odbc_commit
(PHP 3>= 3.0.6, PHP 4 )
odbc_commit -- Commit an ODBC transaction
Description
bool odbc_commit ( resource connection_id)
odbc_commit() commits all pending transactions on the connection_id
connection. Returns TRUE on success or FALSE on failure.
odbc_connect
(PHP 3>= 3.0.6, PHP 4 )
odbc_connect -- Connect to a datasource
Description
resource odbc_connect ( string dsn, string user, string
password [, int cursor_type])
Returns an ODBC connection id or 0 (FALSE) on error.
The connection id returned by this functions is needed
by other ODBC functions. You can have multiple connections
open at once as long as they either use different db or
different credentials. The optional fourth parameter sets
the type of cursor to be used for this connection. This
parameter is not normally needed, but can be useful for
working around problems with some ODBC drivers.
With some ODBC drivers, executing a complex stored procedure
may fail with an error similar to: "Cannot open a cursor
on a stored procedure that has anything other than a single
select statement in it". Using SQL_CUR_USE_ODBC may
avoid that error. Also, some drivers don't support the optional
row_number parameter in odbc_fetch_row(). SQL_CUR_USE_ODBC
might help in that case, too.
The following constants are defined for cursortype:
SQL_CUR_USE_IF_NEEDED
SQL_CUR_USE_ODBC
SQL_CUR_USE_DRIVER
SQL_CUR_DEFAULT
For persistent connections see odbc_pconnect().
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