Database Forge Class
The Database Forge Class contains methods that help you manage your database.
Initializing the Forge Class
Important
In order to initialize the Forge class, your database driver must already be running, since the Forge class relies on it.
Load the Forge Class as follows:
<?php
$forge = \Config\Database::forge();
You can also pass another database group name to the DB Forge loader, in case the database you want to manage isn’t the default one:
<?php
$this->myforge = \Config\Database::forge('other_db');
In the above example, we’re passing the name of a different database group to connect to as the first parameter.
Creating and Dropping Databases
$forge->createDatabase(‘db_name’)
Permits you to create the database specified in the first parameter. Returns true/false based on success or failure:
<?php
if ($forge->createDatabase('my_db')) {
echo 'Database created!';
}
An optional second parameter set to true will add IF EXISTS
statement
or will check if a database exists before create it (depending on DBMS).
<?php
$forge->createDatabase('my_db', true);
/*
* gives CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS `my_db`
* or will check if a database exists
*/
$forge->dropDatabase(‘db_name’)
Permits you to drop the database specified in the first parameter. Returns true/false based on success or failure:
<?php
if ($forge->dropDatabase('my_db')) {
echo 'Database deleted!';
}
Creating Databases in the Command Line
CodeIgniter supports creating databases straight from your favorite terminal using the dedicated db:create
command. By using this command it is assumed that the database is not yet existing. Otherwise, CodeIgniter
will complain that the database creation has failed.
To start, just type the command and the name of the database (e.g., foo
):
php spark db:create foo
If everything went fine, you should expect the Database "foo" successfully created.
message displayed.
If you are on a testing environment or you are using the SQLite3 driver, you may pass in the file extension
for the file where the database will be created using the --ext
option. Valid values are db
and
sqlite
and defaults to db
. Remember that these should not be preceded by a period.
:
php spark db:create foo --ext sqlite
The above command will create the db file in WRITEPATH/foo.sqlite.
Note
When using the special SQLite3 database name :memory:
, expect that the command will still
produce a success message but no database file is created. This is because SQLite3 will just use
an in-memory database.
Creating Tables
There are several things you may wish to do when creating tables. Add fields, add keys to the table, alter columns. CodeIgniter provides a mechanism for this.
Adding Fields
Fields are normally created via an associative array. Within the array, you must
include a type
key that relates to the datatype of the field. For
example, INT, VARCHAR, TEXT, etc. Many datatypes (for example VARCHAR)
also require a constraint
key.
<?php
$fields = [
'users' => [
'type' => 'VARCHAR',
'constraint' => 100,
],
];
// will translate to "users VARCHAR(100)" when the field is added.
Additionally, the following key/values can be used:
unsigned
/true : to generate “UNSIGNED” in the field definition.default
/value : to generate a default value in the field definition.null
/true : to generate “null” in the field definition. Without this, the field will default to “NOT null”.auto_increment
/true : generates an auto_increment flag on the field. Note that the field type must be a type that supports this, such as integer.unique
/true : to generate a unique key for the field definition.
<?php
$fields = [
'id' => [
'type' => 'INT',
'constraint' => 5,
'unsigned' => true,
'auto_increment' => true,
],
'title' => [
'type' => 'VARCHAR',
'constraint' => '100',
'unique' => true,
],
'author' => [
'type' => 'VARCHAR',
'constraint' => 100,
'default' => 'King of Town',
],
'description' => [
'type' => 'TEXT',
'null' => true,
],
'status' => [
'type' => 'ENUM',
'constraint' => ['publish', 'pending', 'draft'],
'default' => 'pending',
],
];
After the fields have been defined, they can be added using
$forge->addField($fields)
followed by a call to the
createTable()
method.
$forge->addField()
The addField()
method will accept the above array.
Raw Sql Strings as Default Values
New in version 4.2.0.
Since v4.2.0, $forge->addField()
accepts a CodeIgniter\Database\RawSql
instance, which expresses raw SQL strings.
