17 KiB
クエリビルダとクエリ
Note|注意: この節はまだ執筆中です。
データベースの基礎 の節で説明したように、Yii は基本的なデータベースアクセスレイヤを提供します。 このデータベースアクセスレイヤは、データベースと相互作用するための低レベルな方法を提供するものです。 それが有用な状況もありますが、生の SQL を書くことは面倒くさく、間違いを生じやすいものでもあります。 これに取って代る方法の一つがクエリビルダを使用することです。 クエリビルダは、実行すべきクエリを生成するためのオブジェクト指向の手法です。
クエリビルダの典型的な使用例は以下のようなものです。
$rows = (new \yii\db\Query())
->select('id, name')
->from('user')
->limit(10)
->all();
// これは下記のコードと等価
$query = (new \yii\db\Query())
->select('id, name')
->from('user')
->limit(10);
// コマンドを作成。$command->sql で実際の SQL を取得できる
$command = $query->createCommand();
// コマンドを実行
$rows = $command->queryAll();
クエリメソッド
ご覧のように、yii\db\Query が、あなたが扱わねばならない主役のオブジェクトです。
舞台裏では、Query
は、実際には、さまざまなクエリ情報を表現する役目を負っているに過ぎません。
実際のクエリ構築のロジックは、createCommand()
コマンドを呼んだときに、yii\db\QueryBuilder によって実行され、クエリの実行は yii\db\Command によって実行されます。
便宜上の理由から、yii\db\Query が、よく使われる一連のクエリメソッド (クエリを構築し、実行して、結果を返すメソッド) を提供しています。 例えば、
- yii\db\Query::all(): クエリを構築し、実行して、全ての結果を配列として返します。
- yii\db\Query::one(): 結果の最初の行を返します。
- yii\db\Query::column(): 結果の最初のカラムを返します。
- yii\db\Query::scalar(): 結果の最初の行の最初のカラムを返します。
- yii\db\Query::exists(): 何らかのクエリ結果が有るかどうかを返します。
- yii\db\Query::count():
COUNT
クエリの結果を返します。 他の似たようなメソッドに、sum($q)
、average($q)
、max($q)
、min($q)
があり、いわゆる統計データクエリをサポートしています。 これらのメソッドでは$q
パラメータは必須であり、カラム名または式を取ります。
クエリを構築する
以下に、SQL 文の中のさまざまな句を組み立てる方法を説明します。
話を単純にするために、$query
という変数を使って yii\db\Query オブジェクトを表すものとします。
SELECT
基本的な SELECT
クエリを形作るためには、どのテーブルからどのカラムをセレクトするかを指定する必要があります。
$query->select('id, name')
->from('user');
セレクトのオプションは、上記のように、カンマで区切られた文字列で指定することも出来ますが、配列によって指定することも出来ます。 配列を使う構文は、セレクトを動的に形作る場合に、特に有用です。
$query->select(['id', 'name'])
->from('user');
Info|情報:
SELECT
句が SQL 式を含む場合は、常に配列形式を使うべきです。 これは、CONCAT(first_name, last_name) AS full_name
のように、SQL 式がカンマを含みうるからです。 そういう式を他のカラムと一緒に文字列の中に含めると、式がカンマによっていくつかの部分に分離されるおそれがあります。 それはあなたの意図するところではないでしょう。
カラムを指定するときは、例えば user.id
や user.id AS user_id
などのように、テーブル接頭辞やカラムエイリアスを含めることが出来ます。
カラムを指定するのに配列を使っている場合は、例えば ['user_id' => 'user.id', 'user_name' => 'user.name']
のように、配列のキーを使ってカラムエイリアスを指定することも出来ます。
バージョン 2.0.1 以降では、サブクエリをカラムとしてセレクトすることも出来ます。例えば、
$subQuery = (new Query)->select('COUNT(*)')->from('user');
$query = (new Query)->select(['id', 'count' => $subQuery])->from('post');
// $query は次の SQL を表現する
// SELECT `id`, (SELECT COUNT(*) FROM `user`) AS `count` FROM `post`
To select distinct rows, you may call distinct()
, like the following:
$query->select('user_id')->distinct()->from('post');
FROM
To specify which table(s) to select data from, call from()
:
$query->select('*')->from('user');
You may specify multiple tables using a comma-separated string or an array.
Table names can contain schema prefixes (e.g. 'public.user'
) and/or table aliases (e.g. 'user u'
).
The method will automatically quote the table names unless it contains some parenthesis
(which means the table is given as a sub-query or DB expression). For example,
$query->select('u.*, p.*')->from(['user u', 'post p']);
When the tables are specified as an array, you may also use the array keys as the table aliases (if a table does not need alias, do not use a string key). For example,
$query->select('u.*, p.*')->from(['u' => 'user', 'p' => 'post']);
You may specify a sub-query using a Query
object. In this case, the corresponding array key will be used
as the alias for the sub-query.
