**Welcome to the Microsoft Drivers for PHP for SQL Server PHP 7**
The Microsoft Drivers for PHP for SQL Server are PHP extensions that allow for the reading and writing of SQL Server data from within PHP scripts. The SQLSRV extension provides a procedural interface while the PDO_SQLSRV extension implements PDO for accessing data in all editions of SQL Server 2005 and later (including Azure SQL DB). These drivers rely on the Microsoft ODBC Driver for SQL Server to handle the low-level communication with SQL Server.
This release contains the SQLSRV and PDO_SQLSRV drivers for PHP 7 with improvements on both drivers and some limitations (see Limitations below for details). Upcoming release(s) will contain more functionality, bug fixes, and more (see Plans below for more details).
**December 19, 2016**: We are delighted announce that production release for PHP Linux Driver for SQL Server is available. PECL packages (4.0.8) are updated with the latest changes, and Linux binaries (4.0.8) compiled with PHP 7.0.14 are available for Ubuntu 15.04, Ubuntu 16.04, and RedHat 7.2. For complete list of changes please visit [CHANGELOG](https://github.com/Microsoft/msphpsql/blob/dev/CHANGELOG.md) file.
Note: if you prefer, you can use the pre-compiled binary found [HERE](https://github.com/Azure/msphpsql/releases)
####Prerequisites
You must first be able to build PHP 7 without including these extensions. For help with doing this, see the [official PHP website][phpbuild] for building your own PHP on Windows.
####Compile the drivers
1. Copy the sqlsrv and/or pdo_sqlsrv source code directory from this repository into the ext subdirectory.
2. Run `buildconf.bat` to rebuild the configure.js script to include the driver.
3. Run `configure.bat --with-odbcver=0x0380 and the desired driver options (as below) [plus other options such as --disable-zts for the Non Thread Safe build]` to generate the makefile. You can run `configure.bat --help` to see what other options are available.
* For SQLSRV use: `--enable-sqlsrv=shared`
* For PDO_SQLSRV use: `--enable-pdo=shared --with-pdo-sqlsrv=shared`
4. Run `nmake`. It is suggested that you run the entire build. If you wish to do so, run `nmake clean` first.
5. To install the resulting build, run `nmake install` or just copy php_sqlsrv.dll and/or php_pdo_sqlsrv.dll to your PHP extension directory.
This software has been compiled and tested under PHP 7.0.8 using the Visual C++ 2015 compiler.
- A Web server such as Internet Information Services (IIS) is required. Your Web server must be configured to run PHP
- [Microsoft ODBC Driver 11][odbc11] or [Microsoft ODBC Driver 13][odbc13]
####Enable the drivers
1. Make sure that the driver is in your PHP extension directory (you can simply copy it there if you did not use nmake install).
2. Enable it within your PHP installation's php.ini: `extension=php_sqlsrv.dll` and/or `extension=php_pdo_sqlsrv.dll`. If necessary, specify the extension directory using extension_dir, for example: `extension_dir = "C:\PHP\ext"`
Following instructions shows how to install PHP 7.x, Microsoft ODBC driver, apache, and Microsoft PHP drivers on Ubuntu 15, 16 and RedHat 7. To see how to get PHP SQLSRV drivers running on Debian, please visit [Wiki](https://github.com/Microsoft/msphpsql/wiki/Dockerfile-for-getting-pdo_sqlsrv-for-PHP-7.0-on-Debian-in-3-ways). Note that Debian is not officially supported and this instruction hasn't been tested in our test lab.
*Note: On Ubuntu, you need to make sure you install PHP 7 before you proceed to step 2. The Microsoft PHP Drivers for SQL Server will only work for PHP 7+.
### Step 3: Install Apache
####PHP 7.0
**Ubuntu**
sudo apt-get install libapache2-mod-php7.0
sudo apt-get install apache2
**RedHat**
sudo yum install httpd
####PHP 7.1
**Ubuntu**
sudo apt-get install libapache2-mod-php7.1
sudo apt-get install apache2
**RedHat**
sudo yum install httpd
### Step 4: Install the Microsoft PHP Drivers for SQL Server
sudo pecl install sqlsrv
sudo pecl install pdo_sqlsrv
*Note: it installs the stable version, for specific version you should set the version. For example, `sudo pecl install sqlsrv-4.0.8`
### Step 5: Add the Microsoft PHP Drivers for SQL Server to php.ini
*Note to RedHat users: SELinux is installed by default and runs in Enforcing mode. To allow Apache to connect to database through SELinux, do this `sudo setsebool -P httpd_can_network_connect_db 1`
Navigate to `/var/www/html` and create a new file called testsql.php. Copy and paste the following code in tetsql.php and change the servername, username, password and databasename.
while ($row = sqlsrv_fetch_array($getResults, SQLSRV_FETCH_ASSOC)) {
echo ($row['SQL_VERSION']);
echo ("<br/>");
}
sqlsrv_free_stmt($getResults);
function FormatErrors( $errors )
{
/* Display errors. */
echo "Error information: <br/>";
foreach ( $errors as $error )
{
echo "SQLSTATE: ".$error['SQLSTATE']."<br/>";
echo "Code: ".$error['code']."<br/>";
echo "Message: ".$error['message']."<br/>";
}
}
?>
### Step 8: Run your sample app
Go to your browser and type in http://localhost/testsql.php
You should be able to connect to your SQL Server/Azure SQL Database.
The drivers are distributed as shared binary extensions for PHP. They are available in thread safe (*_ts.so) and-non thread safe (*_nts.so) versions. The source code for the drivers is also available, and you can choose whether to compile them as thread safe or non-thread safe versions. The thread safety configuration of your web server will determine which version you need.
- sqlsrv_server_info and sqlsrv_client_info return false
- In certain scenarios a generic error message maybe returned instead of a specific error when pooling is disabled
- When retrieving data from columns with a data type of XML, varchar(max), nvarchar(max), or varbinary(max) no data maybe returned or the data maybe truncated depending on the length of the data in the source table.
* Environment details: e.g. PHP version, thread safe (TS) or non-thread safe (NTS), 32-bit &/or 64-bit?
* Table schema (for some issues the data types make a big difference!)
* Any other relevant information you want to share
- Try to include a PHP script demonstrating the isolated problem.
Thank you!
## FAQs
**Q:** Can we get dates for any of the Future Plans listed above?
**A:** At this time, Microsoft is not able to announce dates. We are working extremely hard to release future versions of the driver. We will share future plans once they solidify over the next few weeks.
**A:** On July 20, 2016 we released the early technical preview for our PHP Driver. We will continue releasing frequent technical previews until we reach production quality.
**Q:** Is Microsoft taking pull requests for this project?
**A:** We will not be seeking to take pull requests until GA, Build Verification, and Fundamental tests are released. At this point Microsoft will also begin actively developing using this GitHub project as the prime repository.
## License
The Microsoft Drivers for PHP for SQL Server are licensed under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more details.
This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact opencode@microsoft.com with any additional questions or comments.