203

I'm trying to view the log for a query, but DB::getQueryLog() is just returning an empty array:

$user = User::find(5);
print_r(DB::getQueryLog());

Result

Array
(
)

How can I view the log for this query?

1
  • Laravel Debugbar is a great tool to log the queries. It also has many other awesome features.
    – totymedli
    Jan 5, 2017 at 23:55

15 Answers 15

314

By default, the query log is disabled in Laravel 5: https://github.com/laravel/framework/commit/e0abfe5c49d225567cb4dfd56df9ef05cc297448

You will need to enable the query log by calling:

DB::enableQueryLog();

// and then you can get query log

dd(DB::getQueryLog());

or register an event listener:

DB::listen(
    function ($sql, $bindings, $time) {
        //  $sql - select * from `ncv_users` where `ncv_users`.`id` = ? limit 1
        //  $bindings - [5]
        //  $time(in milliseconds) - 0.38 
    }
);  

Some Tips

1. Multiple DB connections

If you have more than one DB connection you must specify which connection to log

To enables query log for my_connection:

DB::connection('my_connection')->enableQueryLog();

To get query log for my_connection:

print_r(
   DB::connection('my_connection')->getQueryLog()
);

2. Where to enable query log ?

For an HTTP request lifecycle, you can enable query log in the `handle` method of some `BeforeAnyDbQueryMiddleware` [middleware][1] and then retrieve the executed queries in the [`terminate`][2] method of the same middleware.
class BeforeAnyDbQueryMiddleware
{
    public function handle($request, Closure $next)
    {
        DB::enableQueryLog();
        return $next($request);
    }

    public function terminate($request, $response)
    {
        // Store or dump the log data...
        dd(
            DB::getQueryLog()
        );
    }
}

A middleware's chain will not run for artisan commands, so for CLI execution you can enable query log in the artisan.start event listener.

For example you can put it in the bootstrap/app.php file

$app['events']->listen('artisan.start', function(){
    \DB::enableQueryLog();
});

3. Memory

Laravel keeps all queries in memory. So in some cases, such as when inserting a large number of rows, or having a long running job with a lot of queries, this can cause the application to use excess memory.

In most cases you will need the query log only for debugging, and if that is the case I would recommend you enable it only for development.

if (App::environment('local')) {
    // The environment is local
    DB::enableQueryLog();
}

References

6
  • 6
    If your system uses more than one db connection, you have to specify it, otherwise it might return empty array: \DB::connection('myconnection')->enableQueryLog(); print_r(\DB::connection('myconnection')->getQueryLog());
    – Diana R.
    Jun 23, 2015 at 14:19
  • Post your comment as your answer @DianaR. Jan 8, 2016 at 14:00
  • 1
    For Laravel 5.2 see: laravel.com/docs/5.2/database#listening-for-query-events Aug 11, 2016 at 14:41
  • How to enable it to log Eloquent "NameController::create();" statement? Jan 22, 2017 at 20:27
  • 2
    Note that in Laravel 5.4 the DB::listen callback function has a different signature. It's more like this: DB::listen(function($query) { $sql = $query->sql; $bindings = $query->bindings; $time = $query->time; ... });
    – racl101
    Jul 24, 2017 at 17:14
45

If all you really care about is the actual query (the last one run) for quick debugging purposes:

DB::enableQueryLog();

# your laravel query builder goes here

$laQuery = DB::getQueryLog();

$lcWhatYouWant = $laQuery[0]['query']; # <-------

# optionally disable the query log:
DB::disableQueryLog();

do a print_r() on $laQuery[0] to get the full query, including the bindings. (the $lcWhatYouWant variable above will have the variables replaced with ??)

