79

I'm creating an installation script for an application that I'm developing and need to create databases dynamically from within PHP. I've got it to create the database but now I need to load in several .sql files. I had planned to open the file and mysql_query it a line at a time - until I looked at the schema files and realised they aren't just one query per line.

So, how do I load an sql file from within PHP (as phpMyAdmin does with its import command)?

5
  • Not least the phpMyAdmin's source itself :)
    – Vinko Vrsalovic
    Sep 29, 2008 at 7:44
  • @Anonymous : I was looking for 'the best' way. This place is supposed to be a one stop shop for answers (for the future as well) and therefore I feel asking questions answered elsewhere is quite fine. I did, however, look elsewhere first and could not find a great answer. Sep 30, 2008 at 9:51
  • RE: phpMyAdmin - it's source is somewhat helpful but very dependant on it's other functionality and is not suitable to my very strict timeframe and complexity requirement. Sep 30, 2008 at 9:53
  • 1
    To all those who argue in favor of answers apart from the accepted one: The question was how to load script from within PHP. The LOAD DATA solution solves the problem on MySQL side. Also, MySQL could be running on another machine and have no access to file system where PHP script is executed which should be considered.
    – tishma
    Nov 13, 2010 at 11:02

31 Answers 31

87
$db = new PDO($dsn, $user, $password);

$sql = file_get_contents('file.sql');

$qr = $db->exec($sql);
6
  • I am using this answer. It worked well for me on a 643kb script. SO far so good.
    – Kim Stacks
    Mar 11, 2013 at 10:26
  • 7
    How about when the script is 643mb? Or in any case, larger than max_allowed_packet? Mar 3, 2014 at 15:57
  • 1
    Perfect! Works for me with 1MB file so far.
    – dualmon
    May 8, 2014 at 4:34
  • 2
    This mostly worked for me. It doesn't seem to import the stored procedures or triggers, but does fine with DROP, TRUNCATE, SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE.
    – mts7
    Apr 8, 2016 at 20:58
  • Is there any way to show errors concerning any of the SQL entries? $qr may equal false but no specific errors are given if there is a problem with any of the commands given in the file.sql, Jan 7, 2022 at 5:23
62

phpBB uses a few functions to parse their files. They are rather well-commented (what an exception!) so you can easily know what they do (I got this solution from http://www.frihost.com/forums/vt-8194.html). here is the solution an I've used it a lot:

<?php
ini_set('memory_limit', '5120M');
set_time_limit ( 0 );
/***************************************************************************
*                             sql_parse.php
*                              -------------------
*     begin                : Thu May 31, 2001
*     copyright            : (C) 2001 The phpBB Group
*     email                : [email protected]
*
*     $Id: sql_parse.php,v 1.8 2002/03/18 23:53:12 psotfx Exp $
*
****************************************************************************/

/***************************************************************************
 *
 *   This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
 *   it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
 *   the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
 *   (at your option) any later version.
 *
 ***************************************************************************/

/***************************************************************************
*
*   These functions are mainly for use in the db_utilities under the admin
*   however in order to make these functions available elsewhere, specifically
*   in the installation phase of phpBB I have seperated out a couple of
*   functions into this file.  JLH
*
\***************************************************************************/

//
// remove_comments will strip the sql comment lines out of an uploaded sql file
// specifically for mssql and postgres type files in the install....
//
function remove_comments(&$output)
{
$lines = explode("\n", $output);
$output = "";

// try to keep mem. use down
$linecount = count($lines);

$in_comment = false;
for($i = 0; $i < $linecount; $i++)
{
    if( preg_match("/^\/\*/", preg_quote($lines[$i])) )
    {
        $in_comment = true;
    }

    if( !$in_comment )
    {
        $output .= $lines[$i] . "\n";
    }

    if( preg_match("/\*\/$/", preg_quote($lines[$i])) )
    {
        $in_comment = false;
    }
}

unset($lines);
return $output;
}

//
// remove_remarks will strip the sql comment lines out of an uploaded sql file
//
function remove_remarks($sql)
{
$lines = explode("\n", $sql);

// try to keep mem. use down
$sql = "";

$linecount = count($lines);
$output = "";

for ($i = 0; $i < $linecount; $i++)
{
    if (($i != ($linecount - 1)) || (strlen($lines[$i]) > 0))
    {
        if (isset($lines[$i][0]) && $lines[$i][0] != "#")
        {
            $output .= $lines[$i] . "\n";
        }
        else
        {
            $output .= "\n";
        }
        // Trading a bit of speed for lower mem. use here.
        $lines[$i] = "";
    }
}

return $output;

