sql

package standard library
go1.23.1 Latest Latest
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Published: Sep 5, 2024 License: BSD-3-Clause Imports: 17 Imported by: 155,984

Documentation

Overview

Package sql provides a generic interface around SQL (or SQL-like) databases.

The sql package must be used in conjunction with a database driver. See https://golang.org/s/sqldrivers for a list of drivers.

Drivers that do not support context cancellation will not return until after the query is completed.

For usage examples, see the wiki page at https://golang.org/s/sqlwiki.

Example (OpenDBCLI)
package main

import (
	"context"
	"database/sql"
	"flag"
	"log"
	"os"
	"os/signal"
	"time"
)

var pool *sql.DB // Database connection pool.

func main() {
	id := flag.Int64("id", 0, "person ID to find")
	dsn := flag.String("dsn", os.Getenv("DSN"), "connection data source name")
	flag.Parse()

	if len(*dsn) == 0 {
		log.Fatal("missing dsn flag")
	}
	if *id == 0 {
		log.Fatal("missing person ID")
	}
	var err error

	// Opening a driver typically will not attempt to connect to the database.
	pool, err = sql.Open("driver-name", *dsn)
	if err != nil {
		// This will not be a connection error, but a DSN parse error or
		// another initialization error.
		log.Fatal("unable to use data source name", err)
	}
	defer pool.Close()

	pool.SetConnMaxLifetime(0)
	pool.SetMaxIdleConns(3)
	pool.SetMaxOpenConns(3)

	ctx, stop := context.WithCancel(context.Background())
	defer stop()

	appSignal := make(chan os.Signal, 3)
	signal.Notify(appSignal, os.Interrupt)

	go func() {
		<-appSignal
		stop()
	}()

	Ping(ctx)

	Query(ctx, *id)
}

// Ping the database to verify DSN provided by the user is valid and the
// server accessible. If the ping fails exit the program with an error.
func Ping(ctx context.Context) {
	ctx, cancel := context.WithTimeout(ctx, 1*time.Second)
	defer cancel()

	if err := pool.PingContext(ctx); err != nil {
		log.Fatalf("unable to connect to database: %v", err)
	}
}

// Query the database for the information requested and prints the results.
// If the query fails exit the program with an error.
func Query(ctx context.Context, id int64) {
	ctx, cancel := context.WithTimeout(ctx, 5*time.Second)
	defer cancel()

	var name string
	err := pool.QueryRowContext(ctx, "select p.name from people as p where p.id = :id;", sql.Named("id", id)).Scan(&name)
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal("unable to execute search query", err)
	}
	log.Println("name=", name)
}
Output:

Example (OpenDBService)
package main

import (
	"context"
	"database/sql"
	"encoding/json"
	"fmt"
	"io"
	"log"
	"net/http"
	"time"
)

func main() {
	// Opening a driver typically will not attempt to connect to the database.
	db, err := sql.Open("driver-name", "database=test1")
	if err != nil {
		// This will not be a connection error, but a DSN parse error or
		// another initialization error.
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	db.SetConnMaxLifetime(0)
	db.SetMaxIdleConns(50)
	db.SetMaxOpenConns(50)

	s := &Service{db: db}

	http.ListenAndServe(":8080", s)
}

type Service struct {
	db *sql.DB
}

func (s *Service) ServeHTTP(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
	db := s.db
	switch r.URL.Path {
	default:
		http.Error(w, "not found", http.StatusNotFound)
		return
	case "/healthz":
		ctx, cancel := context.WithTimeout(r.Context(), 1*time.Second)
		defer cancel()

		err := s.db.PingContext(ctx)
		if err != nil {
			http.Error(w, fmt.Sprintf("db down: %v", err), http.StatusFailedDependency)
			return
		}
		w.WriteHeader(http.StatusOK)
		return
	case "/quick-action":
		// This is a short SELECT. Use the request context as the base of
		// the context timeout.
		ctx, cancel := context.WithTimeout(r.Context(), 3*time.Second)
		defer cancel()

		id := 5
		org := 10
		var name string
		err := db.QueryRowContext(ctx, `
select
	p.name
from
	people as p
	join organization as o on p.organization = o.id
where
	p.id = :id
	and o.id = :org
;`,
			sql.Named("id", id),
			sql.Named("org", org),
		).Scan(&name)
		if err != nil {
			if err == sql.ErrNoRows {
				http.Error(w, "not found", http.StatusNotFound)
				return
			}
			http.Error(w, err.Error(), http.StatusInternalServerError)
			return
		}
		io.WriteString(w, name)
		return
	case "/long-action":
		// This is a long SELECT. Use the request context as the base of
		// the context timeout, but give it some time to finish. If
		// the client cancels before the query is done the query will also
		// be canceled.
		ctx, cancel := context.WithTimeout(r.Context(), 60*time.Second)
		defer cancel()

		var names []string
		rows, err := db.QueryContext(ctx, "select p.name from people as p where p.active = true;")
		if err != nil {
			http.Error(w, err.Error(), http.StatusInternalServerError)
			return
		}

		for rows.Next() {
			var name string
			err = rows.Scan(&name)
			if err != nil {
				break
			}
			names = append(names, name)
		}
		// Check for errors during rows "Close".
		// This may be more important if multiple statements are executed
		// in a single batch and rows were written as well as read.
		if closeErr := rows.Close(); closeErr != nil {
			http.Error(w, closeErr.Error(), http.StatusInternalServerError)
			return
		}

		// Check for row scan error.
		if err != nil {
			http.Error(w, err.Error(), http.StatusInternalServerError)
			return
		}

		// Check for errors during row iteration.
		if err = rows.Err(); err != nil {
			http.Error(w, err.Error(), http.StatusInternalServerError)
			return
		}

		json.NewEncoder(w).Encode(names)
		return
	case "/async-action":
		// This action has side effects that we want to preserve
		// even if the client cancels the HTTP request part way through.
		// For this we do not use the http request context as a base for
		// the timeout.
		ctx, cancel := context.WithTimeout(context.Background(), 10*time.Second)
		defer cancel()

		var orderRef = "ABC123"
		tx, err := db.BeginTx(ctx, &sql.TxOptions{Isolation: sql.LevelSerializable})
		if err != nil {
			http.Error(w, err.Error(), http.StatusInternalServerError)
			return
		}
		_, err = tx.ExecContext(ctx, "stored_proc_name", orderRef)

		if err != nil {
			tx.Rollback()
			http.Error(w, err.Error(), http.StatusInternalServerError)
			return
		}
		err = tx.Commit()
		if err != nil {
			http.Error(w, "action in unknown state, check state before attempting again", http.StatusInternalServerError)
			return
		}
		w.WriteHeader(http.StatusOK)
		return
	}
}
Output:

Index

Examples

Constants

This section is empty.