$subQuery = (new Query())->select('id')->from('user')->where('status=1');
$query->select('*')->from(['u' => $subQuery]);
WHERE
Usually data is selected based upon certain criteria. Query Builder has some useful methods to specify these, the most powerful of which being where
. It can be used in multiple ways.
The simplest way to apply a condition is to use a string:
$query->where('status=:status', [':status' => $status]);
When using strings, make sure you're binding the query parameters, not creating a query by string concatenation. The above approach is safe to use, the following is not:
$query->where("status=$status"); // Dangerous!
Instead of binding the status value immediately, you can do so using params
or addParams
:
$query->where('status=:status');
$query->addParams([':status' => $status]);
Multiple conditions can simultaneously be set in where
using the hash format:
$query->where([
'status' => 10,
'type' => 2,
'id' => [4, 8, 15, 16, 23, 42],
]);
That code will generate the following SQL:
WHERE (`status` = 10) AND (`type` = 2) AND (`id` IN (4, 8, 15, 16, 23, 42))
NULL is a special value in databases, and is handled smartly by the Query Builder. This code:
$query->where(['status' => null]);
results in this WHERE clause:
WHERE (`status` IS NULL)
You can also create sub-queries with Query
objects like the following,
$userQuery = (new Query)->select('id')->from('user');
$query->where(['id' => $userQuery]);
which will generate the following SQL:
WHERE `id` IN (SELECT `id` FROM `user`)
Another way to use the method is the operand format which is [operator, operand1, operand2, ...]
.
Operator can be one of the following (see also yii\db\QueryInterface::where()):
-
and
: the operands should be concatenated together usingAND
. For example,['and', 'id=1', 'id=2']
will generateid=1 AND id=2
. If an operand is an array, it will be converted into a string using the rules described here. For example,['and', 'type=1', ['or', 'id=1', 'id=2']]
will generatetype=1 AND (id=1 OR id=2)
. The method will NOT do any quoting or escaping. -
or
: similar to theand
operator except that the operands are concatenated usingOR
. -
between
: operand 1 should be the column name, and operand 2 and 3 should be the starting and ending values of the range that the column is in. For example,['between', 'id', 1, 10]
will generateid BETWEEN 1 AND 10
. -
not between
: similar tobetween
except theBETWEEN
is replaced withNOT BETWEEN
in the generated condition. -
in
: operand 1 should be a column or DB expression. Operand 2 can be either an array or aQuery
object. It will generate anIN
condition. If Operand 2 is an array, it will represent the range of the values that the column or DB expression should be; If Operand 2 is aQuery
object, a sub-query will be generated and used as the range of the column or DB expression. For example,['in', 'id', [1, 2, 3]]
will generateid IN (1, 2, 3)
. The method will properly quote the column name and escape values in the range. Thein
operator also supports composite columns. In this case, operand 1 should be an array of the columns, while operand 2 should be an array of arrays or aQuery
object representing the range of the columns. -
not in
: similar to thein
operator except thatIN
is replaced withNOT IN
in the generated condition. -
like
: operand 1 should be a column or DB expression, and operand 2 be a string or an array representing the values that the column or DB expression should be like. For example,['like', 'name', 'tester']
will generatename LIKE '%tester%'
. When the value range is given as an array, multipleLIKE
predicates will be generated and concatenated usingAND
. For example,['like', 'name', ['test', 'sample']]
will generatename LIKE '%test%' AND name LIKE '%sample%'
. You may also provide an optional third operand to specify how to escape special characters in the values. The operand should be an array of mappings from the special characters to their escaped counterparts. If this operand is not provided, a default escape mapping will be used. You may usefalse
or an empty array to indicate the values are already escaped and no escape should be applied. Note that when using an escape mapping (or the third operand is not provided), the values will be automatically enclosed within a pair of percentage characters.Note: When using PostgreSQL you may also use
ilike
instead oflike
for case-insensitive matching. -
or like
: similar to thelike
operator except thatOR
is used to concatenate theLIKE
predicates when operand 2 is an array. -
not like
: similar to thelike
operator except thatLIKE
is replaced withNOT LIKE
in the generated condition. -
or not like
: similar to thenot like
operator except thatOR
is used to concatenate theNOT LIKE
predicates. -
exists
: requires one operand which must be an instance of yii\db\Query representing the sub-query. It will build aEXISTS (sub-query)
expression. -
not exists
: similar to theexists
operator and builds aNOT EXISTS (sub-query)
expression.
