188

How can I retrieve the raw executed SQL query in Laravel 3/4 using Laravel Query Builder or Eloquent ORM?

For example, something like this:

DB::table('users')->where_status(1)->get();

Or:

(posts (id, user_id, ...))

User::find(1)->posts->get();

Otherwise, at the very least how can I save all queries executed to laravel.log?

2

21 Answers 21

320

Laravel 4+

Note for Laravel 5 users: You'll need to call DB::enableQueryLog() before executing the query. Either just above the line that runs the query or inside a middleware.

In Laravel 4 and later, you have to call DB::getQueryLog() to get all ran queries.

$queries = DB::getQueryLog();
$last_query = end($queries);

Or you can download a profiler package. I'd recommend barryvdh/laravel-debugbar, which is pretty neat. You can read for instructions on how to install in their repository.


Laravel 3

In Laravel 3, you can get the last executed query from an Eloquent model calling the static method last_query on the DB class.

DB::last_query();

This, however, requires that you enable the profiler option in application/config/database.php. Alternatively you could, as @dualed mentioned, enable the profiler option, in application/config/application.php or call DB::profile() to get all queries ran in the current request and their execution time.

15
  • 2
    Your code for Laravel 4 doesn't work. I get this ErrorException: Warning: call_user_func_array() expects parameter 1 to be a valid callback, class Illuminate\Database\MySqlConnection does not have a method getQueryList.
    – duality_
    Commented Mar 5, 2013 at 12:00
  • 1
    For Laravel 3 it's actually DB::last_query(); You also need to set 'profile' to true in your application/config/database.php
    – Dan Smart
    Commented Apr 16, 2013 at 8:22
  • 4
    This doesn't seem to work for an Eloquent Model on L4. When I execute Model::find($id) and perform DB::getQueryLog() return blank array(). Any idea how to get the queries for an Eloquent Model?
    – Abishek
    Commented May 12, 2013 at 21:25
  • 1
    L4 oneliner: $q=\DB::getQueryLog();dd(end($q)); Commented Jul 19, 2016 at 19:46
  • 1
    I am getting to be a regular visitor of this page.
    – Jovylle
    Commented Jul 9, 2021 at 6:21
31

You can enable the "Profiler" in Laravel 3 by setting

'profiler' => true,

In your application/config/application.php and application/config/database.php

This enables a bar at the bottom of each page. One of its features is listing the executed queries and how long each one took.

enter image description here

2
  • 14
    Note that in Laravel 4, the Profiler is not included, you have to install it by yourself (e.g. using composer). See this SO question.
    – duality_
    Commented Mar 5, 2013 at 11:56
  • 1
    It's discussed in the first answer there.
    – duality_
    Commented Feb 24, 2014 at 6:44
26

For Eloquent you can just do:

$result->getQuery()->toSql();

But you need to remove the "->get()" part from your query.

0
19

I would recommend using the Chrome extension Clockwork with the Laravel package https://github.com/itsgoingd/clockwork. It's easy to install and use.

Clockwork is a Chrome extension for PHP development, extending Developer Tools with a new panel providing all kinds of information useful for debugging and profiling your PHP scripts, including information on request, headers, GET and POST data, cookies, session data, database queries, routes, visualisation of application runtime and more. Clockwork includes out of the box support for Laravel 4 and Slim 2 based applications, you can add support for any other or custom framework via an extensible API.

enter image description here

0
16

Since the profiler is not yet out in Laravel 4, I've created this helper function to see the SQL being generated:


    public static function q($all = true) 
    {
        $queries = DB::getQueryLog();

        if($all == false) {
            $last_query = end($queries);
            return $last_query;
        }

        return $queries;
    }

NOTE: Set the $all flag to false if you only want the last SQL query.

I keep this sort of functions in a class called DBH.php (short for Database Helper) so I can call it from anywhere like this:

dd(DBH::q()); 

Here is the output I get: enter image description here

In case you are wondering, I use Kint for the dd() formatting. http://raveren.github.io/kint/

1
  • 2
    if($all == false)? Why not simply if(!$all)
    – toesslab
    Commented Feb 22, 2016 at 8:34
14

For Laraver 4 it's

DB::getQueryLog()
14

Here is a quick Javascript snippet you can throw onto your master page template. As long as it's included, all queries will be output to your browser's Javascript Console. It prints them in an easily readable list, making it simple to browse around your site and see what queries are executing on each page.

When you're done debugging, just remove it from your template.