If you're using something other than the main mysql connection, you'll need to use these instead:

DB::connection("mysql2")->enableQueryLog();

DB::connection("mysql2")->getQueryLog();

(with your connection name where "mysql2" is)

2
  • 1
    where does this code go though? (5.4) I've tried controller, model, and looked in middleware, not sure where to execute it before i get the db error.
    – blamb
    Jul 19, 2017 at 22:46
  • If you are getting an error when running the query that is stopping execution, the error should tell you what the problem is. If you have errors turned off, you can check the error log in /storage/log/laravel or something like that. (I'm not at my computer at the moment) If you are saying you're getting an error running the code I suggested in my answer, make sure you're including the DB facade wherever you are running the code. Not sure what you are trying to do, but the controller sounds like the most correct of the options you mentioned. (I usually run queries in seperate helper classes)
    – Skeets
    Jul 19, 2017 at 23:58
18

You need to first enable query logging

DB::enableQueryLog();

Then you can get query logs by simply:

dd(DB::getQueryLog());

It would be better if you enable query logging before application starts, which you can do in a BeforeMiddleware and then retrieve the executed queries in AfterMiddleware.

17

Put this on routes.php file:

\Event::listen('Illuminate\Database\Events\QueryExecuted', function ($query) {
    echo'<pre>';
    var_dump($query->sql);
    var_dump($query->bindings);
    var_dump($query->time);
    echo'</pre>';
});

Submitted by msurguy, source code in this page. You will find this fix-code for laravel 5.2 in comments.

2
  • A bit dirty, but +1 for the $query->bindings and $query->time hints Oct 9, 2019 at 10:32
  • Neat! Using this shows the results in the view, right where the query is occurring! Dec 30, 2019 at 21:31
13

Apparently with Laravel 5.2, the closure in DB::listen only receives a single parameter.

So, if you want to use DB::listen in Laravel 5.2, you should do something like:

DB::listen(
    function ($sql) {
        // $sql is an object with the properties:
        //  sql: The query
        //  bindings: the sql query variables
        //  time: The execution time for the query
        //  connectionName: The name of the connection

        // To save the executed queries to file:
        // Process the sql and the bindings:
        foreach ($sql->bindings as $i => $binding) {
            if ($binding instanceof \DateTime) {
                $sql->bindings[$i] = $binding->format('\'Y-m-d H:i:s\'');
            } else {
                if (is_string($binding)) {
                    $sql->bindings[$i] = "'$binding'";
                }
            }
        }

        // Insert bindings into query
        $query = str_replace(array('%', '?'), array('%%', '%s'), $sql->sql);

        $query = vsprintf($query, $sql->bindings);

        // Save the query to file
        $logFile = fopen(
            storage_path('logs' . DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR . date('Y-m-d') . '_query.log'),
            'a+'
        );
        fwrite($logFile, date('Y-m-d H:i:s') . ': ' . $query . PHP_EOL);
        fclose($logFile);
    }
);
1
11

Use toSql() instead of get() like so:

$users = User::orderBy('name', 'asc')->toSql();

echo $users;

// Outputs the string:
'select * from `users` order by `name` asc'
1
  • 1
    thanks brother simple enough
    – justnajm
    Oct 13, 2021 at 16:53
9

For laravel 5.8 you just add dd or dump.

Ex:

DB::table('users')->where('votes', '>', 100)->dd();

or

DB::table('users')->where('votes', '>', 100)->dump();

reference: https://laravel.com/docs/5.8/queries#debugging

1
  • simply awesome in laravel 8 as well
    – justnajm
    Oct 13, 2021 at 16:52
2

(Laravel 5.2) I find the simplest way is just to add one code line to monitor the sql queries:

\DB::listen(function($sql) {var_dump($sql); });
0
2

Suppose you want to print the SQL query of the following statements.

$user = User::find(5);

You just need to do as follows:

DB::enableQueryLog();//enable query logging

$user = User::find(5);

print_r(DB::getQueryLog());//print sql query

This will print the last executed query in Laravel.