}

//
// split_sql_file will split an uploaded sql file into single sql statements.
// Note: expects trim() to have already been run on $sql.
//
function split_sql_file($sql, $delimiter)
{
// Split up our string into "possible" SQL statements.
$tokens = explode($delimiter, $sql);

// try to save mem.
$sql = "";
$output = array();

// we don't actually care about the matches preg gives us.
$matches = array();

// this is faster than calling count($oktens) every time thru the loop.
$token_count = count($tokens);
for ($i = 0; $i < $token_count; $i++)
{
    // Don't wanna add an empty string as the last thing in the array.
    if (($i != ($token_count - 1)) || (strlen($tokens[$i] > 0)))
    {
        // This is the total number of single quotes in the token.
        $total_quotes = preg_match_all("/'/", $tokens[$i], $matches);
        // Counts single quotes that are preceded by an odd number of backslashes,
        // which means they're escaped quotes.
        $escaped_quotes = preg_match_all("/(?<!\\\\)(\\\\\\\\)*\\\\'/", $tokens[$i], $matches);

        $unescaped_quotes = $total_quotes - $escaped_quotes;

        // If the number of unescaped quotes is even, then the delimiter did NOT occur inside a string literal.
        if (($unescaped_quotes % 2) == 0)
        {
            // It's a complete sql statement.
            $output[] = $tokens[$i];
            // save memory.
            $tokens[$i] = "";
        }
        else
        {
            // incomplete sql statement. keep adding tokens until we have a complete one.
            // $temp will hold what we have so far.
            $temp = $tokens[$i] . $delimiter;
            // save memory..
            $tokens[$i] = "";

            // Do we have a complete statement yet?
            $complete_stmt = false;

            for ($j = $i + 1; (!$complete_stmt && ($j < $token_count)); $j++)
            {
            // This is the total number of single quotes in the token.
            $total_quotes = preg_match_all("/'/", $tokens[$j], $matches);
            // Counts single quotes that are preceded by an odd number of backslashes,
            // which means they're escaped quotes.
            $escaped_quotes = preg_match_all("/(?<!\\\\)(\\\\\\\\)*\\\\'/", $tokens[$j], $matches);

            $unescaped_quotes = $total_quotes - $escaped_quotes;

            if (($unescaped_quotes % 2) == 1)
            {
                // odd number of unescaped quotes. In combination with the previous incomplete
                // statement(s), we now have a complete statement. (2 odds always make an even)
                $output[] = $temp . $tokens[$j];

                // save memory.
                $tokens[$j] = "";
                $temp = "";

                // exit the loop.
                $complete_stmt = true;
                // make sure the outer loop continues at the right point.
                $i = $j;
            }
            else
            {
                // even number of unescaped quotes. We still don't have a complete statement.
                // (1 odd and 1 even always make an odd)
                $temp .= $tokens[$j] . $delimiter;
                // save memory.
                $tokens[$j] = "";
            }

            } // for..
        } // else
    }
}

return $output;
}

$dbms_schema = 'yourfile.sql';

$sql_query = @fread(@fopen($dbms_schema, 'r'), @filesize($dbms_schema)) or die('problem ');
$sql_query = remove_remarks($sql_query);
$sql_query = split_sql_file($sql_query, ';');

$host = 'localhost';
$user = 'user';
$pass = 'pass';
$db = 'database_name';

// mysql_* is deprecated, prefer using mysqli_* instead
// mysql_connect($host,$user,$pass) or die('error connection');
// mysql_select_db($db) or die('error database selection');
$connection = mysqli_connect($host,$user,$pass) or die('error connection');
mysqli_select_db($connection, $db) or die('error database selection');

$i=1;
foreach($sql_query as $sql){
    echo $i++;
    echo "<br />";
    // mysql_* is deprecated, prefer using mysqli_* instead
    // mysql_query($sql) or die('error in query');
    mysqli_query($connection, $sql) or die('error in query');
}
6
  • 7
    This should be the accepted one. Worked like a charm, thanks.
    – takeshin
    Sep 2, 2011 at 20:20
  • 1
    This is the best solution to this problem I have come across
    – Mazatec
    Mar 15, 2012 at 16:36
  • 3
    thanx to The phpBB Group and thank you Abu Sadat that you managed to notice that this piece of code is reusable for other projects as well. thanx again
    – themhz
    Nov 8, 2012 at 18:50
  • 1
    Thanks!Works fine on my side too! Incase your mysql are deprecated, just change to mysqli function. php.net/manual/en/mysqli.query.php
    – Mavichow
    Sep 2, 2014 at 15:16
  • 1
    Note that PhpBB is GPL-licensed. So if you use this code in your project, you must also release your project as GPL-licensed. Sep 13, 2018 at 21:05
55

I'm getting the feeling that everyone here who's answered this question doesn't know what it's like to be a web application developer who allows people to install the application on their own servers. Shared hosting, especially, doesn't allow you to use SQL like the "LOAD DATA" query mentioned previously. Most shared hosts also don't allow you to use shell_exec.

