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PDO_SQLSRV DSN — Connecting to MS SQL Server and SQL Azure databases
The PDO_SQLSRV Data Source Name (DSN) is composed of the following elements:
The DSN prefix is sqlsrv:
.
The application name used in tracing.
Specifies whether the connection is assigned from a connection pool
(1 or TRUE
) or not (0 or FALSE
).
The name of the database.
Specifies whether the communication with SQL Server is encrypted
(1 or TRUE
) or unencrypted (0 or FALSE
).
Specifies the server and instance of the database's mirror (if enabled and configured) to use when the primary server is unavailable.
Specifies the number of seconds to wait before failing the connection attempt.
Disables or explicitly enables support for multiple active Result sets (MARS).
Specifies whether to use SQL-92 rules for quoted identifiers (1 or TRUE
)
or to use legacy Transact-SQL rules (0 or false).
The name of the database server.
Specifies the path for the file used for trace data.
Specifies whether ODBC tracing is enabled (1 or TRUE
) or disabled
(0 or FALSE
) for the connection being established.
Specifies the transaction isolation level. The accepted values for this option are PDO::SQLSRV_TXN_READ_UNCOMMITTED, PDO::SQLSRV_TXN_READ_COMMITTED, PDO::SQLSRV_TXN_REPEATABLE_READ, PDO::SQLSRV_TXN_SNAPSHOT, and PDO::SQLSRV_TXN_SERIALIZABLE.
Specifies whether the client should trust (1 or TRUE
) or reject
(0 or FALSE
) a self-signed server certificate.
Specifies the name of the computer for tracing.
Example #1 PDO_SQLSRV DSN examples
The following example shows how to connecto to a specified MS SQL Server database:
$c = new PDO("sqlsrv:Server=localhost;Database=testdb", "UserName", "Password");
The following example shows how to connect to a MS SQL Server database on a specified port:
$c = new PDO("sqlsrv:Server=localhost,1521;Database=testdb", "UserName", "Password");
The following example shows how to connecto to a SQL Azure database with server ID 12345abcde. Note that when you connect to SQL Azure with PDO, your username will be UserName@12345abcde (UserName@ServerId).
$c = new PDO("sqlsrv:Server=12345abcde.database.windows.net;Database=testdb", "UserName@12345abcde", "Password");
[#1] alasdair at angryloner dot com dot au [2014-05-12 04:09:32]
Adding the backslash solved the problem for me.
Here's my functioning localdb connection string:
new PDO("sqlsrv:Server=(localdb)\\v11.0 ; Database = my_db ; AttachDBFilename = C:\Users\user\my_db.mdf", "", "");
[#2] support at spam eaccounts trap net [2014-02-21 19:34:29]
I suspect the problem with "Server=foo-sql\MSSQLSERVER" was you didn't escape the backslash, with a backslash.
If hostname worked, than IP would work as well given a hostname resolves to an IP unless your DNS was mapping to the wrong IP which would be a simple issue.
I suspect you are running your web services on the same host as mssql? If so, confirm that your mssql server is set to bind to IP addresses (if you want access from the outside of that box). If you are only able to connect via a name (as in a NetBIOS or Active Directory name), it's likely you are connecting to a "socket" or named pipe.
[#3] david at nospam-rm-this dot functionalchaos dot net [2013-10-29 06:16:48]
I found with MS-SQL Server 2008 on Windows Server 2008 R2 that I needed to use the MSSQL Server name. The servers hostname or IP address would not work ( with or without port, and/or SQL instance name, etc.) After trying several combinations, this is what I found worked in my configuration:
host-ip: 10.4.2.50
host-name: mssqlhost.mydomain.org
mssql-server-name: foo-sql
mssql-instance-name: MSSQLSERVER
database-name: mydb
<?php
$dbh = new PDO("sqlsrv:Server=foo-sql,1433;Database=mydb", $user , $pass);
?>
The above worked with and without port (,1433). I also noticed adding the instance name (MSSQLSERVER) after the server name with a slash (\), as in "Server=foo-sql\MSSQLSERVER" caused a failure to connect.