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Reference documentation and code samples for the Cloud Spanner Client class Transaction.
Manages interaction with Cloud Spanner inside a Transaction.
Transactions can be started via Database::runTransaction() (recommended) or via Database::transaction() . Transactions should always call Transaction::commit() or Transaction::rollback() to ensure that locks are released in a timely manner.
If you do not plan on performing any writes in your transaction, a Snapshot is a better solution which does not require a commit or rollback and does not lock any data.
Transactions may raise Google\Cloud\Core\Exception\AbortedException errors when the transaction cannot complete for any reason. In this case, the entire operation (all reads and writes) should be reapplied atomically. Google Cloud PHP handles this transparently when using Database::runTransaction() . In other cases, it is highly recommended that applications implement their own retry logic.
Example:
use Google\Cloud\Spanner\SpannerClient;
$spanner = new SpannerClient();
$database = $spanner->connect('my-instance', 'my-database');
$database->runTransaction(function (Transaction $t) {
// do stuff.
$t->commit();
});
// Get a transaction to manage manually.
$transaction = $database->transaction();
Namespace
Google \ Cloud \ SpannerMethods
__construct
operation
session
transactionId
string
[optional] The Transaction ID. If no ID is provided, the Transaction will be a Single-Use Transaction.
isRetry
bool
Whether the transaction will automatically retry or not.
tag
string
A transaction tag. Requests made using this transaction will use this as the transaction tag.
options
array
Configuration Options.
↳ begin
mapper
getCommitStats
Get the commit stats for this transaction. Commit stats are only available after commit has been called with return_commit_stats
=> true. If commit is called multiple times, only the commitStats for the last commit will
be available.
Example:
$transaction->commit(["returnCommitStats" => true]);
$commitStats = $transaction->getCommitStats();
array
executeUpdate
See also:
sql
string
The query string to execute.
options
array
Configuration Options.
↳ parameters
array
A key/value array of Query Parameters, where the key is represented in the query string prefixed by a @
symbol.
↳ types
array
A key/value array of Query Parameter types. Generally, Google Cloud PHP can infer types. Explicit type declarations are required in the case of struct parameters, or when a null value exists as a parameter. Accepted values for primitive types are defined as constants on Database
, and are as follows: Database::TYPE_BOOL
, Database::TYPE_INT64
, Database::TYPE_FLOAT64
, Database::TYPE_TIMESTAMP
, Database::TYPE_DATE
, Database::TYPE_STRING
, Database::TYPE_BYTES
. If the value is an array, use ArrayType
to declare the array parameter types. Likewise, for structs, use StructType
.
↳ requestOptions
array
Request options. For more information on available options, please see the upstream documentation
. Please note, if using the priority
setting you may utilize the constants available on V1\RequestOptions\Priority
to set a value. Please note, the transactionTag
setting will be ignored as the transaction tag should have already been set when creating the transaction.
int
executeUpdateBatch
See also:
statements
array[]
A list of DML statements to run. Each statement
must contain a sql
key, where the value is a DML string. If the
DML contains placeholders, values are provided as a key/value array
in key parameters
. If parameter types are required, they must be
provided in key types
. Generally, Google Cloud PHP can
infer types. Explicit type declarations are required in the case
of struct parameters, or when a null value exists as a parameter.
Accepted values for primitive types are defined as constants on Database
, and are as follows: Database::TYPE_BOOL
, Database::TYPE_INT64
, Database::TYPE_FLOAT64
, Database::TYPE_TIMESTAMP
, Database::TYPE_DATE
, Database::TYPE_STRING
, Database::TYPE_BYTES
. If the value is an array, use ArrayType
to declare the array
parameter types. Likewise, for structs, use StructType
.
options
array
Configuration Options.
↳ requestOptions
array
Request options. For more information on available options, please see the upstream documentation
. Please note, if using the priority
setting you may utilize the constants available on V1\RequestOptions\Priority
to set a value. Please note, the transactionTag
setting will be ignored as the transaction tag should have already been set when creating the transaction.
rollback
Roll back a transaction.
Rolls back a transaction, releasing any locks it holds. It is a good idea to call this for any transaction that includes one or more Read or ExecuteSql requests and ultimately decides not to commit.
This closes the transaction, preventing any future API calls inside it.
Rollback will NOT error if the transaction is not found or was already aborted.
Example:
$transaction->rollback();
options
array
[optional] Configuration Options.
void
commit
Commit and end the transaction.
It is advised that transactions be run inside Database::runTransaction() in order to take advantage of automated transaction retry in case of a transaction aborted error.
Example:
$transaction->commit();
options
array
Configuration Options.
↳ mutations
array
An array of mutations to commit. May be used instead of or in addition to enqueing mutations separately.
↳ returnCommitStats
bool
If true, commit statistics will be returned and accessible via Transaction::getCommitStats()
. Defaults to false
.
↳ maxCommitDelay
Duration
The amount of latency this request is willing to incur in order to improve throughput. Defaults tonull.
↳ requestOptions
array
Request options. For more information on available options, please see the upstream documentation
. Please note, if using the priority
setting you may utilize the constants available on V1\RequestOptions\Priority
to set a value. Please note, the requestTag
setting will be ignored as it is not supported for commit requests.
state
Retrieve the Transaction State.
Will be one of Transaction::STATE_ACTIVE
, Transaction::STATE_COMMITTED
, or Transaction::STATE_ROLLED_BACK
.
Example:
$state = $transaction->state();
int
isRetry
Check whether the current transaction is a retry transaction.
When using Database::runTransaction()
,
transactions are automatically retried when a conflict causes it to abort.
In such cases, subsequent invocations of the transaction callable will
provide a transaction where $transaction->isRetry()
is true. This can
be useful for debugging and understanding how code is working.
Example:
if ($transaction->isRetry()) {
echo 'This is a retry transaction!';
}
bool