Now, to answer the OP, your best bet is to just build out a PHP file that contains your queries in a variable and can just run them. If you're determined to parse .sql files, you should look into phpMyAdmin and get some ideas for getting data out of .sql files that way. Look around at other web applications that have installers and you'll see that, rather than use .sql files for their queries, they just package them up in PHP files and just run each string through mysql_query or whatever it is that they need to do.

5
  • 2
    Good point that hosted environments are more restrictive. The OP's question does not mention that the application needs to deploy in hosted environments. Hmm. The question of running SQL scripts in PHP comes up often enough that it'd be a great little project. Sep 30, 2008 at 23:03
  • Yeah, I was gonna say that - you can't expect people to assume that you are in the most restrictive environment ever. Especially with virtual machines being offered all over everyone can have their own server at relatively little cost.
    – Till
    Oct 17, 2008 at 0:45
  • 4
    I still don't see why he can't just read the .sql file into a string and execute it with PDO or mysqli. This is how I do it. PDO and mysqli support multiple queries. Admittedly, I haven't run any HUGE .sql files yet, but couldn't you just increase or remove PHP's max script exec time? May 20, 2010 at 21:32
  • 5
    phpMyAdmin's code base is sh*t. The file that does the import (phpMyAdmin/library/import/sql.php) makes heavy use of globals and many of comments have gramatical errors. Do you know of any other better examples. Jan 23, 2012 at 0:40
  • 2
    Checkout the answer below by Luis Granja stackoverflow.com/a/7178917/80353
    – Kim Stacks
    Mar 11, 2013 at 10:27
31

The simplest solution is to use shell_exec() to run the mysql client with the SQL script as input. This might run a little slower because it has to fork, but you can write the code in a couple of minutes and then get back to working on something useful. Writing a PHP script to run any SQL script could take you weeks.

Supporting SQL scripts is more complex than what people are describing here, unless you're certain that your script contains only a subset of the functionality of scripts. Below are some examples of things that may appear in an ordinary SQL script that make it complex to code a script to interpret it line by line.

-- Comment lines cannot be prepared as statements
-- This is a MySQL client tool builtin command.  
-- It cannot be prepared or executed by server.
USE testdb;

-- This is a multi-line statement.
CREATE TABLE foo (
  string VARCHAR(100)
);

-- This statement is not supported as a prepared statement.
LOAD DATA INFILE 'datafile.txt' INTO TABLE foo;

-- This statement is not terminated with a semicolon.
DELIMITER //

-- This multi-line statement contains a semicolon 
-- but not as the statement terminator.
CREATE PROCEDURE simpleproc (OUT param1 INT)
BEGIN
  SELECT COUNT(*) INTO param1 FROM foo;
END
// 

If you only support a subset of SQL scripts, excluding some corner cases such as those above, it's relatively easy to write a PHP script that reads a file and executes the SQL statements within the file. But if you want to support any valid SQL script, that's much more complex.


See also my answers to these related questions:

0
11

In my projects I've used next solution:

<?php

/**
 * Import SQL from file
 *
 * @param string path to sql file
 */
function sqlImport($file)
{

    $delimiter = ';';
    $file = fopen($file, 'r');
    $isFirstRow = true;
    $isMultiLineComment = false;
    $sql = '';

    while (!feof($file)) {

        $row = fgets($file);

        // remove BOM for utf-8 encoded file
        if ($isFirstRow) {
            $row = preg_replace('/^\x{EF}\x{BB}\x{BF}/', '', $row);
            $isFirstRow = false;
        }

        // 1. ignore empty string and comment row
        if (trim($row) == '' || preg_match('/^\s*(#|--\s)/sUi', $row)) {
            continue;
        }

        // 2. clear comments
        $row = trim(clearSQL($row, $isMultiLineComment));

        // 3. parse delimiter row
        if (preg_match('/^DELIMITER\s+[^ ]+/sUi', $row)) {
            $delimiter = preg_replace('/^DELIMITER\s+([^ ]+)$/sUi', '$1', $row);
            continue;
        }