Variables

View Source
var ErrConnDone = errors.New("sql: connection is already closed")

ErrConnDone is returned by any operation that is performed on a connection that has already been returned to the connection pool.

View Source
var ErrNoRows = errors.New("sql: no rows in result set")

ErrNoRows is returned by Row.Scan when DB.QueryRow doesn't return a row. In such a case, QueryRow returns a placeholder *Row value that defers this error until a Scan.

View Source
var ErrTxDone = errors.New("sql: transaction has already been committed or rolled back")

ErrTxDone is returned by any operation that is performed on a transaction that has already been committed or rolled back.

Functions

func Drivers added in go1.4

func Drivers() []string

Drivers returns a sorted list of the names of the registered drivers.

func Register

func Register(name string, driver driver.Driver)

Register makes a database driver available by the provided name. If Register is called twice with the same name or if driver is nil, it panics.

Types

type ColumnType added in go1.8

type ColumnType struct {
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

ColumnType contains the name and type of a column.

func (*ColumnType) DatabaseTypeName added in go1.8

func (ci *ColumnType) DatabaseTypeName() string

DatabaseTypeName returns the database system name of the column type. If an empty string is returned, then the driver type name is not supported. Consult your driver documentation for a list of driver data types. ColumnType.Length specifiers are not included. Common type names include "VARCHAR", "TEXT", "NVARCHAR", "DECIMAL", "BOOL", "INT", and "BIGINT".

func (*ColumnType) DecimalSize added in go1.8

func (ci *ColumnType) DecimalSize() (precision, scale int64, ok bool)

DecimalSize returns the scale and precision of a decimal type. If not applicable or if not supported ok is false.

func (*ColumnType) Length added in go1.8

func (ci *ColumnType) Length() (length int64, ok bool)

Length returns the column type length for variable length column types such as text and binary field types. If the type length is unbounded the value will be math.MaxInt64 (any database limits will still apply). If the column type is not variable length, such as an int, or if not supported by the driver ok is false.

func (*ColumnType) Name added in go1.8

func (ci *ColumnType) Name() string

Name returns the name or alias of the column.

func (*ColumnType) Nullable added in go1.8

func (ci *ColumnType) Nullable() (nullable, ok bool)

Nullable reports whether the column may be null. If a driver does not support this property ok will be false.

func (*ColumnType) ScanType added in go1.8

func (ci *ColumnType) ScanType() reflect.Type

ScanType returns a Go type suitable for scanning into using Rows.Scan. If a driver does not support this property ScanType will return the type of an empty interface.

type Conn added in go1.9

type Conn struct {
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

Conn represents a single database connection rather than a pool of database connections. Prefer running queries from DB unless there is a specific need for a continuous single database connection.

A Conn must call Conn.Close to return the connection to the database pool and may do so concurrently with a running query.

After a call to Conn.Close, all operations on the connection fail with ErrConnDone.

func (*Conn) BeginTx added in go1.9

func (c *Conn) BeginTx(ctx context.Context, opts *TxOptions) (*Tx, error)

BeginTx starts a transaction.

The provided context is used until the transaction is committed or rolled back. If the context is canceled, the sql package will roll back the transaction. Tx.Commit will return an error if the context provided to BeginTx is canceled.

The provided TxOptions is optional and may be nil if defaults should be used. If a non-default isolation level is used that the driver doesn't support, an error will be returned.

func (*Conn) Close added in go1.9

func (c *Conn) Close() error

Close returns the connection to the connection pool. All operations after a Close will return with ErrConnDone. Close is safe to call concurrently with other operations and will block until all other operations finish. It may be useful to first cancel any used context and then call close directly after.

func (*Conn) ExecContext added in go1.9

func (c *Conn) ExecContext(ctx context.Context, query string, args ...any) (Result, error)

ExecContext executes a query without returning any rows. The args are for any placeholder parameters in the query.

Example
package main

import (
	"context"
	"database/sql"
	"log"
)

var (
	ctx context.Context
	db  *sql.DB
)

func main() {
	// A *DB is a pool of connections. Call Conn to reserve a connection for
	// exclusive use.
	conn, err := db.Conn(ctx)
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	defer conn.Close() // Return the connection to the pool.
	id := 41
	result, err := conn.ExecContext(ctx, `UPDATE balances SET balance = balance + 10 WHERE user_id = ?;`, id)
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	rows, err := result.RowsAffected()
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	if rows != 1 {
		log.Fatalf("expected single row affected, got %d rows affected", rows)
	}
}
Output:

func (*Conn) PingContext added in go1.9

func (c *Conn) PingContext(ctx context.Context) error

PingContext verifies the connection to the database is still alive.

func (*Conn) PrepareContext added in go1.9

func (c *Conn) PrepareContext(ctx context.Context, query string) (*Stmt, error)

PrepareContext creates a prepared statement for later queries or executions. Multiple queries or executions may be run concurrently from the returned statement. The caller must call the statement's *Stmt.Close method when the statement is no longer needed.

The provided context is used for the preparation of the statement, not for the execution of the statement.

func (*Conn) QueryContext added in go1.9

func (c *Conn) QueryContext(ctx context.Context, query string, args ...any) (*Rows, error)

QueryContext executes a query that returns rows, typically a SELECT. The args are for any placeholder parameters in the query.

func (*Conn) QueryRowContext added in go1.9

func (c *Conn) QueryRowContext(ctx context.Context, query string, args ...any) *Row

QueryRowContext executes a query that is expected to return at most one row. QueryRowContext always returns a non-nil value. Errors are deferred until the *Row.Scan method is called. If the query selects no rows, the *Row.Scan will return ErrNoRows. Otherwise, the *Row.Scan scans the first selected row and discards the rest.

func (*Conn) Raw added in go1.13

func (c *Conn) Raw(f func(driverConn any) error) (err error)

Raw executes f exposing the underlying driver connection for the duration of f. The driverConn must not be used outside of f.