2

Query Execution

\Event::listen('Illuminate\Database\Events\QueryExecuted', function ($query) {          
            $sql = $query->sql; 
            $time = $query->time;
            $connection = $query->connection->getName();
 
            Log::debug('query : '.$sql);
            Log::debug('time '.$time);
            Log::debug('connection '.$connection);
        });

Query

StaffRegister::all();

Output

[2021-03-14 08:00:57] local.DEBUG: query : select * from `staff_registers`  
[2021-03-14 08:00:57] local.DEBUG: time 0.93  
[2021-03-14 08:00:57] local.DEBUG: connection mysql  

complete structure

<?php

namespace App\Http\Controllers;

use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Log;
use App\Models\StaffRegister;

class AuthController extends Controller
{
   public function index(){
   
       \Event::listen('Illuminate\Database\Events\QueryExecuted', function ($query) {
      
           $sql = $query->sql; 
           $time = $query->time;
           $connection = $query->connection->getName();

           Log::debug('query : '.$sql);
           Log::debug('time '.$time);
           Log::debug('connection '.$connection);
       });

       $obj = StaffRegister::all(); 
    
       return $obj;
   }
}

Accurate Method For GET REPOSNSE

1

In continuing of the Apparently with Laravel 5.2, the closure in DB::listen only receives a single parameter... response above : you can put this code into the Middleware script and use it in the routes.

Additionally:

use Monolog\Logger;
use Monolog\Handler\StreamHandler;

$log = new Logger('sql');
$log->pushHandler(new StreamHandler(storage_path().'/logs/sql-' . date('Y-m-d') . '.log', Logger::INFO));

// add records to the log
$log->addInfo($query, $data);
1
  • which part should be placed into middleware ? which in routes ? Feb 22, 2016 at 9:09
1

This code is for:

  • Laravel 5.2
  • Log the statements into the mysql database

Here is the code, which is based on @milz 's answer:

    DB::listen(function($sql) {
        $LOG_TABLE_NAME = 'log';
        foreach ($sql->bindings as $i => $binding) {
            if ($binding instanceof \DateTime) {
                $sql->bindings[$i] = $binding->format('\'Y-m-d H:i:s\'');
            } else {
                if (is_string($binding)) {
                    $sql->bindings[$i] = "'$binding'";
                }
            }
        }
        // Insert bindings into query
        $query = str_replace(array('%', '?'), array('%%', '%s'), $sql->sql);
        $query = vsprintf($query, $sql->bindings);
        if(stripos($query, 'insert into `'.$LOG_TABLE_NAME.'`')===false){
            $toLog = new LogModel();
            $toLog->uId = 100;
            $toLog->sql = $query;
            $toLog->save();
        }
    });

The core is the if(stripos... line, which prevents the recursion of inserting the insert into log sql statement into database.

3
  • how this line of code is works? if(stripos($query, 'insert into '.$LOG_TABLE_NAME.'')===false){ Mar 14, 2021 at 9:44
  • @MohamedRaza prevents the recursion. otherwise, the "INSERT INTO yourlogtable" query itself will trigger this method, and generate a new insert statement, and so on.
    – ch271828n
    Mar 14, 2021 at 10:08
  • yes which is a endless loop, any how if statement also doesn't break the loop Mar 14, 2021 at 10:23
0

I think the answer located in this article: https://arjunphp.com/laravel-5-5-log-eloquent-queries/

is fast and simple to achieve query logging.

You just have to add to the AppServiceProvider in the boot method a callback to listen to DB queries:

namespace App\Providers;

use DB;
use Illuminate\Support\ServiceProvider;

class AppServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider
{
    public function boot()
    {
        DB::listen(function($query) {
            logger()->info($query->sql . print_r($query->bindings, true));
        });
    }
}
0
-1

Add this function to your helper file and simply call.

function getRawQuery($sql){
        $query = str_replace(array('?'), array('\'%s\''), $sql->toSql());
        $query = vsprintf($query, $sql->getBindings());     
        return $query;
}

Output: "select * from user where status = '1' order by id desc limit 25 offset 0"

-3

For laravel 5 and onwards using only DB::getQueryLog() , will not do. BY default in this the value of

 protected $loggingQueries = false;

change it to

protected $loggingQueries = true; 

in the below file for logging query.

/vendor/laravel/framework/src/illuminate/Database/Connection.php 

And then we can use the DB::getQueryLog() where you want to print the query.

2
  • 1
    It's a bad idea, to edit vendor files. They must be kept original. Aug 2, 2017 at 8:45
  • @shukshin.ivan Yes one must not edit vendor files but to get the exact query we have edit this code for time being then we can change it back. Oct 25, 2017 at 9:04

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