        // 4. separate sql queries by delimiter
        $offset = 0;
        while (strpos($row, $delimiter, $offset) !== false) {
            $delimiterOffset = strpos($row, $delimiter, $offset);
            if (isQuoted($delimiterOffset, $row)) {
                $offset = $delimiterOffset + strlen($delimiter);
            } else {
                $sql = trim($sql . ' ' . trim(substr($row, 0, $delimiterOffset)));
                query($sql);

                $row = substr($row, $delimiterOffset + strlen($delimiter));
                $offset = 0;
                $sql = '';
            }
        }
        $sql = trim($sql . ' ' . $row);
    }
    if (strlen($sql) > 0) {
        query($row);
    }

    fclose($file);
}

/**
 * Remove comments from sql
 *
 * @param string sql
 * @param boolean is multicomment line
 * @return string
 */
function clearSQL($sql, &$isMultiComment)
{
    if ($isMultiComment) {
        if (preg_match('#\*/#sUi', $sql)) {
            $sql = preg_replace('#^.*\*/\s*#sUi', '', $sql);
            $isMultiComment = false;
        } else {
            $sql = '';
        }
        if(trim($sql) == ''){
            return $sql;
        }
    }

    $offset = 0;
    while (preg_match('{--\s|#|/\*[^!]}sUi', $sql, $matched, PREG_OFFSET_CAPTURE, $offset)) {
        list($comment, $foundOn) = $matched[0];
        if (isQuoted($foundOn, $sql)) {
            $offset = $foundOn + strlen($comment);
        } else {
            if (substr($comment, 0, 2) == '/*') {
                $closedOn = strpos($sql, '*/', $foundOn);
                if ($closedOn !== false) {
                    $sql = substr($sql, 0, $foundOn) . substr($sql, $closedOn + 2);
                } else {
                    $sql = substr($sql, 0, $foundOn);
                    $isMultiComment = true;
                }
            } else {
                $sql = substr($sql, 0, $foundOn);
                break;
            }
        }
    }
    return $sql;
}

/**
 * Check if "offset" position is quoted
 *
 * @param int $offset
 * @param string $text
 * @return boolean
 */
function isQuoted($offset, $text)
{
    if ($offset > strlen($text))
        $offset = strlen($text);

    $isQuoted = false;
    for ($i = 0; $i < $offset; $i++) {
        if ($text[$i] == "'")
            $isQuoted = !$isQuoted;
        if ($text[$i] == "\\" && $isQuoted)
            $i++;
    }
    return $isQuoted;
}

function query($sql)
{
    global $mysqli;
    //echo '#<strong>SQL CODE TO RUN:</strong><br>' . htmlspecialchars($sql) . ';<br><br>';
    if (!$query = $mysqli->query($sql)) {
        throw new Exception("Cannot execute request to the database {$sql}: " . $mysqli->error);
    }
}

set_time_limit(0);

$mysqli = new mysqli('localhost', 'root', '', 'test');
$mysqli->set_charset("utf8");

header('Content-Type: text/html;charset=utf-8');
sqlImport('import.sql');

echo "Peak MB: ", memory_get_peak_usage(true)/1024/1024;

On test sql file (41Mb) memory peak usage: 3.25Mb

1
  • @Graben Thanks. I was looking for solution and wasn't able to find any that can import big SQL files except Sypex Dumper, but it cannot be used in your own projects as it's portable ready-to-use solution. So I had to write my own and post it here, but question was asked a long time before my post :).
    – Gromo
    Jun 4, 2014 at 7:39
10

mysqli can run multiple queries separated by a ;

you could read in the whole file and run it all at once using mysqli_multi_query()

But, I'll be the first to say that this isn't the most elegant solution.

0
9

Since I can't comment on answer, beware to use following solution:

$db = new PDO($dsn, $user, $password);

$sql = file_get_contents('file.sql');

$qr = $db->exec($sql);

There is a bug in PHP PDO https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=61613

db->exec('SELECT 1; invalidstatement; SELECT 2');

won't error out or return false (tested on PHP 5.5.14).