Once f returns and err is not driver.ErrBadConn, the Conn will continue to be usable until Conn.Close is called.

type DB

type DB struct {
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

DB is a database handle representing a pool of zero or more underlying connections. It's safe for concurrent use by multiple goroutines.

The sql package creates and frees connections automatically; it also maintains a free pool of idle connections. If the database has a concept of per-connection state, such state can be reliably observed within a transaction (Tx) or connection (Conn). Once DB.Begin is called, the returned Tx is bound to a single connection. Once Tx.Commit or Tx.Rollback is called on the transaction, that transaction's connection is returned to DB's idle connection pool. The pool size can be controlled with DB.SetMaxIdleConns.

func Open

func Open(driverName, dataSourceName string) (*DB, error)

Open opens a database specified by its database driver name and a driver-specific data source name, usually consisting of at least a database name and connection information.

Most users will open a database via a driver-specific connection helper function that returns a *DB. No database drivers are included in the Go standard library. See https://golang.org/s/sqldrivers for a list of third-party drivers.

Open may just validate its arguments without creating a connection to the database. To verify that the data source name is valid, call DB.Ping.

The returned DB is safe for concurrent use by multiple goroutines and maintains its own pool of idle connections. Thus, the Open function should be called just once. It is rarely necessary to close a DB.

func OpenDB added in go1.10

func OpenDB(c driver.Connector) *DB

OpenDB opens a database using a driver.Connector, allowing drivers to bypass a string based data source name.

Most users will open a database via a driver-specific connection helper function that returns a *DB. No database drivers are included in the Go standard library. See https://golang.org/s/sqldrivers for a list of third-party drivers.

OpenDB may just validate its arguments without creating a connection to the database. To verify that the data source name is valid, call DB.Ping.

The returned DB is safe for concurrent use by multiple goroutines and maintains its own pool of idle connections. Thus, the OpenDB function should be called just once. It is rarely necessary to close a DB.

func (*DB) Begin

func (db *DB) Begin() (*Tx, error)

Begin starts a transaction. The default isolation level is dependent on the driver.

Begin uses context.Background internally; to specify the context, use DB.BeginTx.

func (*DB) BeginTx added in go1.8

func (db *DB) BeginTx(ctx context.Context, opts *TxOptions) (*Tx, error)

BeginTx starts a transaction.

The provided context is used until the transaction is committed or rolled back. If the context is canceled, the sql package will roll back the transaction. Tx.Commit will return an error if the context provided to BeginTx is canceled.

The provided TxOptions is optional and may be nil if defaults should be used. If a non-default isolation level is used that the driver doesn't support, an error will be returned.

Example
package main

import (
	"context"
	"database/sql"
	"log"
)

var (
	ctx context.Context
	db  *sql.DB
)

func main() {
	tx, err := db.BeginTx(ctx, &sql.TxOptions{Isolation: sql.LevelSerializable})
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	id := 37
	_, execErr := tx.Exec(`UPDATE users SET status = ? WHERE id = ?`, "paid", id)
	if execErr != nil {
		_ = tx.Rollback()
		log.Fatal(execErr)
	}
	if err := tx.Commit(); err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
}
Output:

func (*DB) Close

func (db *DB) Close() error

Close closes the database and prevents new queries from starting. Close then waits for all queries that have started processing on the server to finish.

It is rare to Close a DB, as the DB handle is meant to be long-lived and shared between many goroutines.

func (*DB) Conn added in go1.9

func (db *DB) Conn(ctx context.Context) (*Conn, error)

Conn returns a single connection by either opening a new connection or returning an existing connection from the connection pool. Conn will block until either a connection is returned or ctx is canceled. Queries run on the same Conn will be run in the same database session.

Every Conn must be returned to the database pool after use by calling Conn.Close.

func (*DB) Driver

func (db *DB) Driver() driver.Driver

Driver returns the database's underlying driver.

func (*DB) Exec

func (db *DB) Exec(query string, args ...any) (Result, error)

Exec executes a query without returning any rows. The args are for any placeholder parameters in the query.

Exec uses context.Background internally; to specify the context, use DB.ExecContext.

func (*DB) ExecContext added in go1.8

func (db *DB) ExecContext(ctx context.Context, query string, args ...any) (Result, error)

ExecContext executes a query without returning any rows. The args are for any placeholder parameters in the query.

Example
package main

import (
	"context"
	"database/sql"
	"log"
)

var (
	ctx context.Context
	db  *sql.DB
)

func main() {
	id := 47
	result, err := db.ExecContext(ctx, "UPDATE balances SET balance = balance + 10 WHERE user_id = ?", id)
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	rows, err := result.RowsAffected()
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	if rows != 1 {
		log.Fatalf("expected to affect 1 row, affected %d", rows)
	}
}
Output:

func (*DB) Ping added in go1.1

func (db *DB) Ping() error

Ping verifies a connection to the database is still alive, establishing a connection if necessary.

Ping uses context.Background internally; to specify the context, use DB.PingContext.

func (*DB) PingContext added in go1.8

func (db *DB) PingContext(ctx context.Context) error

PingContext verifies a connection to the database is still alive, establishing a connection if necessary.

Example
package main

import (
	"context"
	"database/sql"
	"log"
	"time"
)

var (
	ctx context.Context
	db  *sql.DB
)

func main() {
	// Ping and PingContext may be used to determine if communication with
	// the database server is still possible.
	//
	// When used in a command line application Ping may be used to establish
	// that further queries are possible; that the provided DSN is valid.
	//
	// When used in long running service Ping may be part of the health
	// checking system.

	ctx, cancel := context.WithTimeout(ctx, 1*time.Second)
	defer cancel()

	status := "up"
	if err := db.PingContext(ctx); err != nil {
		status = "down"
	}
	log.Println(status)
}
Output:

func (*DB) Prepare

func (db *DB) Prepare(query string) (*Stmt, error)

Prepare creates a prepared statement for later queries or executions. Multiple queries or executions may be run concurrently from the returned statement. The caller must call the statement's *Stmt.Close method when the statement is no longer needed.

Prepare uses context.Background internally; to specify the context, use DB.PrepareContext.

