ID:               30525
 Updated by:       php-bugs@lists.php.net
 Reported By:      l dot cameron2 at ugrad dot unimelb dot edu dot au
-Status:           Feedback
+Status:           No Feedback
 Bug Type:         MySQL related
 Operating System: Fedora Core 2
 PHP Version:      5.0.2
 New Comment:

No feedback was provided for this bug for over a week, so it is
being suspended automatically. If you are able to provide the
information that was originally requested, please do so and change
the status of the bug back to "Open".


Previous Comments:
------------------------------------------------------------------------

[2005-03-07 22:31:13] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Please try using this CVS snapshot:

  http://snaps.php.net/php5-latest.tar.gz
 
For Windows:
 
  http://snaps.php.net/win32/php5-win32-latest.zip

..and update the version field if this still happens, otherwise close
this report.


------------------------------------------------------------------------

[2004-10-22 06:19:48] l dot cameron2 at ugrad dot unimelb dot edu dot
au

Description:
------------
Preface: I *do* understand that by default MySQL connections are shared
in PHP.
 I also note that in older versions a single mysql_close() would close
all of the links; see #9107: there now there appears to be reference
counting before finally closing the TCP connection -- which is IMHO
better than the older behaviour, but the implementation has its own
bugs:

 PHP appears to keeps an internal count of the number of times a link
has been duplicated. When the link count is <= 0, the underlying TCP
connection is actually closed.
 * close() reduces the link count by 1
 * setting the connection to null *also* reduces the link count by 1 --
even if that link has already been close()d

 Currently the only workarounds for this are to:

[1] Set new_link to true every time you mysql_connect() -- potentially
creating a lot of TCP connections and slowing the program down

[2] close() the link, but never set it to null and hope that PHP won't
clean it up until the end of the program: This *will* fail sometimes
though; see the example at http://www.levi.id.au/mysql4.php.txt

[3] Never mysql_close() links, only set them to null and hope that PHP
will in fact clean up the TCP connection before MySQL runs out of
available connections (admittedly only a problem when you have a lot of
simultaneous connections to your database) -- this does work now, but
we're not supposed to assume anything about when PHP does its object
destruction.

 The third is really the only viable solution; but is dependent on the
internal implementation of the MySQL extension.



 At best, the current situation is that if you ever have shared links,
you should never call mysql_close if you ever expect to use that
database again in your program.

Reproduce code:
---------------
Simple example:

#!/usr/local/bin/php -q
<?
$conn1 = mysql_connect('localhost:3306', 'levi', 'DaCr0n!');
$conn2 = mysql_connect('localhost:3306', 'levi', 'DaCr0n!');

mysql_select_db('surveytest', $conn1);
mysql_select_db('surveytest', $conn2);

mysql_close($conn1); $conn1 = null;
mysql_close($conn2); $conn2 = null;

?>

See also the example at http://www.levi.id.au/mysql4.php.txt

Expected result:
----------------

Blank output.


Actual result:
--------------
PHP Warning:  mysql_close(): 1 is not a valid MySQL-Link resource in
/home/levi/public_html/mysql2.php on line 10
<br />
<b>Warning</b>:  mysql_close(): 1 is not a valid MySQL-Link resource in
<b>/home/levi/public_html/mysql2.php</b> on line <b>10</b><br />



(If I remove the mysql_close($conn1); it works)
(If I remove the $conn1 = null; it also works)


------------------------------------------------------------------------


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