1
  • As I've learnt recently, this is because you need to use PDOStatement::nextRowset
    – lordg
    May 6, 2016 at 18:51
5

My suggestion would be to look at the sourcecode of PHPMyBackup. It's an automated PHP SQL loader. You will find that mysql_query only loads one query at a time, and projects like PHPMyAdmin and PHPMyBackup have already done the hard work for you of parsing the SQL the correct way. Please don't re-invent that wheel :P

3
  • 4
    FWIW, both phpMyBackup and phpMyAdmin are licensed under GPL. If you 'borrow' any of their code, you are obliged to make your own project GPL as well. Dec 6, 2008 at 2:33
  • 1
    Yes, I agree. You do have a good point, but in the spirit of GPL, I would imagine just peeking at how others did it is still a valid option if one has to implement such a feature on his own . One sometimes have to re-create the wheel to circumvent GPL restrictions, for example! Still, it often is worth it in my opinion, as not all wheels are created equal. In this case a simple console 10-15 liner script could do this. Jul 13, 2011 at 7:10
  • Sure, it makes your code GPL, but the GPL doesn't matter if you aren't distributing your software - e.g. most web applications. (The AGPL being a notable exception, though AFAIK it's never been tested in court.)
    – sneak
    Jul 18, 2011 at 4:18
4

An updated solution of Plahcinski solution. Alternatively you can use fopen and fread for bigger files:

$fp = file('database.sql', FILE_IGNORE_NEW_LINES | FILE_SKIP_EMPTY_LINES);
$query = '';
foreach ($fp as $line) {
    if ($line != '' && strpos($line, '--') === false) {
        $query .= $line;
        if (substr($query, -1) == ';') {
            mysql_query($query);
            $query = '';
        }
    }
}
2
  • This skips lines that have comments at the end, but a real SQL statement before the comment on the same line. Also, SQL scripts support comments in /* */ format. And the statement delimiter isn't always ;. Mar 3, 2014 at 16:00
  • Nice simple solution when you have a relatively bare file and need a quick simple parser. I had to modify the concatenation by adding a space to the beginning of each line to handle situations where a multi-line statement didn't have whitespace (e.g. ON UPDATE CASCADE)\nENGINE = InnoDB; parses, but CASCADE)\nENGINE = InnoDB\nCOMMENT = 'stuff'; does not)
    – lee
    Jul 12, 2019 at 12:40
4
mysql_query("LOAD DATA LOCAL INFILE '/path/to/file' INTO TABLE mytable");
1
  • 2
    does not work if apache and mysql is different servers
    – verybadbug
    Oct 24, 2012 at 2:03
4

Briefly, the way I have done this is:

  1. Read the file (a db dump eg $ mysqldump db > db.sql)

    $sql = file_get_contents(db.sql);
    
  2. Import it using mysqli::multi_query

    if ($mysqli->multi_query($sql)) {
        $mysqli->close();
    } else {
        throw new Exception ($mysqli->error);
    }
    

Watch out mysqli_query supports async queries. More here: http://php.net/manual/en/mysqli.multi-query.php and here https://stackoverflow.com/a/6652908/2002493

3

I noticed that the PostgreSQL PDO driver does not allow you to run scripts separated by semicolons. In order to run a .sql file on any database using PDO it is necessary to split the statements in PHP code yourself. Here is a solution that seems to work quite well:

https://github.com/diontruter/migrate/blob/master/src/Diontruter/Migrate/SqlScriptParser.php

The referenced class has done the trick for me in a database independent way, please message me if there are any issues. Here is how you could use the script after adding it to your project:

$pdo = new PDO($connectionString, $userName, $password);
$pdo->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE, PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION);
$parser = new SqlScriptParser();
$sqlStatements = $parser->parse($fileName);
foreach ($sqlStatements as $statement) {
    $distilled = $parser->removeComments($statement);
    if (!empty($distilled)) {
        $statement = $pdo->prepare($sql);
        $affectedRows = $statement->execute();
    }
}
3

Are you sure that its not one query per line? Your text editor may be wrapping lines, but in reality each query may be on a single line.

At any rate, olle's method seems best. If you have reasons to run queries one at time, you should be able to read in your file line by line, then use the semicolon at the end of each query to delimit. You're much better off reading in a file line by line than trying to split an enormous string, as it will be much kinder to your server's memory. Example:

$query  = '';
$handle = @fopen("/sqlfile.sql", "r");

if ($handle) {
    while (!feof($handle)) {
        $query.= fgets($handle, 4096);

        if (substr(rtrim($query), -1) === ';') {
            // ...run your query, then unset the string
            $query = '';
        }
    }

    fclose($handle);
}

Obviously, you'll need to consider transactions and the rest if you're running a whole lot of queries in a batch, but it's probably not a big deal for a new-install script.

4
  • 2
    That won't always work.. What if you have a query like.. SELECT example FROM blah WHERE something = "something;"
    – dbr
    Sep 29, 2008 at 8:35
  • 1
    if (substr(rtrim($query, -1) == ';') { is incorrect. It should be: if (substr(rtrim($query), -1) == ';') { Sep 29, 2008 at 14:57
  • file() reads the file split into lines just fine, and the code is a lot cleaner. Sep 29, 2008 at 16:06
  • 1
    The problem with file() is it reads an entire file into memory all at once, which is not ideal for large files.
    – cam8001
    Sep 17, 2011 at 12:17
2

Unless you plan to import huge .sql files, just read the entire file into memory, and run it as a query.

