execute SQL queries using \yii\db\Command.

SELECT

When query returns a set of rows:

$command = $connection->createCommand('SELECT * FROM tbl_post');
$posts = $command->queryAll();

When only a single row is returned:

$command = $connection->createCommand('SELECT * FROM tbl_post WHERE id=1');
$post = $command->queryOne();

When there are multiple values from the same column:

$command = $connection->createCommand('SELECT title FROM tbl_post');
$titles = $command->queryColumn();

When there's a scalar value:

$command = $connection->createCommand('SELECT COUNT(*) FROM tbl_post');
$postCount = $command->queryScalar();

UPDATE, INSERT, DELETE etc.

If SQL executed doesn't return any data you can use command's execute method:

$command = $connection->createCommand('UPDATE tbl_post SET status=1 WHERE id=1');
$command->execute();

Alternatively the following syntax that takes care of proper table and column names quoting is possible:

// INSERT
$connection->createCommand()->insert('tbl_user', [
	'name' => 'Sam',
	'age' => 30,
])->execute();

// INSERT multiple rows at once
$connection->createCommand()->batchInsert('tbl_user', ['name', 'age'], [
	['Tom', 30],
	['Jane', 20],
	['Linda', 25],
])->execute();

// UPDATE
$connection->createCommand()->update('tbl_user', ['status' => 1], 'age > 30')->execute();

// DELETE
$connection->createCommand()->delete('tbl_user', 'status = 0')->execute();

Quoting table and column names

Most of the time you would use the following syntax for quoting table and column names:

$sql = "SELECT COUNT([[$column]]) FROM {{$table}}";
$rowCount = $connection->createCommand($sql)->queryScalar();

In the code above [[X]] will be converted to properly quoted column name while {{Y}} will be converted to properly quoted table name.

The alternative is to quote table and column names manually using \yii\db\Connection::quoteTableName() and \yii\db\Connection::quoteColumnName():

$column = $connection->quoteColumnName($column);
$table = $connection->quoteTableName($table);
$sql = "SELECT COUNT($column) FROM $table";
$rowCount = $connection->createCommand($sql)->queryScalar();

Prepared statements

In order to securely pass query parameters you can use prepared statements:

$command = $connection->createCommand('SELECT * FROM tbl_post WHERE id=:id');
$command->bindValue(':id', $_GET['id']);
$post = $command->query();

Another usage is performing a query multiple times while preparing it only once:

$command = $connection->createCommand('DELETE FROM tbl_post WHERE id=:id');
$command->bindParam(':id', $id);

$id = 1;
$command->execute();

$id = 2;
$command->execute();

Transactions

If the underlying DBMS supports transactions, you can perform transactional SQL queries like the following:

$transaction = $connection->beginTransaction();
try {
	$connection->createCommand($sql1)->execute();
 	$connection->createCommand($sql2)->execute();
	// ... executing other SQL statements ...
	$transaction->commit();
} catch(Exception $e) {
	$transaction->rollback();
}

Working with database schema

Getting schema information

You can get a \yii\db\Schema instance like the following:

$schema = $connection->getSchema();

It contains a set of methods allowing you to retrieve various information about the database:

$tables = $schema->getTableNames();

For the full reference check \yii\db\Schema.

Modifying schema

Aside from basic SQL queries \yii\db\Command contains a set of methods allowing to modify database schema:

  • createTable, renameTable, dropTable, truncateTable
  • addColumn, renameColumn, dropColumn, alterColumn
  • addPrimaryKey, dropPrimaryKey
  • addForeignKey, dropForeignKey
  • createIndex, dropIndex

These can be used as follows:

// CREATE TABLE
$connection->createCommand()->createTable('tbl_post', [
	'id' => 'pk',
	'title' => 'string',
	'text' => 'text',
];

For the full reference check \yii\db\Command.