<?php
use CodeIgniter\Database\RawSql;
$fields = [
'id' => [
'type' => 'INT',
'constraint' => 5,
'unsigned' => true,
'auto_increment' => true,
],
'created_at' => [
'type' => 'TIMESTAMP',
'default' => new RawSql('CURRENT_TIMESTAMP'),
],
];
$forge->addField($fields);
/*
gives:
"id" INT(5) UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
"created_at" TIMESTAMP DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP NOT NULL
*/
Warning
When you use RawSql
, you MUST escape the data manually. Failure to do so could result in SQL injections.
Passing Strings as Fields
If you know exactly how you want a field to be created, you can pass the
string into the field definitions with addField()
:
<?php
$forge->addField("label varchar(100) NOT NULL DEFAULT 'default label'");
Note
Passing raw strings as fields cannot be followed by addKey()
calls on those fields.
Note
Multiple calls to addField()
are cumulative.
Creating an id Field
There is a special exception for creating id fields. A field with type id will automatically be assigned as an INT(9) auto_incrementing Primary Key.
<?php
$forge->addField('id');
// gives `id` INT(9) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT
Adding Keys
$forge->addKey()
Generally speaking, you’ll want your table to have Keys. This is
accomplished with $forge->addKey('field')
. The optional second
parameter set to true will make it a primary key and the third
parameter set to true will make it a unique key. You may specify a name
with the fourth parameter. Note that addKey()
must be followed by a
call to createTable()
or processIndexes()
when the table already
exists.
Multiple column non-primary keys must be sent as an array. Sample output below is for MySQL.
<?php
$forge->addKey('blog_id', true);
// gives PRIMARY KEY `blog_id` (`blog_id`)
$forge->addKey('blog_id', true);
$forge->addKey('site_id', true);
// gives PRIMARY KEY `blog_id_site_id` (`blog_id`, `site_id`)
$forge->addKey('blog_name');
// gives KEY `blog_name` (`blog_name`)
$forge->addKey(['blog_name', 'blog_label'], false, false, 'my_key_name');
// gives KEY `my_key_name` (`blog_name`, `blog_label`)
$forge->addKey(['blog_id', 'uri'], false, true, 'my_key_name');
// gives UNIQUE KEY `my_key_name` (`blog_id`, `uri`)
$forge->addPrimaryKey()
$forge->addUniqueKey()
To make code reading more objective it is also possible to add primary and unique keys with specific methods:
<?php
$forge->addPrimaryKey('blog_id', 'pd_name');
// gives PRIMARY KEY `pd_name` (`blog_id`)
$forge->addUniqueKey(['blog_id', 'uri'], 'key_name');
// gives UNIQUE KEY `key_name` (`blog_id`, `uri`)
Note
When you add a primary key, MySQL and SQLite will assume the name PRIMARY
even if a name is provided.
Adding Foreign Keys
Foreign Keys help to enforce relationships and actions across your tables. For tables that support Foreign Keys, you may add them directly in forge:
<?php
$forge->addForeignKey('users_id', 'users', 'id');
// gives CONSTRAINT `TABLENAME_users_id_foreign` FOREIGN KEY(`users_id`) REFERENCES `users`(`id`)
$forge->addForeignKey(['users_id', 'users_name'], 'users', ['id', 'name']);
// gives CONSTRAINT `TABLENAME_users_id_foreign` FOREIGN KEY(`users_id`, `users_name`) REFERENCES `users`(`id`, `name`)
You can specify the desired action for the “on update” and “on delete” properties of the constraint as well as the name:
<?php
$forge->addForeignKey('users_id', 'users', 'id', 'CASCADE', 'CASCADE', 'my_fk_name');
// gives CONSTRAINT `my_fk_name` FOREIGN KEY(`users_id`) REFERENCES `users`(`id`) ON DELETE CASCADE ON UPDATE CASCADE
$forge->addForeignKey('users_id', 'users', 'id', '', 'CASCADE');
// gives CONSTRAINT `TABLENAME_users_foreign` FOREIGN KEY(`users_id`) REFERENCES `users`(`id`) ON DELETE CASCADE
$forge->addForeignKey(['users_id', 'users_name'], 'users', ['id', 'name'], 'CASCADE', 'CASCADE', 'my_fk_name');
// gives CONSTRAINT `my_fk_name` FOREIGN KEY(`users_id`, `users_name`) REFERENCES `users`(`id`, `name`) ON DELETE CASCADE ON UPDATE CASCADE
Note
SQLite3 does not support the naming of foreign keys. CodeIgniter will refer to them by prefix_table_column_foreign
.
