php-src/ext/mysqli/tests/022.phpt
Ulf Wendel 1855a57471 Introducing new environment variable:
MYSQL_TEST_SKIP_CONNECT_FAILURE = false

Every test that needs a working MySQL connection now includes
skipifconnectfailure.inc. If MYSQL_TEST_SKIP_CONNECT_FAILURE evaluates
to true skipifconnectfailure.inc tries to establish a database
connection. If no connection can be opened, the test will be skipped.
In case of MYSQL_TEST_SKIP_CONNECT_FAILURE = false (default) an no
connection, a test who cannot establish a connection will fail.

So, if you have a buggy configuration or a server that is sometimes
not available, you can now decide if you want the tests to ignore this
and skip the test or to fail (MYSQL_TEST_CONNECT_FAILURE = false, default).

Other, minor tweaks:
  042.phpt - whitespace
  067.phpt - parse error in SKIPIF section fixed
2007-08-09 08:41:12 +00:00

60 lines
1.2 KiB
PHP

--TEST--
mysqli bind_param/bind_result char/text long
--SKIPIF--
<?php
require_once('skipif.inc');
require_once('skipifconnectfailure.inc');
?>
--FILE--
<?php
include "connect.inc";
/*** test mysqli_connect 127.0.0.1 ***/
$link = mysqli_connect($host, $user, $passwd, $db, $port, $socket);
mysqli_select_db($link, $db);
mysqli_query($link,"DROP TABLE IF EXISTS test_bind_fetch");
mysqli_query($link,"CREATE TABLE test_bind_fetch(c1 char(10), c2 text)");
$stmt = mysqli_prepare($link, "INSERT INTO test_bind_fetch VALUES (?,?)");
mysqli_bind_param($stmt, "ss", $a1, $a2);
$a1 = "1234567890";
$a2 = str_repeat("A1", 32000);
mysqli_execute($stmt);
mysqli_stmt_close($stmt);
$stmt = mysqli_prepare($link, "SELECT * FROM test_bind_fetch");
mysqli_bind_result($stmt, $c1, $c2);
mysqli_execute($stmt);
mysqli_fetch($stmt);
$test[] = $c1;
$test[] = ($a2 == $c2) ? "32K String ok" : "32K String failed";
var_dump($test);
mysqli_stmt_close($stmt);
mysqli_close($link);
print "done!";
?>
--EXPECTF--
array(2) {
[0]=>
string(10) "1234567890"
[1]=>
%s(13) "32K String ok"
}
done!
--UEXPECTF--
array(2) {
[0]=>
unicode(10) "1234567890"
[1]=>
%s(13) "32K String ok"
}
done!