Oracle 11.2 introduced support for REF CURSOR prefetching
oci_new_cursor
(PHP 5, PECL OCI8 >= 1.1.0)
oci_new_cursor — Allocates and returns a new cursor (statement handle)
Descrierea
resource oci_new_cursor
( resource $connection
)
Allocates a new statement handle on the specified connection.
Valorile întoarse
Returns a new statement handle, or FALSE on error.
Exemple
Example #1 Using REF CURSOR in an Oracle's stored procedure
<?php
// suppose your stored procedure info.output returns a ref cursor in :data
$conn = oci_connect("scott", "tiger");
$curs = oci_new_cursor($conn);
$stmt = oci_parse($conn, "begin info.output(:data); end;");
oci_bind_by_name($stmt, "data", $curs, -1, OCI_B_CURSOR);
oci_execute($stmt);
oci_execute($curs);
while ($data = oci_fetch_row($curs)) {
var_dump($data);
}
oci_free_statement($stmt);
oci_free_statement($curs);
oci_close($conn);
?>
Example #2 Using REF CURSOR in an Oracle's select statement
<?php
echo "<html><body>";
$conn = oci_connect("scott", "tiger");
$count_cursor = "CURSOR(select count(empno) num_emps from emp " .
"where emp.deptno = dept.deptno) as EMPCNT from dept";
$stmt = oci_parse($conn, "select deptno,dname,$count_cursor");
oci_execute($stmt);
echo "<table border=\"1\">";
echo "<tr>";
echo "<th>DEPT NAME</th>";
echo "<th>DEPT #</th>";
echo "<th># EMPLOYEES</th>";
echo "</tr>";
while ($data = oci_fetch_assoc($stmt)) {
echo "<tr>";
$dname = $data["DNAME"];
$deptno = $data["DEPTNO"];
echo "<td>$dname</td>";
echo "<td>$deptno</td>";
oci_execute($data["EMPCNT"]);
while ($subdata = oci_fetch_assoc($data["EMPCNT"])) {
$num_emps = $subdata["NUM_EMPS"];
echo "<td>$num_emps</td>";
}
echo "</tr>";
}
echo "</table>";
echo "</body></html>";
oci_free_statement($stmt);
oci_close($conn);
?>
Note
Notă:
In PHP versions before 5.0.0 you must use ocinewcursor() instead. This name still can be used, it was left as alias of oci_new_cursor() for downwards compatability. This, however, is deprecated and not recommended.
sixd at php dot net
27-Jan-2010 10:41
sixd at php dot net
05-Nov-2008 12:13
Because OCI8 uses "prefetching" to greatly improve returning query results, but Oracle doesn't support prefetching for REF CURSORs, application performance using REF CURSORs can be greatly improved by writing a PL/SQL function that pulls data from the REF CURSOR and PIPEs the output. The new function can be queried in a SELECT as if it were a table. See http://blogs.oracle.com/opal/2008/11/
converting_ref_cursor_to_pipe.html
