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How to: Retrieve Input and Output Parameters Using the SQLSRV Driver

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This topic demonstrates how to use the SQLSRV driver to call a stored procedure in which one parameter has been defined as an input/output parameter, and how to retrieve the results. When retrieving an output or input/output parameter, all results returned by the stored procedure must be consumed before the returned parameter value is accessible.

Note

Variables that are initialized or updated to null, DateTime, or stream types cannot be used as output parameters.

Example 1

The following example calls a stored procedure that subtracts used vacation hours from the available vacation hours of a specified employee. The variable that represents used vacation hours, $vacationHrs, is passed to the stored procedure as an input parameter. After updating the available vacation hours, the stored procedure uses the same parameter to return the number of remaining vacation hours.

Note

Initializing $vacationHrs to 4 sets the returned PHPTYPE to integer. To ensure data type integrity, input/output parameters should be initialized before calling the stored procedure, or the desired PHPTYPE should be specified. For information about specifying the PHPTYPE, see How to: Specify PHP Data Types.

Because the stored procedure returns two results, sqlsrv_next_result must be called after the stored procedure has been executed to make the value of the output parameter available. After calling sqlsrv_next_result, $vacationHrs contains the value of the output parameter returned by the stored procedure.

Note

Calling stored procedures using canonical syntax is the recommended practice. For more information about canonical syntax, see Calling a Stored Procedure.

The example assumes that SQL Server and the AdventureWorks database are installed on the local computer. All output is written to the console when the example is run from the command line.

<?php  
/* Connect to the local server using Windows Authentication and   
specify the AdventureWorks database as the database in use. */  
$serverName = "(local)";  
$connectionInfo = array( "Database"=>"AdventureWorks");  
$conn = sqlsrv_connect( $serverName, $connectionInfo);  
if( $conn === false )  
{  
     echo "Could not connect.\n";  
     die( print_r( sqlsrv_errors(), true));  
}  
  
/* Drop the stored procedure if it already exists. */  
$tsql_dropSP = "IF OBJECT_ID('SubtractVacationHours', 'P') IS NOT NULL  
                DROP PROCEDURE SubtractVacationHours";  
$stmt1 = sqlsrv_query( $conn, $tsql_dropSP);  
if( $stmt1 === false )  
{  
     echo "Error in executing statement 1.\n";  
     die( print_r( sqlsrv_errors(), true));  
}  
  
/* Create the stored procedure. */  
$tsql_createSP = "CREATE PROCEDURE SubtractVacationHours  
                        @EmployeeID int,  
                        @VacationHrs smallint OUTPUT  
                  AS  
                  UPDATE HumanResources.Employee  
                  SET VacationHours = VacationHours - @VacationHrs  
                  WHERE EmployeeID = @EmployeeID;  
                  SET @VacationHrs = (SELECT VacationHours  
                                      FROM HumanResources.Employee  
                                      WHERE EmployeeID = @EmployeeID)";  
  
$stmt2 = sqlsrv_query( $conn, $tsql_createSP);  
if( $stmt2 === false )  
{  
     echo "Error in executing statement 2.\n";  
     die( print_r( sqlsrv_errors(), true));  
}  
  
/*--------- The next few steps call the stored procedure. ---------*/  
  
/* Define the Transact-SQL query. Use question marks (?) in place of  
the parameters to be passed to the stored procedure */  
$tsql_callSP = "{call SubtractVacationHours( ?, ?)}";  
  
/* Define the parameter array. By default, the first parameter is an  
INPUT parameter. The second parameter is specified as an INOUT  
parameter. Initializing $vacationHrs to 8 sets the returned PHPTYPE to  
integer. To ensure data type integrity, output parameters should be  
initialized before calling the stored procedure, or the desired  
PHPTYPE should be specified in the $params array.*/  
  
$employeeId = 4;  
$vacationHrs = 8;  
$params = array(   
                 array($employeeId, SQLSRV_PARAM_IN),  
                 array(&$vacationHrs, SQLSRV_PARAM_INOUT)  
               );  
  
/* Execute the query. */  
$stmt3 = sqlsrv_query( $conn, $tsql_callSP, $params);  
if( $stmt3 === false )  
{  
     echo "Error in executing statement 3.\n";  
     die( print_r( sqlsrv_errors(), true));  
}  
  
/* Display the value of the output parameter $vacationHrs. */  
sqlsrv_next_result($stmt3);  
echo "Remaining vacation hours: ".$vacationHrs;  
  
/*Free the statement and connection resources. */  
sqlsrv_free_stmt( $stmt1);  
sqlsrv_free_stmt( $stmt2);  
sqlsrv_free_stmt( $stmt3);  
sqlsrv_close( $conn);  
?>  

Note

When binding an input/output parameter to a bigint type, if the value may end up outside the range of an integer, you will need to specify its SQL field type as SQLSRV_SQLTYPE_BIGINT. Otherwise, it may result in a "value out of range" exception.

Example 2

This code sample shows how to bind a large bigint value as an input/output parameter.

<?php
$serverName = "(local)";
$connectionInfo = array("Database"=>"testDB");  
$conn = sqlsrv_connect($serverName, $connectionInfo);  
if ($conn === false) {  
    echo "Could not connect.\n";  
    die(print_r(sqlsrv_errors(), true));  
}  

// Assume the stored procedure spTestProcedure exists, which retrieves a bigint value of some large number
// e.g. 9223372036854
$bigintOut = 0;
$outSql = "{CALL spTestProcedure (?)}";
$stmt = sqlsrv_prepare($conn, $outSql, array(array(&$bigintOut, SQLSRV_PARAM_INOUT, null, SQLSRV_SQLTYPE_BIGINT)));
sqlsrv_execute($stmt);
echo "$bigintOut\n";   // Expect 9223372036854

sqlsrv_free_stmt($stmt);  
sqlsrv_close($conn);  

?>

See Also

How to: Specify Parameter Direction Using the SQLSRV Driver

How to: Retrieve Output Parameters Using the SQLSRV Driver

Retrieving Data