It's been a while since I've used PHP, so, pseudo code:

all_query = read_file("/my/file.sql")
con = mysql_connect("localhost")
con.mysql_select_db("mydb")
con.mysql_query(all_query)
con.close()

Unless the files are huge (say, over several megabytes), there's no reason to execute it line-at-a-time, or try and split it into multiple queries (by splitting using ;, which as I commented on cam8001's answer, will break if the query has semi-colons within strings)..

2
  • 3
    Unfortunately, mysql_query will only execute one query at a time ;) Sep 29, 2008 at 9:48
  • $query="SELECT * FROM posts LIMIT 1; SELECT * FROM posts LIMIT 1"; mysql_query($query); seems to run fine..? I guess you can't grab the results of each query, but if you're just loading the .sql file, surely all you need to check for is the query erroring?
    – dbr
    Sep 30, 2008 at 22:58
2

Works on Navicat dumps. Might need to dump the first /* */ comment navicat puts in.

$file_content = file('myfile.sql');
$query = "";
foreach($file_content as $sql_line){
  if(trim($sql_line) != "" && strpos($sql_line, "--") === false){
    $query .= $sql_line;
    if (substr(rtrim($query), -1) == ';'){
      echo $query;
      $result = mysql_query($query)or die(mysql_error());
      $query = "";
    }
  }
 }
1
  • 3
    will drop on some like this: select id,any from some where any=='--'
    – msangel
    Jul 31, 2012 at 3:37
2

This The Best Code For restore sql by php can use 100% Goooood! Thank A lot

$file_content = file('myfile.sql');
$query = "";
foreach($file_content as $sql_line){
if(trim($sql_line) != "" && strpos($sql_line, "--") === false){
 $query .= $sql_line;
 if (substr(rtrim($query), -1) == ';'){
   echo $query;
   $result = mysql_query($query)or die(mysql_error());
   $query = "";
  }
 }
}
2
  • 1
    This skips lines that have comments at the end, but a real SQL statement before the comment on the same line. Also, SQL scripts support comments in /* */ format. And the statement delimiter isn't always ;. Mar 3, 2014 at 16:01
  • This works well with views, functions, insert,alter... but not for all cases, such as when in your table you has rows with HTML with character " ; ", but this can be updated.. thanks i will try to update and repost... Apr 5, 2017 at 14:43
2

Try This:

// SQL File
$SQLFile = 'YourSQLFile.sql';

// Server Name
$hostname = 'localhost';

// User Name
$db_user = 'root';

// User Password
$db_password = '';

// DBName
$database_name = 'YourDBName';

// Connect MySQL
$link = mysql_connect($hostname, $db_user, $db_password);

if (!$link) {
die("MySQL Connection error");
}

// Select MySQL DB
mysql_select_db($database_name, $link) or die("Wrong MySQL Database");

// Function For Run Multiple Query From .SQL File
function MultiQuery($sqlfile, $sqldelimiter = ';') {
set_time_limit(0);

if (is_file($sqlfile) === true) {
$sqlfile = fopen($sqlfile, 'r');

if (is_resource($sqlfile) === true) {
$query = array();
echo "<table cellspacing='3' cellpadding='3' border='0'>";

while (feof($sqlfile) === false) {
$query[] = fgets($sqlfile);

if (preg_match('~' . preg_quote($sqldelimiter, '~') . '\s*$~iS', end($query)) === 1) {
$query = trim(implode('', $query));

if (mysql_query($query) === false) {
echo '<tr><td>ERROR:</td><td> ' . $query . '</td></tr>';
} else {
echo '<tr><td>SUCCESS:</td><td>' . $query . '</td></tr>';
}

while (ob_get_level() &gt; 0) {
ob_end_flush();
}

flush();
}

if (is_string($query) === true) {
$query = array();
}
}
echo "</table>";

return fclose($sqlfile);
}
}

return false;
}

/* * * Use Function Like This: ** */

MultiQuery($SQLFile);
2

The easiest and fastest way to load & parse phpmyadmin dump or mysql dump file..

$ mysql -u username -p -h localhost dbname < dumpfile.sql 
1

None of the solutions I have seen here deal with needing to change the delimiter while creating a stored procedure on a server where I can't count on having access to LOAD DATA INFILE. I was hoping to find that someone had already solved this without having to scour the phpMyAdmin code to figure it out. Like others, I too was in the process of looking for someone else's GPL'ed way of doing it since I am writing GPL code myself.

