My fellows at work and I are trying to develop a web application using Laravel with a Vertica database. The only problem is that as soon as you use bindValue or bindParam wi
Or you can use laravel-ready PDO connector:
composer require mixartemev/dbal-vertica-driver
Okay so after a lot of trial and error, my co-workers and I managed to get things up and running. The most time-consuming part turned out to build the wrapper. Assuming you have that, here's what you need to do to integrate it in Laravel (these steps are for Laravel 5.1 by the way). Also, my wrapper's called PDOVertica so whenever you see this term, you have to substitute it for the name of your own wrapper.
1) Copy your wrapper file to the following folder:
vendor/laravel/framework/src/Illuminate/Database/Connectors
2) Next, you need to modify a couple of files:
vendor\laravel\framework\src\Illuminate\Database\Connection.php
namespace Illuminate\Database;
use PDO;
use PDOVertica; //Add this line
use Closure;
use DateTime;
...
//Change the type of the first parameter to PDOVertica as follow
public function __construct(PDOVertica $pdo, $database = '', $tablePrefix = '', array $config = [])
vendor\laravel\framework\src\Illuminate\Database\Connectors\Connector.php
namespace Illuminate\Database\Connectors;
include 'clsPDOVertica.php'; //Add this line
use PDO;
use PDOVertica; //Add this line
...
public function createConnection($dsn, array $config, array $options)
{
$username = array_get($config, 'username');
$password = array_get($config, 'password');
//Modify the return value to return your wrapper
return new PDOVertica($dsn, $username, $password, $options);
}
vendor\laravel\framework\src\Illuminate\Database\Connectors\PostgresConnector.php
protected function getDsn(array $config)
{
extract($config);
$host = isset($host) ? "Server={$host};" : '';
// Modify this line so that it creates the Vertica DSN.
// It should look something like this.
$dsn = "Driver=/opt/vertica/lib64/libverticaodbc.so;{$host}Database={$database}";
if (isset($config['port'])) {
$dsn .= ";port={$port}";
}
if (isset($config['sslmode'])) {
$dsn .= ";sslmode={$sslmode}";
}
return $dsn;
}
vendor\laravel\framework\src\Illuminate\Database\Connectors\ConnectionFactory.php
namespace Illuminate\Database\Connectors;
use PDO;
use PDOVertica; //Add this line
use InvalidArgumentException;
...
// Modify the header of this function so that the $connection parameter
// is of type PDOVertica
protected function createConnection($driver, PDOVertica $connection, $database, $prefix = '', array $config = [])
{
if ($this->container->bound($key = "db.connection.{$driver}")) {
return $this->container->make($key, [$connection, $database, $prefix, $config]);
}
switch ($driver) {
case 'mysql':
return new MySqlConnection($connection, $database, $prefix, $config);
case 'pgsql':
return new PostgresConnection($connection, $database, $prefix, $config);
case 'sqlite':
return new SQLiteConnection($connection, $database, $prefix, $config);
case 'sqlsrv':
return new SqlServerConnection($connection, $database, $prefix, $config);
}
throw new InvalidArgumentException("Unsupported driver [$driver]");
}
3) Once the files have been properly modified, all you have to do is properly configure Laravel to use your custom connection by modifying the following file:
config/database.php
/* |--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Default Database Connection Name
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| Here you may specify which of the database connections below you wish
| to use as your default connection for all database work. Of course
| you may use many connections at once using the Database library.
|
*/
'default' => 'vertica',
...
'connections' => [
'sqlite' => [
'driver' => 'sqlite',
'database' => storage_path('database.sqlite'),
'prefix' => '',
],
'mysql' => [
'driver' => 'mysql',
'host' => env('DB_HOST', ''),
'database' => env('DB_DATABASE', ''),
'username' => env('DB_USERNAME', ''),
'password' => env('DB_PASSWORD', ''),
'port' => '5433h',
'charset' => 'utf8',
'collation' => 'utf8_unicode_ci',
'prefix' => '',
'strict' => false,
],
//This is our custom connection
'vertica' => [
'driver' => 'pgsql',
'host' => env('DB_HOST', '192.168.1.1'),
'database' => env('DB_DATABASE', 'mydb'),
'username' => env('DB_USERNAME', 'myuser'),
'password' => env('DB_PASSWORD', 'mypassword'),
'port' => '5433',
'charset' => 'utf8',
'schema' => 'myschema',
],
'pgsql' => [
'driver' => 'pgsql',
'host' => env('DB_HOST', 'localhost'),
'database' => env('DB_DATABASE', 'forge'),
'username' => env('DB_USERNAME', 'forge'),
'password' => env('DB_PASSWORD', ''),
'port' => '5433',
'charset' => 'utf8',
'prefix' => '',
'schema' => 'public',
],
'sqlsrv' => [
'driver' => 'sqlsrv',
'host' => env('DB_HOST', 'localhost'),
'database' => env('DB_DATABASE', 'forge'),
'username' => env('DB_USERNAME', 'forge'),
'password' => env('DB_PASSWORD', ''),
'prefix' => '',
],
],
So far as I could tell, this was all the steps needed to get Laravel to connect to a Vertica database without crashing. I hope this helps.