<script type="text/javascript">
    var queries = {{ json_encode(DB::getQueryLog()) }};
    console.log('/****************************** Database Queries ******************************/');
    console.log(' ');
    queries.forEach(function(query) {
        console.log('   ' + query.time + ' | ' + query.query + ' | ' + query.bindings[0]);
    });
    console.log(' ');
    console.log('/****************************** End Queries ***********************************/');
</script>
5
  • I think you would need "" around the {{ json_encode... }} part
    – mydoglixu
    Commented Jun 1, 2015 at 16:39
  • @mydoglixu Since DB::getQueryLog() returns an array, there's no need to surround it with "". json_encode will translate it accordingly.
    – rmobis
    Commented Jun 30, 2015 at 7:43
  • @mobis - I meant that you need the "" outside the {{ ... }} so that javascript doesn't throw an error. like this: var queries = "json output";
    – mydoglixu
    Commented Jun 30, 2015 at 11:41
  • @mydoglixu You don't, because a JSON array (or object) is valid JavaScript. It would break if you did.
    – rmobis
    Commented Jul 1, 2015 at 16:17
  • @mobis - oh yeah, duh
    – mydoglixu
    Commented Jul 7, 2015 at 13:53
11

Laravel 5

Note that this is the procedural approach, which I use for quick debugging

    DB::enableQueryLog();

    // Run your queries
    // ...

    // Then to retrieve everything since you enabled the logging:
    $queries = DB::getQueryLog();
    foreach($queries as $i=>$query)
    {
        Log::debug("Query $i: " . json_encode($query));
    }

in your header, use:

     use DB;
     use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Log;

The output will look something like this (default log file is laravel.log):

[2015-09-25 12:33:29] testing.DEBUG: Query 0: {"query":"select * from 'users' where ('user_id' = ?)","bindings":["9"],"time":0.23}

***I know this question specified Laravel 3/4 but this page comes up when searching for a general answer. Newbies to Laravel may not know there is a difference between versions. Since I never see DD::enableQueryLog() mentioned in any of the answers I normally find, it may be specific to Laravel 5 - perhaps someone can comment on that.

7

You can also listen for query events using this:

DB::listen(function($sql, $bindings, $time)
{
    var_dump($sql);
});

See the information from the docs here under Listening For Query Events

6

Using the query log doesnt give you the actual RAW query being executed, especially if there are bound values. This is the best approach to get the raw sql:

DB::table('tablename')->toSql();

or more involved:

$query = Article::whereIn('author_id', [1,2,3])->orderBy('published', 'desc')->toSql();
dd($query);
5

If you are using Laravel 5 you need to insert this before query or on middleware :

\DB::enableQueryLog();
0
4

Or as alternative to laravel 3 profiler you can use:

https://github.com/paulboco/profiler or https://github.com/barryvdh/laravel-debugbar

3

in Laravel 4 you can actually use an Event Listener for database queries.

Event::listen('illuminate.query', function($sql, $bindings)
{
    foreach ($bindings as $val) {
        $sql = preg_replace('/\?/', "'{$val}'", $sql, 1);
    }

    Log::info($sql);
});

Place this snippet anywhere, e.g. in start/global.php. It'll write the queries to the info log (storage/log/laravel.log).

3
Event::listen('illuminate.query', function($sql, $param)
{
    \Log::info($sql . ", with[" . join(',', $param) ."]<br>\n");
});

put it in global.php it will log your sql query.

2

The Loic Sharma SQL profiler does support Laravel 4, I just installed it. The instructions are listed here. The steps are the following:

  1. Add "loic-sharma/profiler": "1.1.*" in the require section in composer.json
  2. Perform self-update => php composer.phar self-update in the console.
  3. Perform composer update => php composer.phar update loic-sharma/profiler in the console as well `
  4. Add 'Profiler\ProfilerServiceProvider', in the provider array in app.php
  5. Add 'Profiler' => 'Profiler\Facades\Profiler', in the aliasses array in app.php as well
  6. Run php artisan config:publish loic-sharma/profiler in the console
2

Last query print

$queries = \DB::getQueryLog();
$last_query = end($queries);

// Add binding to query
foreach ($last_query['bindings'] as $val) {
        $last_query['query'] = preg_replace('/\?/', "'{$val}'", $last_query['query'], 1);
}
dd($last_query);
1

L4 one-liner

(which write query):

$q=\DB::getQueryLog();dd(end($q));

0

Laravel 3

Another way to do this is:

#config/database.php

'profiler' => true

For all Queries result:

print_r(DB::profiler());

For last Result:

print_r(DB::last_query());
0

To get the last executed query in laravel,We will use DB::getQueryLog() function of laravel it return all executed queries. To get last query we will use end() function which return last executed query.

$student = DB::table('student')->get();
$query = DB::getQueryLog();
$lastQuery = end($query);
print_r($lastQuery);

I have taken reference from http://www.tutsway.com/how-to-get-the-last-executed-query-in-laravel.php.

1
  • Your answer does not seem to contribute any new knowledge to what the accepted answer by Raphael_ already covers.
    – Jaak Kütt
    Commented May 18, 2015 at 6:26
0

There is very easy way to do it, from your laravel query just rename any column name, it will show you an error with your query.. :)

1
  • Quick hacky way. Not to useful in production, but in development mode it's fine in some cases.
    – instead
    Commented May 28, 2018 at 11:51
0

In Laravel 8.x you can listen to the event by registering your query listener in a service provider as documented in laravel.com website.

//header
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\DB;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Log;

public function boot()
{
   
  DB::listen(function ($query) {            
   Log::debug("SQL : " . $query->sql);
  });

}

You can then see all the queries in the laravel.log file inside storage\logs\laravel.log

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