PQstatus
Returns the status of the connection.
ConnStatusType PQstatus(const PGconn *conn);
The status can be one of a number of values. However, only two of
these are seen outside of an asynchronous connection procedure:
CONNECTION_OK and
CONNECTION_BAD. A good connection to the database
has the status CONNECTION_OK. A failed
connection attempt is signaled by status
CONNECTION_BAD. Ordinarily, an OK status will
remain so until PQfinish
, but a communications
failure might result in the status changing to
CONNECTION_BAD prematurely. In that case the
application could try to recover by calling
PQreset
.
See the entry for PQconnectStartParams
, PQconnectStart
and PQconnectPoll
with regards to other status codes that
might be returned.
PQtransactionStatus
Returns the current in-transaction status of the server.
PGTransactionStatusType PQtransactionStatus(const PGconn *conn);
The status can be PQTRANS_IDLE (currently idle),
PQTRANS_ACTIVE (a command is in progress),
PQTRANS_INTRANS (idle, in a valid transaction block),
or PQTRANS_INERROR (idle, in a failed transaction block).
PQTRANS_UNKNOWN is reported if the connection is bad.
PQTRANS_ACTIVE is reported only when a query
has been sent to the server and not yet completed.
Caution |
PQtransactionStatus will give incorrect results when using
a PostgreSQL 7.3 server that has the parameter autocommit
set to off. The server-side autocommit feature has been
deprecated and does not exist in later server versions.
|
PQparameterStatus
Looks up a current parameter setting of the server.
const char *PQparameterStatus(const PGconn *conn, const char *paramName);
Certain parameter values are reported by the server automatically at
connection startup or whenever their values change.
PQparameterStatus
can be used to interrogate these settings.
It returns the current value of a parameter if known, or NULL
if the parameter is not known.
Parameters reported as of the current release include
server_version,
server_encoding,
client_encoding,
application_name,
is_superuser,
session_authorization,
DateStyle,
IntervalStyle,
TimeZone,
integer_datetimes, and
standard_conforming_strings.
(server_encoding, TimeZone, and
integer_datetimes were not reported by releases before 8.0;
standard_conforming_strings was not reported by releases
before 8.1;
IntervalStyle was not reported by releases before 8.4;
application_name was not reported by releases before 9.0.)
Note that
server_version,
server_encoding and
integer_datetimes
cannot change after startup.
Pre-3.0-protocol servers do not report parameter settings, but
libpq includes logic to obtain values for
server_version and client_encoding anyway.
Applications are encouraged to use PQparameterStatus
rather than ad hoc code to determine these values.
(Beware however that on a pre-3.0 connection, changing
client_encoding via SET after connection
startup will not be reflected by PQparameterStatus
.)
For server_version, see also
PQserverVersion
, which returns the information in a
numeric form that is much easier to compare against.
If no value for standard_conforming_strings is reported,
applications can assume it is off, that is, backslashes
are treated as escapes in string literals. Also, the presence of
this parameter can be taken as an indication that the escape string
syntax (E'...') is accepted.
Although the returned pointer is declared const, it in fact
points to mutable storage associated with the PGconn structure.
It is unwise to assume the pointer will remain valid across queries.
PQprotocolVersion
Interrogates the frontend/backend protocol being used.
int PQprotocolVersion(const PGconn *conn);
Applications might wish to use this function to determine whether certain
features are supported. Currently, the possible values are 2 (2.0
protocol), 3 (3.0 protocol), or zero (connection bad). The
protocol version will
not change after connection startup is complete, but it could
theoretically change during a connection reset. The 3.0 protocol
will normally be used when communicating with
PostgreSQL 7.4 or later servers; pre-7.4 servers
support only protocol 2.0. (Protocol 1.0 is obsolete and not
supported by libpq.)
PQserverVersion
Returns an integer representing the backend version.
int PQserverVersion(const PGconn *conn);
Applications might use this function to determine the version of the database
server they are connected to. The number is formed by converting
the major, minor, and revision numbers into two-decimal-digit
numbers and appending them together. For example, version 8.1.5
will be returned as 80105, and version 8.2 will be returned as
80200 (leading zeroes are not shown). Zero is returned if the
connection is bad.
PQerrorMessage
Returns the error message
most recently generated by an operation on the connection.
char *PQerrorMessage(const PGconn *conn);
Nearly all libpq functions will set a message for
PQerrorMessage
if they fail. Note that by
libpq convention, a nonempty
PQerrorMessage
result can consist of multiple lines,
and will include a trailing newline. The caller should not free
the result directly. It will be freed when the associated
PGconn handle is passed to
PQfinish
. The result string should not be
expected to remain the same across operations on the
PGconn structure.
PQsocket
Obtains the file descriptor number of the connection socket to
the server. A valid descriptor will be greater than or equal
to 0; a result of -1 indicates that no server connection is
currently open. (This will not change during normal operation,
but could change during connection setup or reset.)
int PQsocket(const PGconn *conn);
PQbackendPID
Returns the process ID (PID)
of the backend process handling this connection.
int PQbackendPID(const PGconn *conn);
The backend PID is useful for debugging
purposes and for comparison to NOTIFY
messages (which include the PID of the
notifying backend process). Note that the
PID belongs to a process executing on the
database server host, not the local host!
PQconnectionNeedsPassword
Returns true (1) if the connection authentication method
required a password, but none was available.
Returns false (0) if not.
int PQconnectionNeedsPassword(const PGconn *conn);
This function can be applied after a failed connection attempt
to decide whether to prompt the user for a password.
PQconnectionUsedPassword
Returns true (1) if the connection authentication method
used a password. Returns false (0) if not.
int PQconnectionUsedPassword(const PGconn *conn);
This function can be applied after either a failed or successful
connection attempt to detect whether the server demanded a password.
PQgetssl
Returns the SSL structure used in the connection, or null
if SSL is not in use.
SSL *PQgetssl(const PGconn *conn);
This structure can be used to verify encryption levels, check server
certificates, and more. Refer to the OpenSSL
documentation for information about this structure.
You must define USE_SSL in order to get the
correct prototype for this function. Doing so will also
automatically include ssl.h from
OpenSSL.