Creating a Table
After fields and keys have been declared, you can create a new table with
<?php
$forge->createTable('table_name');
// gives CREATE TABLE table_name
An optional second parameter set to true will create the table only if it doesn’t already exist.
<?php
$forge->createTable('table_name', true);
// creates table only if table does not exist
You could also pass optional table attributes, such as MySQL’s ENGINE
:
<?php
$attributes = ['ENGINE' => 'InnoDB'];
$forge->createTable('table_name', false, $attributes);
// produces: CREATE TABLE `table_name` (...) ENGINE = InnoDB DEFAULT CHARACTER SET utf8 COLLATE utf8_general_ci
Note
Unless you specify the CHARACTER SET
and/or COLLATE
attributes,
createTable()
will always add them with your configured charset
and DBCollat values, as long as they are not empty (MySQL only).
Dropping Tables
Dropping a Table
Execute a DROP TABLE
statement and optionally add an IF EXISTS
clause.
<?php
// Produces: DROP TABLE `table_name`
$forge->dropTable('table_name');
// Produces: DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `table_name`
$forge->dropTable('table_name', true);
A third parameter can be passed to add a CASCADE
option, which might be required for some
drivers to handle removal of tables with foreign keys.
<?php
// Produces: DROP TABLE `table_name` CASCADE
$forge->dropTable('table_name', false, true);
Modifying Tables
Adding a Field to a Table
$forge->addColumn()
The addColumn()
method is used to modify an existing table. It
accepts the same field array as Creating Tables, and can
be used to add additional fields.
Note
Unlike when creating a table, if null
is not specified, the column
will be NULL
, not NOT NULL
.
<?php
$fields = [
'preferences' => ['type' => 'TEXT'],
];
$forge->addColumn('table_name', $fields);
// Executes: ALTER TABLE `table_name` ADD `preferences` TEXT
If you are using MySQL or CUBIRD, then you can take advantage of their
AFTER
and FIRST
clauses to position the new column.
Examples:
<?php
// Will place the new column after the `another_field` column:
$fields = [
'preferences' => ['type' => 'TEXT', 'after' => 'another_field'],
];
// Will place the new column at the start of the table definition:
$fields = [
'preferences' => ['type' => 'TEXT', 'first' => true],
];
Dropping Fields From a Table
$forge->dropColumn()
Used to remove a column from a table.
<?php
$forge->dropColumn('table_name', 'column_to_drop'); // to drop one single column
Used to remove multiple columns from a table.
<?php
$forge->dropColumn('table_name', 'column_1,column_2'); // by proving comma separated column names
$forge->dropColumn('table_name', ['column_1', 'column_2']); // by proving array of column names
Modifying a Field in a Table
$forge->modifyColumn()
The usage of this method is identical to addColumn()
, except it
alters an existing column rather than adding a new one. In order to
change the name, you can add a “name” key into the field defining array.
<?php
$fields = [
'old_name' => [
'name' => 'new_name',
'type' => 'TEXT',
'null' => false,
],
];
$forge->modifyColumn('table_name', $fields);
// gives ALTER TABLE `table_name` CHANGE `old_name` `new_name` TEXT NOT NULL
Note
The modifyColumn()
may unexpectedly change NULL
/NOT NULL
.
So it is recommended to always specify the value for null
key. Unlike when creating
a table, if null
is not specified, the column will be NULL
, not
NOT NULL
.
