(PHP 4 >= 4.0.1, PHP 5)
pg_trace — Enable tracing a PostgreSQL connection
$pathname
[, string $mode
= "w"
[, resource $connection
]] )pg_trace() enables tracing of the PostgreSQL frontend/backend communication to a file. To fully understand the results, one needs to be familiar with the internals of PostgreSQL communication protocol.
For those who are not, it can still be useful for tracing errors in queries sent to the server, you could do for example grep '^To backend' trace.log and see what queries actually were sent to the PostgreSQL server. For more information, refer to the » PostgreSQL Documentation.
pathname
The full path and file name of the file in which to write the trace log. Same as in fopen().
pathname
An optional file access mode, same as for fopen().
connection
PostgreSQL database connection resource. When
connection
is not present, the default connection
is used. The default connection is the last connection made by
pg_connect() or pg_pconnect().
Returns TRUE
on success or FALSE
on failure.
Example #1 pg_trace() example
<?php
$pgsql_conn = pg_connect("dbname=mark host=localhost");
if ($pgsql_conn) {
pg_trace('/tmp/trace.log', 'w', $pgsql_conn);
pg_query("SELECT 1");
pg_untrace($pgsql_conn);
// Now /tmp/trace.log will contain backend communication
} else {
print pg_last_error($pgsql_conn);
exit;
}
?>