Example
package main

import (
	"context"
	"database/sql"
	"log"
)

var db *sql.DB

func main() {
	projects := []struct {
		mascot  string
		release int
	}{
		{"tux", 1991},
		{"duke", 1996},
		{"gopher", 2009},
		{"moby dock", 2013},
	}

	stmt, err := db.Prepare("INSERT INTO projects(id, mascot, release, category) VALUES( ?, ?, ?, ? )")
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	defer stmt.Close() // Prepared statements take up server resources and should be closed after use.

	for id, project := range projects {
		if _, err := stmt.Exec(id+1, project.mascot, project.release, "open source"); err != nil {
			log.Fatal(err)
		}
	}
}
Output:

func (*DB) PrepareContext added in go1.8

func (db *DB) PrepareContext(ctx context.Context, query string) (*Stmt, error)

PrepareContext creates a prepared statement for later queries or executions. Multiple queries or executions may be run concurrently from the returned statement. The caller must call the statement's *Stmt.Close method when the statement is no longer needed.

The provided context is used for the preparation of the statement, not for the execution of the statement.

func (*DB) Query

func (db *DB) Query(query string, args ...any) (*Rows, error)

Query executes a query that returns rows, typically a SELECT. The args are for any placeholder parameters in the query.

Query uses context.Background internally; to specify the context, use DB.QueryContext.

Example (MultipleResultSets)
package main

import (
	"context"
	"database/sql"
	"log"
)

var db *sql.DB

func main() {
	age := 27
	q := `
create temp table uid (id bigint); -- Create temp table for queries.
insert into uid
select id from users where age < ?; -- Populate temp table.

-- First result set.
select
	users.id, name
from
	users
	join uid on users.id = uid.id
;

-- Second result set.
select 
	ur.user, ur.role
from
	user_roles as ur
	join uid on uid.id = ur.user
;
	`
	rows, err := db.Query(q, age)
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	defer rows.Close()

	for rows.Next() {
		var (
			id   int64
			name string
		)
		if err := rows.Scan(&id, &name); err != nil {
			log.Fatal(err)
		}
		log.Printf("id %d name is %s\n", id, name)
	}
	if !rows.NextResultSet() {
		log.Fatalf("expected more result sets: %v", rows.Err())
	}
	var roleMap = map[int64]string{
		1: "user",
		2: "admin",
		3: "gopher",
	}
	for rows.Next() {
		var (
			id   int64
			role int64
		)
		if err := rows.Scan(&id, &role); err != nil {
			log.Fatal(err)
		}
		log.Printf("id %d has role %s\n", id, roleMap[role])
	}
	if err := rows.Err(); err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
}
Output:

func (*DB) QueryContext added in go1.8

func (db *DB) QueryContext(ctx context.Context, query string, args ...any) (*Rows, error)

QueryContext executes a query that returns rows, typically a SELECT. The args are for any placeholder parameters in the query.

Example
package main

import (
	"context"
	"database/sql"
	"fmt"
	"log"
	"strings"
)

var (
	ctx context.Context
	db  *sql.DB
)

func main() {
	age := 27
	rows, err := db.QueryContext(ctx, "SELECT name FROM users WHERE age=?", age)
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	defer rows.Close()
	names := make([]string, 0)

	for rows.Next() {
		var name string
		if err := rows.Scan(&name); err != nil {
			// Check for a scan error.
			// Query rows will be closed with defer.
			log.Fatal(err)
		}
		names = append(names, name)
	}
	// If the database is being written to ensure to check for Close
	// errors that may be returned from the driver. The query may
	// encounter an auto-commit error and be forced to rollback changes.
	rerr := rows.Close()
	if rerr != nil {
		log.Fatal(rerr)
	}

	// Rows.Err will report the last error encountered by Rows.Scan.
	if err := rows.Err(); err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	fmt.Printf("%s are %d years old", strings.Join(names, ", "), age)
}
Output:

func (*DB) QueryRow

func (db *DB) QueryRow(query string, args ...any) *Row

QueryRow executes a query that is expected to return at most one row. QueryRow always returns a non-nil value. Errors are deferred until Row's Scan method is called. If the query selects no rows, the *Row.Scan will return ErrNoRows. Otherwise, *Row.Scan scans the first selected row and discards the rest.

QueryRow uses context.Background internally; to specify the context, use DB.QueryRowContext.

func (*DB) QueryRowContext added in go1.8

func (db *DB) QueryRowContext(ctx context.Context, query string, args ...any) *Row

QueryRowContext executes a query that is expected to return at most one row. QueryRowContext always returns a non-nil value. Errors are deferred until Row's Scan method is called. If the query selects no rows, the *Row.Scan will return ErrNoRows. Otherwise, *Row.Scan scans the first selected row and discards the rest.

Example
package main

import (
	"context"
	"database/sql"
	"log"
	"time"
)

var (
	ctx context.Context
	db  *sql.DB
)

func main() {
	id := 123
	var username string
	var created time.Time
	err := db.QueryRowContext(ctx, "SELECT username, created_at FROM users WHERE id=?", id).Scan(&username, &created)
	switch {
	case err == sql.ErrNoRows:
		log.Printf("no user with id %d\n", id)
	case err != nil:
		log.Fatalf("query error: %v\n", err)
	default:
		log.Printf("username is %q, account created on %s\n", username, created)
	}
}
Output:

func (*DB) SetConnMaxIdleTime added in go1.15

func (db *DB) SetConnMaxIdleTime(d time.Duration)

SetConnMaxIdleTime sets the maximum amount of time a connection may be idle.

Expired connections may be closed lazily before reuse.

If d <= 0, connections are not closed due to a connection's idle time.

func (*DB) SetConnMaxLifetime added in go1.6

func (db *DB) SetConnMaxLifetime(d time.Duration)

SetConnMaxLifetime sets the maximum amount of time a connection may be reused.

Expired connections may be closed lazily before reuse.

If d <= 0, connections are not closed due to a connection's age.

func (*DB) SetMaxIdleConns added in go1.1

func (db *DB) SetMaxIdleConns(n int)

SetMaxIdleConns sets the maximum number of connections in the idle connection pool.

If MaxOpenConns is greater than 0 but less than the new MaxIdleConns, then the new MaxIdleConns will be reduced to match the MaxOpenConns limit.

If n <= 0, no idle connections are retained.

The default max idle connections is currently 2. This may change in a future release.

func (*DB) SetMaxOpenConns added in go1.2

func (db *DB) SetMaxOpenConns(n int)

SetMaxOpenConns sets the maximum number of open connections to the database.

If MaxIdleConns is greater than 0 and the new MaxOpenConns is less than MaxIdleConns, then MaxIdleConns will be reduced to match the new MaxOpenConns limit.

