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C++ asynchronous mysql library on top of the REACT-CPP library. Uses lambdas and callbacks to return query results.

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REACT-CPP-MYSQL

C++ asynchronous mysql library on top of the REACT-CPP library. Uses lambdas and callbacks to return query results.

REACT-CPP-MYSQL is a MySQL library using REACT-CPP to manage an asynchronous connection to MySQL.

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REACT-CPP-MYSQL library is created and maintained by Copernica (www.copernica.com). Do you appreciate our work and are you looking for other high quality solutions?

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Connection class

The React::MySQL::Connection class is used to establish a connection to a MySQL daemon.

#include <reactcpp/mysql.h>
#include <iostream>
#include <cassert>

/**
 *  Main application procedure
 */
int main()
{
    // create an event loop
    React::MainLoop loop;

    // create the connection to MySQL
    React::MySQL::Connection connection(&loop, "mysql.example.org", "example user", "example password", "example database");

    // get connection updates
    connection.onConnected([](const char *error) {
        /**
         *  This function will be called upon success/failure of the connection
         *
         *  The error parameter will be set to NULL upon success, and set
         *  to a c-string containing a description of the problem otherwise.
         */
        if (error) std::cout << "Failed to connect: " << error << std::endl;
        else std::cout << "Connected" << std::endl;
    });

    /**
     *  At this point, the connection is still being established. It is,
     *  however, perfectly valid to start sending queries to MySQL.
     *
     *  The queries will be executed after the connection has been established.
     *  If the connection somehow fails, all the failure callbacks will be
     *  called with a description of the error to indicate this condition.
     */
    connection.query("SELECT * FROM test LIMIT 10").onSuccess([](React::MySQL::Result&& result) {
        // this is a normal select query, affectedRows should be zero
        assert(result.affectedRows() == 0);

        // dump all rows to screen
        for (auto row : result)
        {
            // wrap each row in curly braces
            std::cout << "{" << std::endl;

            // and dump all fields
            for (auto field : row)
            {
                // field is an std::pair with as first member the name and the second member the field value
                std::cout << "  " << field.first << " => " << field.second << std::endl;
            }

            // close the row
            std::cout << "}" << std::endl;
        }

        // stop the application
        exit(0);
    }).onFailure([](const char *error) {
        /**
         *  In case of an error, the error parameter will contain
         *  a pointer to a description of the error.
         */
        std::cout << "Query error: " << error << std::endl;
        exit(1);
    });

    // run the event loop
    loop.run();

    // done
    return 0;
}

Both the result set and the individual rows can be iterated (as shown in the example above) or simply used as an array. The rows can only be accessed with a numerical index, while the fields can be accessed using their field index as well as their name:

connection.query("SELECT a, b, c FROM test").onSuccess([](React::MySQL::Result&& result) {
    // loop over the rows by their index
    for (size_t i = 0; i < result.size(); ++i)
    {
        // retrieve the row
        auto row = result[i];

        // the individual fields can be accessed by name or by index
        // e.g.: the field 'b', can be accessed by index 1 or 'b':
        auto field = row[1];
        auto sameField = row["b"];

        // fields can be casted to a string, or any of the numeric types
        // assuming that 'a' holds a unsigned bigint
        unsigned long a = row["a"];
    }

    /**
     *  It is, of course, also possible to take individual rows
     *  from the result set in any order.
     *
     *  Note that this can be extremely slow when working with
     *  larger result sets. Sequential access is the fastest
     *  way to step through the results.
     */
    auto row = result[17];
});

Prepared Statements

When executing a particular query multiple times, or when dealing with unsanitized input (e.g. user input), the fastest, and most secure, way is to use prepared statements.

When using prepared statements the query is only sent to the MySQL daemon once and the input and output to and from the query is done using a binary format. This way the query will only have to be parsed once (the execution plan is cached on the server) and saves on network overhead. It also completely eliminates the possibility of SQL injection.

#include <reactcpp/mysql.h>
#include <iostream>
#include <cassert>

/**
 *  Min application procedure
 */
int main()
{
    // create an event loop
    React::MainLoop loop;

    // create the connection to MySQL and clean out the logs
    React::MySQL::Connection connection(&loop, "mysql.example.org", "example user", "example password", "example database");

    // create the statement
    React::MySQL::Statement statement(&connection, "INSERT INTO logs (event_time, description) VALUES (NOW(), ?), (NOW(), ?), (NOW(), ?)")

    // catch statement preparation errors
    statement.onPrepared([](const char *error) {
        /**
         *  As with the connection class and query function
         *  the error parameter will be a NULL pointer if the
         *  statement was correctly initialized.
         */
        if (error)
        {
            std::cout << "Cannot initialize statement: " << error << std::endl;
            exit(0);
        }
    });

    /**
     *  When we get here, the statement is not yet initialized
     *  but we can already start executing it. As with the connection
     *  class, it will start executing once it is initialized.
     *
     *  The execute method takes as many arguments as there are
     *  placeholders in the query. The statement was initialized
     *  with a query containing three placeholders, so we have to
     *  provide three values.
     *
     *  The values should always be of a similar type as the type
     *  used in the table. For example, a MySQL column defined as
     *  'unsigned int' could receive a uint32_t, while a varchar
     *  column could receive a const char* or std::string.
     *
     *  This is not a hard requirement, if you send a number where
     *  the column holds a varchar, conversion will take place on
     *  the server (causing a little extra overhead). The other way
     *  around also works, but only if the string actually holds
     *  numeric data.
     */
    statement.execute("first event description", "second event description", "third event description");

    /**
     *  We can also select data with prepared statements.
     *
     *  Just as with other functions and classes, we simply
     *  register a callback function that will receive the data.
     */
    React::MySQL::Statement selectStatement(&connection, "SELECT a, b, c FROM test WHERE a BETWEEN ? and ?");
    selectStatement.execute(5, 10).onSuccess([](React::MySQL::Result&& result) {
        // this is a normal select query, affectedRows should be zero
        assert(result.affectedRows() == 0);

        // dump all rows to screen
        for (auto row : result)
        {
            // wrap each row in curly braces
            std::cout << "{" << std::endl;

            // and dump all fields
            for (auto field : row)
            {
                // field is an std::pair with as first member the name and the second member the field value
                std::cout << "  " << field.first << " => " << field.second << std::endl;
            }

            // close the row
            std::cout << "}" << std::endl;
        }
    });
}

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C++ asynchronous mysql library on top of the REACT-CPP library. Uses lambdas and callbacks to return query results.

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