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Multi-function operations

Multi-function operations allow running operations as a set of separate steps, which gives you better control over execution. They work by splitting some of the reads and writes into several function calls. You can use multi-function operations to execute text queries and prepared statements.

Protocol primer

To make a good use of multi-function operations, you should have a basic understanding of the underlying protocol.

The protocol uses messages to communicate. These are delimited by headers containing the message length. All operations are initiated by the client, by sending a single request message, to which the server responds with a set of response messages.

The diagram below shows the message exchange between client and server for text queries and statement executions. Each arrow represents a message.

The message exchange is similar for text queries and prepared statements. The wire format varies, but the semantics are the same.

There are two separate cases:

connection::query and connection::execute_statement handle the full message exchange. In contrast, connection::start_query and connection::start_statement_execution will not read the rows, if any.

Some takeaways:

Starting a multi-function operation

Given the following setup:

results result;
conn.query(
    R"%(
        CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE posts (
            id INT PRIMARY KEY AUTO_INCREMENT,
            title VARCHAR (256),
            body TEXT
        )
    )%",
    result
);
conn.query(
    R"%(
        INSERT INTO posts (title, body) VALUES
            ('Post 1', 'A very long post body'),
            ('Post 2', 'An even longer post body')
    )%",
    result
);

statement stmt = conn.prepare_statement("SELECT title, body FROM posts");

You can start a multi-function operation using connection::start_query or connection::start_statement_execution:

Text queries

Prepared statements

execution_state st;
conn.start_query("SELECT title, body FROM posts", st);
execution_state st;
conn.start_statement_execution(
    stmt,
    std::make_tuple(),  // The statement has no params, so an empty tuple is passed
    st
);

Reading rows

Once the operation has been started, you must read all the generated rows by calling connection::read_some_rows, which will return a batch of an unspecified size.

This is the typical use of read_some_rows:

// st.complete() returns true once the OK packet is received
while (!st.complete())
{
    // row_batch will be valid until conn performs the next network operation
    rows_view row_batch = conn.read_some_rows(st);

    for (row_view post : row_batch)
    {
        // Process post as required
        std::cout << "Title:" << post.at(0) << std::endl;
    }
}

Some remarks:

read_some_rows returns a rows_view object pointing into the connection's internal buffers. This view is valid until the connection performs any other operation involving a network transfer.

Note that there is no need to distinguish between case 1 and case 2 in the diagram above in our code, as reading rows for a complete operation is well defined.

Accessing metadata and OK packet data

You can access metadata at any point, using execution_state::meta. This function returns a collection of metadata objects. There is one object for each column retrieved by the SQL query, and in the same order as in the query. You can find a bunch of useful information in this object, like the column name, its type, whether it's a key or not, and so on.

You can access OK packet data using functions like execution_state::last_insert_id and execution_state::affected_rows. As this information is contained in the OK packet, these functions have st.complete() == true as precondition.

More on read_some_rows

To properly understand read_some_rows, we need to know that every connection owns an internal read buffer, where packets sent by the server are stored. It is a single, flat buffer, and you can configure its initial size when creating a connection, passing a buffer_params object as the first argument to connection's constructor. The read buffer may be grown under certain circumstances to accomodate large messages.

read_some_rows gets the maximum number of rows that fit in the read buffer (without growing it) performing a single read_some operation on the stream (or using cached data). If there are rows to read, read_some_rows guarantees to read at least one. This means that, if doing what we described yields no rows (e.g. because of a large row that doesn't fit into the read buffer), read_some_rows will grow the buffer or perform more reads until at least one row has been read.

If you want to get the most of read_some_rows, customize the initial read buffer size to maximize the number of rows that each batch retrieves.


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