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PHP mysqli_autocommit() Function

❮ PHP MySQLi Reference

Example

Turn off auto-committing, make some queries, then commit the queries:

<?php
$con=mysqli_connect("localhost","my_user","my_password","my_db");
// Check connection
if (mysqli_connect_errno())
  {
  echo "Failed to connect to MySQL: " . mysqli_connect_error();
  }

// Set autocommit to off
mysqli_autocommit($con,FALSE);

// Insert some values
mysqli_query($con,"INSERT INTO Persons (FirstName,LastName,Age)
VALUES ('Peter','Griffin',35)");
mysqli_query($con,"INSERT INTO Persons (FirstName,LastName,Age)
VALUES ('Glenn','Quagmire',33)");

// Commit transaction
mysqli_commit($con);

// Close connection
mysqli_close($con);
?>

Definition and Usage

The mysqli_autocommit() function turns on or off auto-committing database modifications.

Tip: Also look at the mysqli_commit() function, which commits the current transaction for the specified database connection, and the mysqli_rollback() function, which rolls back the current transaction.


Syntax

mysqli_autocommit(connection,mode);

Parameter Description
connection Required. Specifies the MySQL connection to use
mode Required. FALSE turns auto-commit off. TRUE turns auto-commit on (and commits any waiting queries)

Technical Details

Return Value: TRUE on success. FALSE on failure
PHP Version: 5+

❮ PHP MySQLi Reference