If n <= 0, then there is no limit on the number of open connections. The default is 0 (unlimited).

func (*DB) Stats added in go1.5

func (db *DB) Stats() DBStats

Stats returns database statistics.

type DBStats added in go1.5

type DBStats struct {
	MaxOpenConnections int // Maximum number of open connections to the database.

	// Pool Status
	OpenConnections int // The number of established connections both in use and idle.
	InUse           int // The number of connections currently in use.
	Idle            int // The number of idle connections.

	// Counters
	WaitCount         int64         // The total number of connections waited for.
	WaitDuration      time.Duration // The total time blocked waiting for a new connection.
	MaxIdleClosed     int64         // The total number of connections closed due to SetMaxIdleConns.
	MaxIdleTimeClosed int64         // The total number of connections closed due to SetConnMaxIdleTime.
	MaxLifetimeClosed int64         // The total number of connections closed due to SetConnMaxLifetime.
}

DBStats contains database statistics.

type IsolationLevel added in go1.8

type IsolationLevel int

IsolationLevel is the transaction isolation level used in TxOptions.

const (
	LevelDefault IsolationLevel = iota
	LevelReadUncommitted
	LevelReadCommitted
	LevelWriteCommitted
	LevelRepeatableRead
	LevelSnapshot
	LevelSerializable
	LevelLinearizable
)

Various isolation levels that drivers may support in DB.BeginTx. If a driver does not support a given isolation level an error may be returned.

See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isolation_(database_systems)#Isolation_levels.

func (IsolationLevel) String added in go1.11

func (i IsolationLevel) String() string

String returns the name of the transaction isolation level.

type NamedArg added in go1.8

type NamedArg struct {

	// Name is the name of the parameter placeholder.
	//
	// If empty, the ordinal position in the argument list will be
	// used.
	//
	// Name must omit any symbol prefix.
	Name string

	// Value is the value of the parameter.
	// It may be assigned the same value types as the query
	// arguments.
	Value any
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

A NamedArg is a named argument. NamedArg values may be used as arguments to DB.Query or DB.Exec and bind to the corresponding named parameter in the SQL statement.

For a more concise way to create NamedArg values, see the Named function.

func Named added in go1.8

func Named(name string, value any) NamedArg

Named provides a more concise way to create NamedArg values.

Example usage:

db.ExecContext(ctx, `
    delete from Invoice
    where
        TimeCreated < @end
        and TimeCreated >= @start;`,
    sql.Named("start", startTime),
    sql.Named("end", endTime),
)

type Null added in go1.22.0

type Null[T any] struct {
	V     T
	Valid bool
}

Null represents a value that may be null. Null implements the Scanner interface so it can be used as a scan destination:

var s Null[string]
err := db.QueryRow("SELECT name FROM foo WHERE id=?", id).Scan(&s)
...
if s.Valid {
   // use s.V
} else {
   // NULL value
}

func (*Null[T]) Scan added in go1.22.0

func (n *Null[T]) Scan(value any) error

func (Null[T]) Value added in go1.22.0

func (n Null[T]) Value() (driver.Value, error)

type NullBool

type NullBool struct {
	Bool  bool
	Valid bool // Valid is true if Bool is not NULL
}

NullBool represents a bool that may be null. NullBool implements the Scanner interface so it can be used as a scan destination, similar to NullString.

func (*NullBool) Scan

func (n *NullBool) Scan(value any) error

Scan implements the Scanner interface.

func (NullBool) Value

func (n NullBool) Value() (driver.Value, error)

Value implements the driver.Valuer interface.

type NullByte added in go1.17

type NullByte struct {
	Byte  byte
	Valid bool // Valid is true if Byte is not NULL
}

NullByte represents a byte that may be null. NullByte implements the Scanner interface so it can be used as a scan destination, similar to NullString.

func (*NullByte) Scan added in go1.17

func (n *NullByte) Scan(value any) error

Scan implements the Scanner interface.

func (NullByte) Value added in go1.17

func (n NullByte) Value() (driver.Value, error)

Value implements the driver.Valuer interface.

type NullFloat64

type NullFloat64 struct {
	Float64 float64
	Valid   bool // Valid is true if Float64 is not NULL
}

NullFloat64 represents a float64 that may be null. NullFloat64 implements the Scanner interface so it can be used as a scan destination, similar to NullString.

func (*NullFloat64) Scan

func (n *NullFloat64) Scan(value any) error

Scan implements the Scanner interface.

func (NullFloat64) Value

func (n NullFloat64) Value() (driver.Value, error)

Value implements the driver.Valuer interface.

type NullInt16 added in go1.17

type NullInt16 struct {
	Int16 int16
	Valid bool // Valid is true if Int16 is not NULL
}

NullInt16 represents an int16 that may be null. NullInt16 implements the Scanner interface so it can be used as a scan destination, similar to NullString.

func (*NullInt16) Scan added in go1.17

func (n *NullInt16) Scan(value any) error

Scan implements the Scanner interface.

func (NullInt16) Value added in go1.17

func (n NullInt16) Value() (driver.Value, error)

Value implements the driver.Valuer interface.

type NullInt32 added in go1.13

type NullInt32 struct {
	Int32 int32
	Valid bool // Valid is true if Int32 is not NULL
}

NullInt32 represents an int32 that may be null. NullInt32 implements the Scanner interface so it can be used as a scan destination, similar to NullString.

func (*NullInt32) Scan added in go1.13

func (n *NullInt32) Scan(value any) error

Scan implements the Scanner interface.

func (NullInt32) Value added in go1.13

func (n NullInt32) Value() (driver.Value, error)

Value implements the driver.Valuer interface.

type NullInt64

type NullInt64 struct {
	Int64 int64
	Valid bool // Valid is true if Int64 is not NULL
}

NullInt64 represents an int64 that may be null. NullInt64 implements the Scanner interface so it can be used as a scan destination, similar to NullString.

func (*NullInt64) Scan

func (n *NullInt64) Scan(value any) error

Scan implements the Scanner interface.

func (NullInt64) Value

func (n NullInt64) Value() (driver.Value, error)

Value implements the driver.Valuer interface.

type NullString

type NullString struct {
	String string
	Valid  bool // Valid is true if String is not NULL
}