Additionally you can specify anything as operator:
$userQuery = (new Query)->select('id')->from('user');
$query->where(['>=', 'id', 10]);
It will result in:
SELECT id FROM user WHERE id >= 10;
If you are building parts of condition dynamically it's very convenient to use andWhere()
and orWhere()
:
$status = 10;
$search = 'yii';
$query->where(['status' => $status]);
if (!empty($search)) {
$query->andWhere(['like', 'title', $search]);
}
In case $search
isn't empty the following SQL will be generated:
WHERE (`status` = 10) AND (`title` LIKE '%yii%')
Building Filter Conditions
When building filter conditions based on user inputs, you usually want to specially handle "empty inputs"
by ignoring them in the filters. For example, you have an HTML form that takes username and email inputs.
If the user only enters something in the username input, you may want to build a query that only tries to
match the entered username. You may use the filterWhere()
method achieve this goal:
// $username and $email are from user inputs
$query->filterWhere([
'username' => $username,
'email' => $email,
]);
The filterWhere()
method is very similar to where()
. The main difference is that filterWhere()
will remove empty values from the provided condition. So if $email
is "empty", the resulting query
will be ...WHERE username=:username
; and if both $username
and $email
are "empty", the query
will have no WHERE
part.
A value is empty if it is null, an empty string, a string consisting of whitespaces, or an empty array.
You may also use andFilterWhere()
and orFilterWhere()
to append more filter conditions.
ORDER BY
For ordering results orderBy
and addOrderBy
could be used:
$query->orderBy([
'id' => SORT_ASC,
'name' => SORT_DESC,
]);
Here we are ordering by id
ascending and then by name
descending.
GROUP BY
and HAVING
In order to add GROUP BY
to generated SQL you can use the following:
$query->groupBy('id, status');
If you want to add another field after using groupBy
:
$query->addGroupBy(['created_at', 'updated_at']);
To add a HAVING
condition the corresponding having
method and its andHaving
and orHaving
can be used. Parameters
for these are similar to the ones for where
methods group:
$query->having(['status' => $status]);
LIMIT
and OFFSET
To limit result to 10 rows limit
can be used:
$query->limit(10);
To skip 100 fist rows use:
$query->offset(100);
JOIN
The JOIN
clauses are generated in the Query Builder by using the applicable join method:
innerJoin()
leftJoin()
rightJoin()
This left join selects data from two related tables in one query:
$query->select(['user.name AS author', 'post.title as title'])
->from('user')
->leftJoin('post', 'post.user_id = user.id');
In the code, the leftJoin()
method's first parameter
specifies the table to join to. The second parameter defines the join condition.
If your database application supports other join types, you can use those via the generic join
method:
$query->join('FULL OUTER JOIN', 'post', 'post.user_id = user.id');
The first argument is the join type to perform. The second is the table to join to, and the third is the condition.
Like FROM
, you may also join with sub-queries. To do so, specify the sub-query as an array
which must contain one element. The array value must be a Query
object representing the sub-query,
while the array key is the alias for the sub-query. For example,
$query->leftJoin(['u' => $subQuery], 'u.id=author_id');
UNION
UNION
in SQL adds results of one query to results of another query. Columns returned by both queries should match.
In Yii in order to build it you can first form two query objects and then use union
method:
$query = new Query();
$query->select("id, category_id as type, name")->from('post')->limit(10);
$anotherQuery = new Query();
$anotherQuery->select('id, type, name')->from('user')->limit(10);
$query->union($anotherQuery);
Batch Query
When working with large amount of data, methods such as yii\db\Query::all() are not suitable because they require loading all data into the memory. To keep the memory requirement low, Yii provides the so-called batch query support. A batch query makes uses of data cursor and fetches data in batches.
Batch query can be used like the following:
use yii\db\Query;
$query = (new Query())
->from('user')
->orderBy('id');
foreach ($query->batch() as $users) {
// $users is an array of 100 or fewer rows from the user table
}
// or if you want to iterate the row one by one
foreach ($query->each() as $user) {
// $user represents one row of data from the user table
}
The method yii\db\Query::batch() and yii\db\Query::each() return an yii\db\BatchQueryResult object
which implements the Iterator
interface and thus can be used in the foreach
construct.
During the first iteration, a SQL query is made to the database. Data are since then fetched in batches
in the iterations. By default, the batch size is 100, meaning 100 rows of data are being fetched in each batch.
You can change the batch size by passing the first parameter to the batch()
or each()
method.
Compared to the yii\db\Query::all(), the batch query only loads 100 rows of data at a time into the memory. If you process the data and then discard it right away, the batch query can help keep the memory usage under a limit.
If you specify the query result to be indexed by some column via yii\db\Query::indexBy(), the batch query will still keep the proper index. For example,
use yii\db\Query;
$query = (new Query())
->from('user')
->indexBy('username');
foreach ($query->batch() as $users) {
// $users is indexed by the "username" column
}
foreach ($query->each() as $username => $user) {
}