Welcome to libpqxx, the C++ API to the PostgreSQL database management system.
Home page: http://pqxx.org/development/libpqxx/
Find libpqxx on Github: https://github.com/jtv/libpqxx
Documentation on Read The Docs: https://readthedocs.org/projects/libpqxx/
Compiling this package requires PostgreSQL to be installed -- or at least the C headers and library for client development. The library builds on top of PostgreSQL's standard C API, libpq, though your code won't notice.
If you're getting the code straight from the Git repo, the master
branch
contains the current development version. To get a released version, check
out the revision that's tagged for that version. For example, to get version
7.1.1:
git checkout 7.1.1
The 7.x versions require C++17. However, it's probably not a problem if
your compiler does not implement C++17 fully. Initially the 7.x series will
only require some basic C++17 features such as std::string_view
. More
advanced use may follow later.
Also, 7.0 makes some breaking changes in rarely used APIs:
- There is just a single
connection
class. It connects immediately. - Custom
connection
classes are no longer supported. - Closed connections can no longer be reactivated.
- The API for defining string conversions has changed.
And if you're defining your own type conversions, *7.1 requires one additional
field in your nullness
traits.
There are two different ways of building libpqxx from the command line:
- Using CMake, on any system which supports it.
- On Unix-like systems, using a
configure
script.
"Unix-like" systems include GNU/Linux, Apple macOS and the BSD family, AIX, HP-UX, Irix, Solaris, etc. Even on Microsoft Windows, a Unix-like environment such as WSL, Cygwin, or MinGW should work.
You'll find detailed build and install instructions in BUILDING-configure.md
and BUILDING-cmake.md
, respectively.
And if you're working with Microsoft Visual Studio, have a look at Gordon Elliott's Easy-PQXX Build for Windows Visual Studio project:
https://github.com/GordonLElliott/Easy-PQXX-Build-for-Windows-Visual-Studio
At the time of writing, June 2020, this is still in development and in need of testers and feedback.
Building the library, if you have the right tools installed, generates HTML
documentation in the doc/
directory. It is based on the headers in
include/pqxx/
and text in include/pqxx/doc/
. The documentation is also
available online at readthedocs.org.
Your first program will involve the libpqxx classes "connection" (see the
pqxx/connection.hxx
header), and work
(a convenience alias for
transaction<>
which conforms to the interface defined in
pqxx/transaction_base.hxx
).
These *.hxx
headers are not the ones you include in your program. Instead,
include the versions without filename suffix (e.g. pqxx/connection
). Those
will include the actual .hxx files for you. This was done so that includes are
in standard C++ style (as in <iostream>
etc.), but an editor will still
recognize them as files containing C++ code.
Continuing the list of classes, you will most likely also need the result class
(pqxx/result.hxx
). In a nutshell, you create a connection
based on a
Postgres connection string (see below), create a work
in the context of that
connection, and run one or more queries on the work which return result
objects. The results are containers of rows of data, each of which you can
treat as an array of strings: one for each field in the row. It's that simple.
Here is a simple example program to get you going, with full error handling:
#include <iostream>
#include <pqxx/pqxx>
int main()
{
try
{
pqxx::connection C;
std::cout << "Connected to " << C.dbname() << std::endl;
pqxx::work W{C};
pqxx::result R{W.exec("SELECT name FROM employee")};
std::cout << "Found " << R.size() << "employees:\n";
for (auto row: R)
std::cout << row[0].c_str() << '\n';
std::cout << "Doubling all employees' salaries...\n";
W.exec0("UPDATE employee SET salary = salary*2");
std::cout << "Making changes definite: ";
W.commit();
std::cout << "OK.\n";
}
catch (std::exception const &e)
{
std::cerr << e.what() << '\n';
return 1;
}
return 0;
}
Postgres connection strings state which database server you wish to connect to, under which username, using which password, and so on. Their format is defined in the documentation for libpq, the C client interface for PostgreSQL. Alternatively, these values may be defined by setting certain environment variables as documented in e.g. the manual for psql, the command line interface to PostgreSQL. Again the definitions are the same for libpqxx-based programs.
The connection strings and variables are not fully and definitively documented here; this document will tell you just enough to get going. Check the PostgreSQL documentation for authoritative information.
The connection string consists of attribute=value pairs separated by spaces, e.g. "user=john password=1x2y3z4". The valid attributes include:
-
host
Name of server to connect to, or the full file path (beginning with a slash) to a Unix-domain socket on the local machine. Defaults to "/tmp". Equivalent to (but overrides) environment variable PGHOST. -
hostaddr
IP address of a server to connect to; mutually exclusive with "host". -
port
Port number at the server host to connect to, or socket file name extension for Unix-domain connections. Equivalent to (but overrides) environment variable PGPORT. -
dbname
Name of the database to connect to. A single server may host multiple databases. Defaults to the same name as the current user's name. Equivalent to (but overrides) environment variable PGDATABASE. -
user
User name to connect under. This defaults to the name of the current user, although PostgreSQL users are not necessarily the same thing as system users. -
requiressl
If set to 1, demands an encrypted SSL connection (and fails if no SSL connection can be created).
Settings in the connection strings override the environment variables, which in turn override the default, on a variable-by-variable basis. You only need to define those variables that require non-default values.
To link your final program, make sure you link to both the C-level libpq library and the actual C++ library, libpqxx. With most Unix-style compilers, you'd do this using the options
-lpqxx -lpq
while linking. Both libraries must be in your link path, so the linker knows where to find them. Any dynamic libraries you use must also be in a place where the loader can find them when loading your program at runtime.
Some users have reported problems using the above syntax, however, particularly when multiple versions of libpqxx are partially or incorrectly installed on the system. If you get massive link errors, try removing the "-lpqxx" argument from the command line and replacing it with the name of the libpqxx library binary instead. That's typically libpqxx.a, but you'll have to add the path to its location as well, e.g. /usr/local/pqxx/lib/libpqxx.a. This will ensure that the linker will use that exact version of the library rather than one found elsewhere on the system, and eliminate worries about the exact right version of the library being installed with your program..