int
mysql_real_query(MYSQL *mysql,
const char *stmt_str,
unsigned long length)
mysql_real_query() is a
synchronous function. Its asynchronous counterpart is
mysql_real_query_nonblocking(),
for use by applications that require asynchronous
communication with the server. See
Chapter 7, C API Asynchronous Interface.
mysql_real_query() executes
the SQL statement pointed to by stmt_str, a
string length bytes long. Normally, the
string must consist of a single SQL statement without a
terminating semicolon (;) or
\g. If multiple-statement execution has
been enabled, the string can contain several statements
separated by semicolons. See
Section 3.6.3, “Multiple Statement Execution Support”.
mysql_query() cannot be used
for statements that contain binary data; you must use
mysql_real_query() instead.
(Binary data may contain the \0 character,
which mysql_query() interprets
as the end of the statement string.) In addition,
mysql_real_query() is faster
than mysql_query() because it
does not call strlen() on the statement
string.
To determine whether a statement returns a result set, call
mysql_field_count(). See
Section 5.4.23, “mysql_field_count()”.
-
Commands were executed in an improper order.
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The MySQL server has gone away.
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The connection to the server was lost during the query.
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An unknown error occurred.