NullString represents a string that may be null. NullString implements the Scanner interface so it can be used as a scan destination:

var s NullString
err := db.QueryRow("SELECT name FROM foo WHERE id=?", id).Scan(&s)
...
if s.Valid {
   // use s.String
} else {
   // NULL value
}

func (*NullString) Scan

func (ns *NullString) Scan(value any) error

Scan implements the Scanner interface.

func (NullString) Value

func (ns NullString) Value() (driver.Value, error)

Value implements the driver.Valuer interface.

type NullTime added in go1.13

type NullTime struct {
	Time  time.Time
	Valid bool // Valid is true if Time is not NULL
}

NullTime represents a time.Time that may be null. NullTime implements the Scanner interface so it can be used as a scan destination, similar to NullString.

func (*NullTime) Scan added in go1.13

func (n *NullTime) Scan(value any) error

Scan implements the Scanner interface.

func (NullTime) Value added in go1.13

func (n NullTime) Value() (driver.Value, error)

Value implements the driver.Valuer interface.

type Out added in go1.9

type Out struct {

	// Dest is a pointer to the value that will be set to the result of the
	// stored procedure's OUTPUT parameter.
	Dest any

	// In is whether the parameter is an INOUT parameter. If so, the input value to the stored
	// procedure is the dereferenced value of Dest's pointer, which is then replaced with
	// the output value.
	In bool
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

Out may be used to retrieve OUTPUT value parameters from stored procedures.

Not all drivers and databases support OUTPUT value parameters.

Example usage:

var outArg string
_, err := db.ExecContext(ctx, "ProcName", sql.Named("Arg1", sql.Out{Dest: &outArg}))

type RawBytes

type RawBytes []byte

RawBytes is a byte slice that holds a reference to memory owned by the database itself. After a Rows.Scan into a RawBytes, the slice is only valid until the next call to Rows.Next, Rows.Scan, or Rows.Close.

type Result

type Result interface {
	// LastInsertId returns the integer generated by the database
	// in response to a command. Typically this will be from an
	// "auto increment" column when inserting a new row. Not all
	// databases support this feature, and the syntax of such
	// statements varies.
	LastInsertId() (int64, error)

	// RowsAffected returns the number of rows affected by an
	// update, insert, or delete. Not every database or database
	// driver may support this.
	RowsAffected() (int64, error)
}

A Result summarizes an executed SQL command.

type Row

type Row struct {
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

Row is the result of calling DB.QueryRow to select a single row.

func (*Row) Err added in go1.15

func (r *Row) Err() error

Err provides a way for wrapping packages to check for query errors without calling Row.Scan. Err returns the error, if any, that was encountered while running the query. If this error is not nil, this error will also be returned from Row.Scan.

func (*Row) Scan

func (r *Row) Scan(dest ...any) error

Scan copies the columns from the matched row into the values pointed at by dest. See the documentation on Rows.Scan for details. If more than one row matches the query, Scan uses the first row and discards the rest. If no row matches the query, Scan returns ErrNoRows.

type Rows

type Rows struct {
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

Rows is the result of a query. Its cursor starts before the first row of the result set. Use Rows.Next to advance from row to row.

Example
package main

import (
	"context"
	"database/sql"
	"log"
	"strings"
)

var (
	ctx context.Context
	db  *sql.DB
)

func main() {
	age := 27
	rows, err := db.QueryContext(ctx, "SELECT name FROM users WHERE age=?", age)
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	defer rows.Close()

	names := make([]string, 0)
	for rows.Next() {
		var name string
		if err := rows.Scan(&name); err != nil {
			log.Fatal(err)
		}
		names = append(names, name)
	}
	// Check for errors from iterating over rows.
	if err := rows.Err(); err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	log.Printf("%s are %d years old", strings.Join(names, ", "), age)
}
Output:

func (*Rows) Close

func (rs *Rows) Close() error

Close closes the Rows, preventing further enumeration. If Rows.Next is called and returns false and there are no further result sets, the Rows are closed automatically and it will suffice to check the result of Rows.Err. Close is idempotent and does not affect the result of Rows.Err.

func (*Rows) ColumnTypes added in go1.8

func (rs *Rows) ColumnTypes() ([]*ColumnType, error)

ColumnTypes returns column information such as column type, length, and nullable. Some information may not be available from some drivers.

func (*Rows) Columns

func (rs *Rows) Columns() ([]string, error)

Columns returns the column names. Columns returns an error if the rows are closed.

func (*Rows) Err

func (rs *Rows) Err() error

Err returns the error, if any, that was encountered during iteration. Err may be called after an explicit or implicit Rows.Close.

func (*Rows) Next

func (rs *Rows) Next() bool

Next prepares the next result row for reading with the Rows.Scan method. It returns true on success, or false if there is no next result row or an error happened while preparing it. Rows.Err should be consulted to distinguish between the two cases.

Every call to Rows.Scan, even the first one, must be preceded by a call to Rows.Next.

func (*Rows) NextResultSet added in go1.8

func (rs *Rows) NextResultSet() bool

NextResultSet prepares the next result set for reading. It reports whether there is further result sets, or false if there is no further result set or if there is an error advancing to it. The Rows.Err method should be consulted to distinguish between the two cases.

After calling NextResultSet, the Rows.Next method should always be called before scanning. If there are further result sets they may not have rows in the result set.

func (*Rows) Scan

func (rs *Rows) Scan(dest ...any) error

Scan copies the columns in the current row into the values pointed at by dest. The number of values in dest must be the same as the number of columns in Rows.

Scan converts columns read from the database into the following common Go types and special types provided by the sql package:

*string
*[]byte
*int, *int8, *int16, *int32, *int64
*uint, *uint8, *uint16, *uint32, *uint64
*bool
*float32, *float64
*interface{}
*RawBytes
*Rows (cursor value)
any type implementing Scanner (see Scanner docs)

In the most simple case, if the type of the value from the source column is an integer, bool or string type T and dest is of type *T, Scan simply assigns the value through the pointer.

Scan also converts between string and numeric types, as long as no information would be lost. While Scan stringifies all numbers scanned from numeric database columns into *string, scans into numeric types are checked for overflow. For example, a float64 with value 300 or a string with value "300" can scan into a uint16, but not into a uint8, though float64(255) or "255" can scan into a uint8. One exception is that scans of some float64 numbers to strings may lose information when stringifying. In general, scan floating point columns into *float64.

If a dest argument has type *[]byte, Scan saves in that argument a copy of the corresponding data. The copy is owned by the caller and can be modified and held indefinitely. The copy can be avoided by using an argument of type *RawBytes instead; see the documentation for RawBytes for restrictions on its use.