1
  • I just happened to read the code I was referring to in this question the other day so it's fresh. We ended up just reading until we encountered an ; and executing that statement, noting in the comments that it should be improved. The project didn't go anywhere so we didn't come up with a better solution than that. Jun 1, 2010 at 6:17
1

Some PHP libraries can parse a SQL file made of multiple SQL statements, explode it properly (not using a simple ";" explode, naturally), and the execute them.

For instance, check Phing's PDOSQLExecTask

1

Just to restate the problem for everyone:

PHP's mysql_query, automatically end-delimits each SQL commands, and additionally is very vague about doing so in its manual. Everything beyond one command will yield an error.

On the other mysql_query is fine with a string containing SQL-style comments, \n, \r..

The limitation of mysql_query reveals itself in that the SQL parser reports the problem to be directly at the next command e.g.

 You have an error in your SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your
 MySQL server version for the right syntax to use near 'INSERT INTO `outputdb:`
 (`intid`, `entry_id`, `definition`) VALUES...

Here is a quick solution: (assuming well formatted SQL;

$sqlCmds = preg_split("/[\n|\t]*;[\n|\t]*[\n|\r]$/", $sqlDump);
1

Many hosts will not allow you to create your own database through PHP, but you seem to have solved that.
Once the DB has been created, you can manipulate and populate it simply:

mysql_connect("localhost");
mysql_query("SOURCE file.sql");

1

Some guys (Plahcinski) suggested this code:

$file_content = file('myfile.sql');
$query = "";
foreach($file_content as $sql_line){
  if(trim($sql_line) != "" && strpos($sql_line, "--") === false){
    $query .= $sql_line;
    if (substr(rtrim($query), -1) == ';'){
      echo $query;
      $result = mysql_query($query)or die(mysql_error());
      $query = "";
    }
  }
 }

but I would update it with the one which worked for me:

 //selecting my database
    $database = 'databaseTitleInFile';
    $selectDatabase = mysql_select_db($database, $con);
    if(! $selectDatabase )
    {
      die('Could not select the database: ' . mysql_error());
    }
    echo "The database " . $database . " selected successfully\n";
//reading the file
    $file_path='..\yourPath\to\File';
    if(!file_exists($file_path)){
        echo "File Not Exists";
    }
    $file_content = file_get_contents($file_path);
    $array = explode("\n", $file_content)
//making queries
    $query = "";
        foreach($array as $sql_line){
$sql_line=trim($sql_line);
          if($sql_line != "" && substr($sql_line, 0, 2) === "--" && strpos($sql_line, "/*") === false){
            $query .= $sql_line;
            if (substr(rtrim($query), -1) == ';'){
              $result = mysql_query($query)or die(mysql_error());
              $query = "";
            }
          }
         }

because it is more comprehensive. ;-)

1

This may be helpful -->

More or less what it does is to first take the string given to the function (the file_get_contents() value of your file.sql) and remove all the line breaks. Then it splits the data by the ";" character. Next it goes into a while loop, looking at each line of the array that is created. If the line contains the " ` " character, it will know it is a query and execture the myquery() function for the given line data.

Code:

function myquery($query) {

mysql_connect(dbhost, dbuser, dbpass);

mysql_select_db(dbname);

$result = mysql_query($query);

if (!mysql_errno() && @mysql_num_rows($result) > 0) {
}

else {

$result="not";
}
mysql_close();

return $result;

}



function mybatchquery ($str) {

$sql = str_replace("\n","",$str)

$sql = explode(";",$str);

$x=0;

while (isset($str[$x])) {

if (preg_match("/(\w|\W)+`(\w|\W)+) {

myquery($str[$x]);

}

$x++

}

return TRUE;

}




function myrows($result) {

$rows = @mysql_num_rows($result);

return $rows;
}




function myarray($result) {

$array = mysql_fetch_array($result);

return $array;
}




function myescape($query) {

$escape = mysql_escape_string($query);

return $escape;
}



$str = file_get_contents("foo.sql");
mybatchquery($str);
1
    $sql = file_get_contents("sql.sql");

Seems to be the simplest answer

1
  • 1
    It is indeed the simplest answer. But people here want to complicate their lives. Blocking users from posting questions is the only thing they know to do best !
    – Thanasis
    Jan 31, 2021 at 14:43
0

I use this all the time:

$sql = explode(";",file_get_contents('[your dump file].sql'));// 

foreach($sql as $query)
 mysql_query($query);
2
  • 2
    This will work in most cases, but not if a string contains a ; character. Jan 12, 2011 at 22:58
  • Or if the .sql file is larger than your PHP's memory limit, or if the .sql file contains some client builtin commands, or a bunch of other cases. Mar 3, 2014 at 16:07
0

I hope the following code will solve your problem pretty well.

