pg_last_notice

(PHP 4 >= 4.0.6, PHP 5, PHP 7)
Returns the last notice message from PostgreSQL server
string pg_last_notice ( resource $connection )

pg_last_notice() returns the last notice message from the PostgreSQL server on the specified connection. The PostgreSQL server sends notice messages in several cases, for instance when creating a SERIAL column in a table.

With pg_last_notice(), you can avoid issuing useless queries by checking whether or not the notice is related to your transaction.

Notice message tracking can be set to optional by setting 1 for pgsql.ignore_notice in php.ini.

Notice message logging can be set to optional by setting 0 for pgsql.log_notice in php.ini. Unless pgsql.ignore_notice is set to 0, notice message cannot be logged.

Parameters:
connection

PostgreSQL database connection resource.

Returns:

A string containing the last notice on the given connection, or FALSE on error.

Examples:
pg_last_notice() example
<?php
  $pgsql_conn = pg_connect("dbname=mark host=localhost");
  
  $res = pg_query("CREATE TABLE test (id SERIAL)");
  
  $notice = pg_last_notice($pgsql_conn);
  
  echo $notice;
?>

The above example will output:

CREATE TABLE will create implicit sequence "test_id_seq" for "serial" column "test.id"
See also:

pg_query() -

pg_last_error() -

doc_php
2016-02-24 16:18:16
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