THE WORLD'S LARGEST WEB DEVELOPER SITE

PHP7 Tutorial

PHP7 HOME PHP7 Intro PHP7 Install PHP7 Syntax PHP7 Variables PHP7 Echo / Print PHP7 Data Types PHP7 Strings PHP7 Constants PHP7 Operators PHP7 If...Else...Elseif PHP7 Switch PHP7 While Loops PHP7 For Loops PHP7 Functions PHP7 Arrays PHP7 Sorting Arrays PHP7 Superglobals

PHP7 Forms

PHP7 Form Handling PHP7 Form Validation PHP7 Form Required PHP7 Form URL/E-mail PHP7 Form Complete

PHP7 Advanced

PHP7 Arrays Multi PHP7 Date and Time PHP7 Include PHP7 File Handling PHP7 File Open/Read PHP7 File Create/Write PHP7 File Upload PHP7 Cookies PHP7 Sessions PHP7 Filters PHP7 Filters Advanced

MySQL Database

MySQL Database MySQL Connect MySQL Create DB MySQL Create Table MySQL Insert Data MySQL Get Last ID MySQL Insert Multiple MySQL Prepared MySQL Select Data MySQL Delete Data MySQL Update Data MySQL Limit Data

PHP7 XML

PHP7 XML Parsers PHP7 SimpleXML Parser PHP7 SimpleXML - Get PHP7 XML Expat PHP7 XML DOM

PHP7 - AJAX

AJAX Intro AJAX PHP AJAX Database AJAX XML AJAX Live Search AJAX Poll

PHP7 Reference

PHP7 Overview PHP7 Array PHP7 Calendar PHP7 Date PHP7 Directory PHP7 Error PHP7 Filesystem PHP7 Filter PHP7 FTP PHP7 Libxml PHP7 Mail PHP7 Math PHP7 Misc PHP7 MySQLi PHP7 Network PHP7 SimpleXML PHP7 Stream PHP7 String PHP7 XML Parser PHP7 Zip PHP7 Timezones

PHP 7 mysqli_rollback() Function

❮ PHP mysqli Reference

Example

Turn off auto-committing, make some queries, commit the queries, then roll back the current transaction:

<?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);

// Rollback transaction
mysqli_rollback($con);

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

Definition and Usage

The mysqli_rollback() function rolls back the current transaction for the specified database connection.

Tip: Also look at the mysqli_commit() function, which commits the current transaction for the specified database connection, and the mysqli_autocommit() function, which turns on or off auto-committing database modifications.


Syntax

mysqli_rollback(connection);

Parameter Description
connection Required. Specifies the MySQL connection to use

Technical Details

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

❮ PHP mysqli Reference