Sample to get the primary keys of an MSSQL table:
$cn = odbc_connect( "DSN", "sa", "pwd");
$rs = odbc_primarykeys( $cn, "database", "dbo", "table_name");
odbc_result_all($rs);
(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
odbc_primarykeys — Restituisce un identificatore di risultato che può essere utilizzato per ricavare il nome della colonna che contiene la chiave primaria della tabella.
$id_connessione
,$qualifica
,$proprietario
,$tabella
Restituisce il nome della colonna che contiene la chiave primaria
per la tabella. La funzione ritorna un identificatore di risultato
ODBC oppure false
se si verifica un errore.
Le righe risultanti dall'elaborazione contengono i seguenti campi:
Sample to get the primary keys of an MSSQL table:
$cn = odbc_connect( "DSN", "sa", "pwd");
$rs = odbc_primarykeys( $cn, "database", "dbo", "table_name");
odbc_result_all($rs);
Responding to devendra_joshi:
In DB2 Universal Database for Linux, UNIX, and Windows the catalog views are accessed through the SYSCAT schema, not the SYSIBM schema -- so you should be issuing "SELECT * FROM SYSCAT.KEYCOLUSE" to list all of the columns that participate in a given key constraint.
A complete list of the catalog views for DB2 can be referenced at http://publib.boulder.ibm.com/infocenter/db2help/ by searching for 'catalog views' and selecting the top hit.
I want a list of primary keys of a table in db2
by using
'select * from SYSIBM.SYSKEYCOLUSE ' query i am getting the result on CLP
but when i am writing it in PHP as follows it returns 0 ROWS.
$mstmt="select * from SYSIBM.SYSKEYCOLUSE";
$b=odbc_exec($conn,$mstmt);
echo odbc_result_all($b);
where as if we write this code
$mstmt="select * from SYSIBM.SYSFUNCTIONS";
$b=odbc_exec($conn,$mstmt);
echo odbc_result_all($b);
it returns the correct data.
I was trying to find the primary keys from an SQLServer database through the ODBC interface. Funnily enough, the odbc_primarykeys function doesn't work with SQLServer (at least not my implementation of it). Fortunately, the sp_keys query is passed through and the answer returned. This code works (providing you know which database you're dealing with, which is a whole 'nother story).
// If this is SQLServer, we need to do a special operation to get the
// primary keys.
//
// Looks like the implementers of the ODBC interface just blew this
// one off, since the database has a query to return the info and the
// info even comes back with the same column names.
if ($DBType == "SQLServer")
$KeySel = odbc_exec($DBConn, "sp_pkeys ".$TableName);
// Otherwise, ask the database through ODBC for the primary key
// names.
else $KeySel = odbc_primarykeys($DBConn, $DatabaseName,
$DatabaseUser, $TableName);
while ($KeySel && ($KeyRec = odbc_fetch_array($KeySel)))
$KeyCol[$KeyRec["KEY_SEQ"]] = $KeyRec["COLUMN_NAME"];