Note
Due to a bug, prior v4.3.3, SQLite3 may not set NOT NULL
even if you
specify 'null' => false
.
Note
Due to a bug, prior v4.3.3, Postgres and SQLSRV set NOT NULL
even
if you specify 'null' => false
.
Adding Keys to a Table
New in version 4.3.0.
You may add keys to an existing table by using addKey()
, addPrimaryKey()
,
addUniqueKey()
or addForeignKey()
and processIndexes()
:
<?php
$this->forge->addKey(['category', 'name'], false, false, 'category_name');
$this->forge->addPrimaryKey('id', 'pk_actions');
$this->forge->addForeignKey('userid', 'user', 'id', '', '', 'userid_fk');
$this->forge->processIndexes('actions');
/* gives:
ALTER TABLE `actions` ADD KEY `category_name` (`category`, `name`);
ALTER TABLE `actions` ADD CONSTRAINT `pk_actions` PRIMARY KEY(`id`);
ALTER TABLE `actions` ADD CONSTRAINT `userid_fk` FOREIGN KEY (`userid`) REFERENCES `user`(`id`);
*/
Dropping a Primary Key
New in version 4.3.0.
Execute a DROP PRIMARY KEY.
<?php
// MySqli Produces: ALTER TABLE `tablename` DROP PRIMARY KEY
// Others Produces: ALTER TABLE `tablename` DROP CONSTRAINT `pk_tablename`
$forge->dropPrimaryKey('tablename');
Dropping a Key
Execute a DROP KEY.
<?php
// For Indexes Produces: DROP INDEX `users_index` ON `tablename`
// For Unique Indexes Produces: ALTER TABLE `tablename` DROP CONSTRAINT `users_index`
$forge->dropKey('tablename', 'users_index', false);
Dropping a Foreign Key
Execute a DROP FOREIGN KEY.
<?php
// Produces: ALTER TABLE `tablename` DROP FOREIGN KEY `users_foreign`
$forge->dropForeignKey('tablename', 'users_foreign');
Renaming a Table
Executes a TABLE rename
<?php
$forge->renameTable('old_table_name', 'new_table_name');
// gives ALTER TABLE `old_table_name` RENAME TO `new_table_name`
Class Reference
- class CodeIgniter\Database\Forge
- addColumn($table[, $field = []])
- Parameters
$table (
string
) – Table name to add the column to$field (
array
) – Column definition(s)
- Returns
true on success, false on failure
- Return type
bool
Adds a column to an existing table. Usage: See Adding a Field to a Table.
- addField($field)
- Parameters
$field (
array
) – Field definition to add
- Returns
\CodeIgniter\Database\Forge
instance (method chaining)- Return type
\CodeIgniter\Database\Forge
Adds a field to the set that will be used to create a table. Usage: See Adding Fields.
- addForeignKey($fieldName, $tableName, $tableField[, $onUpdate = '', $onDelete = '', $fkName = ''])
- Parameters
$fieldName (
string|string[]
) – Name of a key field or an array of fields$tableName (
string
) – Name of a parent table$tableField (
string|string[]
) – Name of a parent table field or an array of fields$onUpdate (
string
) – Desired action for the “on update”$onDelete (
string
) – Desired action for the “on delete”$fkName (
string
) – Name of foreign key. This does not work with SQLite3
- Returns
\CodeIgniter\Database\Forge
instance (method chaining)- Return type
\CodeIgniter\Database\Forge
Adds a foreign key to the set that will be used to create a table. Usage: See Adding Foreign Keys.
Note
$fkName
can be used since v4.3.0.
- addKey($key[, $primary = false[, $unique = false[, $keyName = '']]])
- Parameters
$key (
mixed
) – Name of a key field or an array of fields$primary (
bool
) – Set to true if it should be a primary key or a regular one$unique (
bool
) – Set to true if it should be a unique key or a regular one$keyName (
string
) – Name of key to be added
- Returns
\CodeIgniter\Database\Forge
instance (method chaining)- Return type
\CodeIgniter\Database\Forge
Adds a key to the set that will be used to create a table. Usage: See Adding Keys.