//Empty all tables' contents

$result_t = mysql_query("SHOW TABLES");
while($row = mysql_fetch_assoc($result_t))
{
mysql_query("TRUNCATE " . $row['Tables_in_' . $mysql_database]);
}
// Temporary variable, used to store current query
$templine = '';
// Read in entire file
$lines = file($filename);
// Loop through each line
foreach ($lines as $line)
{
// Skip it if it's a comment
if (substr($line, 0, 2) == '--' || $line == '')
    continue;

// Add this line to the current segment
$templine .= $line;
// If it has a semicolon at the end, it's the end of the query
if (substr(trim($line), -1, 1) == ';')
{
    // Perform the query
    mysql_query($templine) or print('Error performing query \'<strong>' . $templine . '\': ' . mysql_error() . '<br /><br />');
    // Reset temp variable to empty
    $templine = '';
}
}

?>
0

this actually worked for me:

/* load sql-commands from a sql file */
function loadSQLFromFile($url)
{
    // ini_set ( 'memory_limit', '512M' );
    // set_time_limit ( 0 );

    global $settings_database_name;
    global $mysqli_object; global $worked; $worked = false;

    $sql_query = "";

    // read line by line
    $lines = file($url);
    $count = count($lines);

    for($i = 0;$i<$count;$i++)
    {
        $line = $lines[$i];
        $cmd3 = substr($line, 0, 3);
        $cmd4 = substr($line, 0, 4);
        $cmd6 = substr($line, 0, 6);
        if($cmd3 == "USE")
        {
            // cut away USE ``;
            $settings_database_name = substr($line, 5, -3);
        }
        else if($cmd4 == "DROP")
        {
            $mysqli_object->query($line); // execute this line
        }
        else if(($cmd6 == "INSERT") || ($cmd6 == "CREATE"))
        {
            // sum all lines up until ; is detected
            $multiline = $line;
            while(!strstr($line, ';'))
            {
                $i++;
                $line = $lines[$i];
                $multiline .= $line;
            }
            $multiline = str_replace("\n", "", $multiline); // remove newlines/linebreaks
            $mysqli_object->query($multiline); // execute this line
        }       
    }

    return $worked;
}
?>
0

I have an environment where no mysql tool or phpmyadmin just my php application connecting to a mysql server on a different host but I need to run scripts exported by mysqldump or myadmin. To solve the problem I created a script multi_query as I mentioned here

It can process mysqldump output and phpmyadmin exports without mysql command line tool. I also made some logic to process multiple migration files based on timestamp stored in DB like Rails. I know it needs more error handling but currently does the work for me.

Check it out: https://github.com/kepes/php-migration

It's pure php and don't need any other tools. If you don't process user input with it only scripts made by developers or export tools you can use it safely.

0

This is from a project I am working on. Basically takes any text file and extracts the SQL statements while ignoring comments and gratuitous line breaks.

<?php

  /*
     ingestSql(string) : string

     Read the contents of a SQL batch file, stripping away comments and
     joining statements that are broken over multiple lines with the goal
     of producing lines of sql statements that can be successfully executed
     by PDO exec() or execute() functions.

     For example:
       -- My SQL Batch
       CREATE TABLE foo(
         bar VARCHAR(80),
         baz INT NOT NULL);

     Becomes:
       CREATE TABLE foo(bar VARCHAR(80), baz INT NOT NULL);
  */

  function ingestSql($sqlFilePath=__DIR__ . "/create-db.sql") {
    $sqlFile = file($sqlFilePath);
    $ingestedSql = "";
     $statement = "";
    foreach($sqlFile as $line) {

      // Ignore anything between a double-dash and the end of the line.
      $commentStart = strpos($line, "--");
      if ($commentStart !== false) {
        $line = substr($line, 0, $commentStart);
      }

      // Only process non-blank lines.
      if (strlen($line)) {

        // Remove any leading and trailing whitespace and append what's
        // left of the line to the current statement.
        $line = trim($line);
        $statement .= $line;

        // A semi-colon ends the current statement.  Otherwise what was a
        // newline becomes a single space;
        if (substr($statement, -1) == ";") {
          $ingestedSql .= $statement;
          $statement = "\n";
        }
        else {
          $statement .= " ";
        }
      }
    }

    return $ingestedSql;
  }

?>

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