unsigned long mysql_hex_string(char *to, const char
*from, unsigned long length)
This function is used to create a legal SQL string that you can use in an SQL statement. See Section 9.1.1, “String Literals”.
The string in from is encoded to hexadecimal
format, with each character encoded as two hexadecimal digits.
The result is placed in to and a terminating
null byte is appended.
The string pointed to by from must be
length bytes long. You must allocate the
to buffer to be at least
length*2+1 bytes long. When
mysql_hex_string() returns, the
contents of to is a null-terminated string.
The return value is the length of the encoded string, not
including the terminating null character.
The return value can be placed into an SQL statement using
either 0x or
valueX' format.
However, the return value does not include the
value'0x or X'...'. The caller
must supply whichever of those is desired.
char query[1000],*end;
end = strmov(query,"INSERT INTO test_table values(");
end = strmov(end,"0x");
end += mysql_hex_string(end,"What is this",12);
end = strmov(end,",0x");
end += mysql_hex_string(end,"binary data: \0\r\n",16);
*end++ = ')';
if (mysql_real_query(&mysql,query,(unsigned int) (end - query)))
{
fprintf(stderr, "Failed to insert row, Error: %s\n",
mysql_error(&mysql));
}
The strmov() function used in the example is
included in the libmysqlclient library and
works like strcpy() but returns a pointer to
the terminating null of the first parameter.
The length of the value placed into to, not
including the terminating null character.
None.