On Jan 10, 2007, at 10:09 AM, Jochem Maas wrote:

Philip Thompson wrote:
Hi.

Does anyone know if the mssql_connect/_init/_bind/etc require a lot of
overhead?

I have a page that requires multiple function calls and each of those
opens a new connection to the database, performs the necessary actions in stored procedure(s), and then closes the connection. However, I found
this to be slower than I was wanting. So I thought, just create one
connection and assign it to the SESSION (a global), and in each function
that requires a connection, call that SESSION variable. At the end of
the page, close the connection and nullify the variable.

I wouldn't stick it in the SESSION superglobal (my tactic is usually to create a little wrapper class to the relevant DB functions and store the connection
as a property of the class/object.

basically opening & closing the connection once per request is the way to go - if your going to using a global, better [than $_SESSION] to stick it
in $GLOBALS imho.

Would there be any speed decrease with multiple users (hundreds) sharing this $GLOBALS variable (if that makes sense)?


$_SESSION is used for persisting data over multiple requests - something that is not possible to do for 'resource identifiers' (which is what the connection [id] is).

BTW, it does work b/c that's how it's currently setup. I am open to changing it though. I should say, I'm creating at the beginning of the script and closing it at the end. So, it doesn't actually stay open throughout the whole user session.


Does anyone see a problem with doing it this way? Security concerns?
Anything?

Thanks in advance,
~Philip

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