Boost
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Coding Standards
This is an older version of Boost and was released in 2024. The current version is 1.90.0.
This example demonstrates how use the asynchronous functions using futures.
This example assumes you have gone through the setup.
#include <boost/mysql/error_code.hpp> #include <boost/mysql/handshake_params.hpp> #include <boost/mysql/results.hpp> #include <boost/mysql/row_view.hpp> #include <boost/mysql/statement.hpp> #include <boost/mysql/tcp_ssl.hpp> #include <boost/asio/io_context.hpp> #include <boost/asio/ip/tcp.hpp> #include <boost/asio/ssl/context.hpp> #include <boost/asio/use_future.hpp> #include <boost/system/system_error.hpp> #include <iostream> #include <thread> using boost::asio::use_future; using boost::mysql::error_code; void print_employee(boost::mysql::row_view employee) { std::cout << "Employee '" << employee.at(0) << " " // first_name (string) << employee.at(1) << "' earns " // last_name (string) << employee.at(2) << " dollars yearly\n"; // salary (double) } /** * A boost::asio::io_context plus a thread that calls context.run(). * We encapsulate this here to ensure correct shutdown even in case of * error (exception), when we should first reset the work guard, then * stop the io_context, and then join the thread. Failing to do so * may cause your application to not stop (if the work guard is not * reset) or to terminate badly (if the thread is not joined). */ class application { boost::asio::io_context ctx_; boost::asio::executor_work_guard<boost::asio::io_context::executor_type> guard_; std::thread runner_; public: application() : guard_(ctx_.get_executor()), runner_([this] { ctx_.run(); }) {} application(const application&) = delete; application(application&&) = delete; application& operator=(const application&) = delete; application& operator=(application&&) = delete; ~application() { guard_.reset(); runner_.join(); } boost::asio::io_context& context() { return ctx_; } }; void main_impl(int argc, char** argv) { if (argc != 4 && argc != 5) { std::cerr << "Usage: " << argv[0] << " <username> <password> <server-hostname> [company-id]\n"; exit(1); } // The company_id whose employees we will be listing. This // is user-supplied input, and should be treated as untrusted. const char* company_id = argc == 5 ? argv[4] : "HGS"; // Context and connections application app; // boost::asio::io_context and a thread that calls run() boost::asio::ssl::context ssl_ctx(boost::asio::ssl::context::tls_client); boost::mysql::tcp_ssl_connection conn(app.context(), ssl_ctx); // Resolver for hostname resolution boost::asio::ip::tcp::resolver resolver(app.context().get_executor()); // Connection params boost::mysql::handshake_params params( argv[1], // username argv[2], // password "boost_mysql_examples" // database to use; leave empty or omit for no database ); /** * Hostname resolution. * Calling async_resolve triggers the * operation, and calling future::get() blocks the current thread until * it completes. get() will throw an exception if the operation fails. */ auto endpoints_fut = resolver.async_resolve( argv[3], boost::mysql::default_port_string, boost::asio::use_future ); auto endpoints = endpoints_fut.get(); // Perform the TCP connect and MySQL handshake. std::future<void> fut = conn.async_connect(*endpoints.begin(), params, use_future); fut.get(); // We will be using company_id, which is untrusted user input, so we will use a prepared // statement. std::future<boost::mysql::statement> stmt_fut = conn.async_prepare_statement( "SELECT first_name, last_name, salary FROM employee WHERE company_id = ?", use_future ); boost::mysql::statement stmt = stmt_fut.get(); // Execute the statement boost::mysql::results result; fut = conn.async_execute(stmt.bind(company_id), result, use_future); fut.get(); // Print employees for (boost::mysql::row_view employee : result.rows()) { print_employee(employee); } // Notify the MySQL server we want to quit, then close the underlying connection. conn.async_close(use_future).get(); // application dtor. stops io_context and then joins the thread } int main(int argc, char** argv) { try { main_impl(argc, argv); } catch (const std::exception& err) { std::cerr << "Error: " << err.what() << std::endl; return 1; } }