If an argument has type *interface{}, Scan copies the value provided by the underlying driver without conversion. When scanning from a source value of type []byte to *interface{}, a copy of the slice is made and the caller owns the result.

Source values of type time.Time may be scanned into values of type *time.Time, *interface{}, *string, or *[]byte. When converting to the latter two, time.RFC3339Nano is used.

Source values of type bool may be scanned into types *bool, *interface{}, *string, *[]byte, or *RawBytes.

For scanning into *bool, the source may be true, false, 1, 0, or string inputs parseable by strconv.ParseBool.

Scan can also convert a cursor returned from a query, such as "select cursor(select * from my_table) from dual", into a *Rows value that can itself be scanned from. The parent select query will close any cursor *Rows if the parent *Rows is closed.

If any of the first arguments implementing Scanner returns an error, that error will be wrapped in the returned error.

type Scanner

type Scanner interface {
	// Scan assigns a value from a database driver.
	//
	// The src value will be of one of the following types:
	//
	//    int64
	//    float64
	//    bool
	//    []byte
	//    string
	//    time.Time
	//    nil - for NULL values
	//
	// An error should be returned if the value cannot be stored
	// without loss of information.
	//
	// Reference types such as []byte are only valid until the next call to Scan
	// and should not be retained. Their underlying memory is owned by the driver.
	// If retention is necessary, copy their values before the next call to Scan.
	Scan(src any) error
}

Scanner is an interface used by Rows.Scan.

type Stmt

type Stmt struct {
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

Stmt is a prepared statement. A Stmt is safe for concurrent use by multiple goroutines.

If a Stmt is prepared on a Tx or Conn, it will be bound to a single underlying connection forever. If the Tx or Conn closes, the Stmt will become unusable and all operations will return an error. If a Stmt is prepared on a DB, it will remain usable for the lifetime of the DB. When the Stmt needs to execute on a new underlying connection, it will prepare itself on the new connection automatically.

Example
package main

import (
	"context"
	"database/sql"
	"log"
)

var (
	ctx context.Context
	db  *sql.DB
)

func main() {
	// In normal use, create one Stmt when your process starts.
	stmt, err := db.PrepareContext(ctx, "SELECT username FROM users WHERE id = ?")
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	defer stmt.Close()

	// Then reuse it each time you need to issue the query.
	id := 43
	var username string
	err = stmt.QueryRowContext(ctx, id).Scan(&username)
	switch {
	case err == sql.ErrNoRows:
		log.Fatalf("no user with id %d", id)
	case err != nil:
		log.Fatal(err)
	default:
		log.Printf("username is %s\n", username)
	}
}
Output:

func (*Stmt) Close

func (s *Stmt) Close() error

Close closes the statement.

func (*Stmt) Exec

func (s *Stmt) Exec(args ...any) (Result, error)

Exec executes a prepared statement with the given arguments and returns a Result summarizing the effect of the statement.

Exec uses context.Background internally; to specify the context, use Stmt.ExecContext.

func (*Stmt) ExecContext added in go1.8

func (s *Stmt) ExecContext(ctx context.Context, args ...any) (Result, error)

ExecContext executes a prepared statement with the given arguments and returns a Result summarizing the effect of the statement.

func (*Stmt) Query

func (s *Stmt) Query(args ...any) (*Rows, error)

Query executes a prepared query statement with the given arguments and returns the query results as a *Rows.

Query uses context.Background internally; to specify the context, use Stmt.QueryContext.

func (*Stmt) QueryContext added in go1.8

func (s *Stmt) QueryContext(ctx context.Context, args ...any) (*Rows, error)

QueryContext executes a prepared query statement with the given arguments and returns the query results as a *Rows.

func (*Stmt) QueryRow

func (s *Stmt) QueryRow(args ...any) *Row

QueryRow executes a prepared query statement with the given arguments. If an error occurs during the execution of the statement, that error will be returned by a call to Scan on the returned *Row, which is always non-nil. If the query selects no rows, the *Row.Scan will return ErrNoRows. Otherwise, the *Row.Scan scans the first selected row and discards the rest.

Example usage:

var name string
err := nameByUseridStmt.QueryRow(id).Scan(&name)

QueryRow uses context.Background internally; to specify the context, use Stmt.QueryRowContext.

func (*Stmt) QueryRowContext added in go1.8

func (s *Stmt) QueryRowContext(ctx context.Context, args ...any) *Row

QueryRowContext executes a prepared query statement with the given arguments. If an error occurs during the execution of the statement, that error will be returned by a call to Scan on the returned *Row, which is always non-nil. If the query selects no rows, the *Row.Scan will return ErrNoRows. Otherwise, the *Row.Scan scans the first selected row and discards the rest.

Example
package main

import (
	"context"
	"database/sql"
	"log"
)

var (
	ctx context.Context
	db  *sql.DB
)

func main() {
	// In normal use, create one Stmt when your process starts.
	stmt, err := db.PrepareContext(ctx, "SELECT username FROM users WHERE id = ?")
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	defer stmt.Close()

	// Then reuse it each time you need to issue the query.
	id := 43
	var username string
	err = stmt.QueryRowContext(ctx, id).Scan(&username)
	switch {
	case err == sql.ErrNoRows:
		log.Fatalf("no user with id %d", id)
	case err != nil:
		log.Fatal(err)
	default:
		log.Printf("username is %s\n", username)
	}
}
Output:

type Tx

type Tx struct {
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

Tx is an in-progress database transaction.

A transaction must end with a call to Tx.Commit or Tx.Rollback.

After a call to Tx.Commit or Tx.Rollback, all operations on the transaction fail with ErrTxDone.

The statements prepared for a transaction by calling the transaction's Tx.Prepare or Tx.Stmt methods are closed by the call to Tx.Commit or Tx.Rollback.

func (*Tx) Commit

func (tx *Tx) Commit() error

Commit commits the transaction.

func (*Tx) Exec

func (tx *Tx) Exec(query string, args ...any) (Result, error)

Exec executes a query that doesn't return rows. For example: an INSERT and UPDATE.

Exec uses context.Background internally; to specify the context, use Tx.ExecContext.

func (*Tx) ExecContext added in go1.8

func (tx *Tx) ExecContext(ctx context.Context, query string, args ...any) (Result, error)

ExecContext executes a query that doesn't return rows. For example: an INSERT and UPDATE.