Note
$keyName
can be used since v4.3.0.
- addPrimaryKey($key[, $keyName = ''])
- Parameters
$key (
mixed
) – Name of a key field or an array of fields$keyName (
string
) – Name of key to be added
- Returns
\CodeIgniter\Database\Forge
instance (method chaining)- Return type
\CodeIgniter\Database\Forge
Adds a primary key to the set that will be used to create a table. Usage: See Adding Keys.
Note
$keyName
can be used since v4.3.0.
- addUniqueKey($key[, $keyName = ''])
- Parameters
$key (
mixed
) – Name of a key field or an array of fields$keyName (
string
) – Name of key to be added
- Returns
\CodeIgniter\Database\Forge
instance (method chaining)- Return type
\CodeIgniter\Database\Forge
Adds a unique key to the set that will be used to create a table. Usage: See Adding Keys.
Note
$keyName
can be used since v4.3.0.
- createDatabase($dbName[, $ifNotExists = false])
- Parameters
$db_name (
string
) – Name of the database to create$ifNotExists (
string
) – Set to true to add anIF NOT EXISTS
clause or check if database exists
- Returns
true on success, false on failure
- Return type
bool
Creates a new database. Usage: See Creating and Dropping Databases.
- createTable($table[, $if_not_exists = false[, array $attributes = []]])
- Parameters
$table (
string
) – Name of the table to create$if_not_exists (
string
) – Set to true to add anIF NOT EXISTS
clause$attributes (
string
) – An associative array of table attributes
- Returns
Query object on success, false on failure
- Return type
mixed
Creates a new table. Usage: See Creating a Table.
- dropColumn($table, $column_name)
- Parameters
$table (
string
) – Table name$column_names (
mixed
) – Comma-delimited string or an array of column names
- Returns
true on success, false on failure
- Return type
bool
Drops single or multiple columns from a table. Usage: See Dropping Fields From a Table.
- dropDatabase($dbName)
- Parameters
$dbName (
string
) – Name of the database to drop
- Returns
true on success, false on failure
- Return type
bool
Drops a database. Usage: See Creating and Dropping Databases.
- dropKey($table, $keyName[, $prefixKeyName = true])
- Parameters
$table (
string
) – Name of table that has key$keyName (
string
) – Name of key to be dropped$prefixKeyName (
string
) – If database prefix should be added to$keyName
- Returns
true on success, false on failure
- Return type
bool
Drops an index or unique index.
Note
$keyName
and$prefixKeyName
can be used since v4.3.0.
- dropPrimaryKey($table[, $keyName = ''])
- Parameters
$table (
string
) – Name of table to drop primary key$keyName (
string
) – Name of primary key to be dropped
- Returns
true on success, false on failure
- Return type
bool
Drops a primary key from a table.
Note
$keyName
can be used since v4.3.0.
- dropTable($table_name[, $if_exists = false])
- Parameters
$table (
string
) – Name of the table to drop$if_exists (
string
) – Set to true to add anIF EXISTS
clause
- Returns
true on success, false on failure
- Return type
bool
Drops a table. Usage: See Dropping a Table.
- processIndexes($table)
New in version 4.3.0.
- Parameters
$table (
string
) – Name of the table to add indexes to
- Returns
true on success, false on failure
- Return type
bool
Used following
addKey()
,addPrimaryKey()
,addUniqueKey()
, andaddForeignKey()
to add indexes to an existing table. See Adding Keys to a Table.
- modifyColumn($table, $field)
- Parameters
$table (
string
) – Table name$field (
array
) – Column definition(s)
- Returns
true on success, false on failure
- Return type
bool
Modifies a table column. Usage: See Modifying a Field in a Table.
- renameTable($table_name, $new_table_name)
- Parameters
$table (
string
) – Current of the table$new_table_name (
string
) – New name of the table
- Returns
Query object on success, false on failure
- Return type
mixed
Renames a table. Usage: See Renaming a Table.