Example
package main

import (
	"context"
	"database/sql"
	"log"
)

var (
	ctx context.Context
	db  *sql.DB
)

func main() {
	tx, err := db.BeginTx(ctx, &sql.TxOptions{Isolation: sql.LevelSerializable})
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	id := 37
	_, execErr := tx.ExecContext(ctx, "UPDATE users SET status = ? WHERE id = ?", "paid", id)
	if execErr != nil {
		if rollbackErr := tx.Rollback(); rollbackErr != nil {
			log.Fatalf("update failed: %v, unable to rollback: %v\n", execErr, rollbackErr)
		}
		log.Fatalf("update failed: %v", execErr)
	}
	if err := tx.Commit(); err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
}
Output:

func (*Tx) Prepare

func (tx *Tx) Prepare(query string) (*Stmt, error)

Prepare creates a prepared statement for use within a transaction.

The returned statement operates within the transaction and will be closed when the transaction has been committed or rolled back.

To use an existing prepared statement on this transaction, see Tx.Stmt.

Prepare uses context.Background internally; to specify the context, use Tx.PrepareContext.

Example
package main

import (
	"context"
	"database/sql"
	"log"
)

var db *sql.DB

func main() {
	projects := []struct {
		mascot  string
		release int
	}{
		{"tux", 1991},
		{"duke", 1996},
		{"gopher", 2009},
		{"moby dock", 2013},
	}

	tx, err := db.Begin()
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	defer tx.Rollback() // The rollback will be ignored if the tx has been committed later in the function.

	stmt, err := tx.Prepare("INSERT INTO projects(id, mascot, release, category) VALUES( ?, ?, ?, ? )")
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	defer stmt.Close() // Prepared statements take up server resources and should be closed after use.

	for id, project := range projects {
		if _, err := stmt.Exec(id+1, project.mascot, project.release, "open source"); err != nil {
			log.Fatal(err)
		}
	}
	if err := tx.Commit(); err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
}
Output:

func (*Tx) PrepareContext added in go1.8

func (tx *Tx) PrepareContext(ctx context.Context, query string) (*Stmt, error)

PrepareContext creates a prepared statement for use within a transaction.

The returned statement operates within the transaction and will be closed when the transaction has been committed or rolled back.

To use an existing prepared statement on this transaction, see Tx.Stmt.

The provided context will be used for the preparation of the context, not for the execution of the returned statement. The returned statement will run in the transaction context.

func (*Tx) Query

func (tx *Tx) Query(query string, args ...any) (*Rows, error)

Query executes a query that returns rows, typically a SELECT.

Query uses context.Background internally; to specify the context, use Tx.QueryContext.

func (*Tx) QueryContext added in go1.8

func (tx *Tx) QueryContext(ctx context.Context, query string, args ...any) (*Rows, error)

QueryContext executes a query that returns rows, typically a SELECT.

func (*Tx) QueryRow

func (tx *Tx) QueryRow(query string, args ...any) *Row

QueryRow executes a query that is expected to return at most one row. QueryRow always returns a non-nil value. Errors are deferred until Row's Scan method is called. If the query selects no rows, the *Row.Scan will return ErrNoRows. Otherwise, the *Row.Scan scans the first selected row and discards the rest.

QueryRow uses context.Background internally; to specify the context, use Tx.QueryRowContext.

func (*Tx) QueryRowContext added in go1.8

func (tx *Tx) QueryRowContext(ctx context.Context, query string, args ...any) *Row

QueryRowContext executes a query that is expected to return at most one row. QueryRowContext always returns a non-nil value. Errors are deferred until Row's Scan method is called. If the query selects no rows, the *Row.Scan will return ErrNoRows. Otherwise, the *Row.Scan scans the first selected row and discards the rest.

func (*Tx) Rollback

func (tx *Tx) Rollback() error

Rollback aborts the transaction.

Example
package main

import (
	"context"
	"database/sql"
	"log"
)

var (
	ctx context.Context
	db  *sql.DB
)

func main() {
	tx, err := db.BeginTx(ctx, &sql.TxOptions{Isolation: sql.LevelSerializable})
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	id := 53
	_, err = tx.ExecContext(ctx, "UPDATE drivers SET status = ? WHERE id = ?;", "assigned", id)
	if err != nil {
		if rollbackErr := tx.Rollback(); rollbackErr != nil {
			log.Fatalf("update drivers: unable to rollback: %v", rollbackErr)
		}
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	_, err = tx.ExecContext(ctx, "UPDATE pickups SET driver_id = $1;", id)
	if err != nil {
		if rollbackErr := tx.Rollback(); rollbackErr != nil {
			log.Fatalf("update failed: %v, unable to back: %v", err, rollbackErr)
		}
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	if err := tx.Commit(); err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
}
Output:

func (*Tx) Stmt

func (tx *Tx) Stmt(stmt *Stmt) *Stmt

Stmt returns a transaction-specific prepared statement from an existing statement.

Example:

updateMoney, err := db.Prepare("UPDATE balance SET money=money+? WHERE id=?")
...
tx, err := db.Begin()
...
res, err := tx.Stmt(updateMoney).Exec(123.45, 98293203)

The returned statement operates within the transaction and will be closed when the transaction has been committed or rolled back.

Stmt uses context.Background internally; to specify the context, use Tx.StmtContext.

func (*Tx) StmtContext added in go1.8

func (tx *Tx) StmtContext(ctx context.Context, stmt *Stmt) *Stmt

StmtContext returns a transaction-specific prepared statement from an existing statement.

Example:

updateMoney, err := db.Prepare("UPDATE balance SET money=money+? WHERE id=?")
...
tx, err := db.Begin()
...
res, err := tx.StmtContext(ctx, updateMoney).Exec(123.45, 98293203)

The provided context is used for the preparation of the statement, not for the execution of the statement.

The returned statement operates within the transaction and will be closed when the transaction has been committed or rolled back.

type TxOptions added in go1.8

type TxOptions struct {
	// Isolation is the transaction isolation level.
	// If zero, the driver or database's default level is used.
	Isolation IsolationLevel
	ReadOnly  bool
}

TxOptions holds the transaction options to be used in DB.BeginTx.

Directories

Path Synopsis
Package driver defines interfaces to be implemented by database drivers as used by package sql.
Package driver defines interfaces to be implemented by database drivers as used by package sql.

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