I have the following:
$ARTIFACT_NAME = $_POST['ArtifactName'];
$ARTIFACT_TYPE = $_POST['ArtifactType'];
$ARTIFACT_LOCATION = $_POST['ArtifactLocation'];
$ARTIFACT_DOMAIN = $_POST['ArtifactDomain'];
$ARTIFACT_AUTHOR = $_POST['ArtifactAuthor'];
$ARTIFACT_LABEL = 'DB_'.$ARTIFACT_LOCATION.'_'.$ARTIFACT_DOMAIN.'_'.$ARTIFACT_NAME;
$AUDIT_CONSTRAINTS = $_POST['AuditConstraints'];
$SECURITY_CONSTRAINTS = $_POST['SecurityConstraints'];
$REGISTERED_EMAIL = $_SERVER['HTTP_REMOTE_USER'];
$REGISTERED_TIMESTAMP = "to_date('15-08-2011 14:32:37', 'DD-MM-YYYY HH24:MI:SS')";
$query = "INSERT INTO ".$db_schema.".ARTIFACTS (ARTIFACT_ID, ARTIFACT_NAME, ARTIFACT_TYPE, ARTIFACT_LOCATION, ARTIFACT_DOMAIN, ARTIFACT_AUTHOR, ARTIFACT_LABEL, AUDIT_CONSTRAINTS, SECURITY_CONSTRAINTS, REGISTERED_EMAIL, REGISTERED_TIMESTAMP)
VALUES (:bind1, :bind2, :bind3, :bind4, :bind5, :bind6, :bind7, :bind8, :bind9, :bind10, :bind11)";
$statement = oci_parse($connection, $query);
oci_bind_by_name($statement, ":bind1", $ARTIFACT_ID);
oci_bind_by_name($statement, ":bind2", $ARTIFACT_NAME);
oci_bind_by_name($statement, ":bind3", $ARTIFACT_TYPE);
oci_bind_by_name($statement, ":bind4", $ARTIFACT_LOCATION);
oci_bind_by_name($statement, ":bind5", $ARTIFACT_DOMAIN);
oci_bind_by_name($statement, ":bind6", $ARTIFACT_AUTHOR);
oci_bind_by_name($statement, ":bind7", $ARTIFACT_LABEL);
oci_bind_by_name($statement, ":bind8", $AUDIT_CONSTRAINTS);
oci_bind_by_name($statement, ":bind9", $SECURITY_CONSTRAINTS);
oci_bind_by_name($statement, ":bind10", $REGISTERED_EMAIL);
oci_bind_by_name($statement, ":bind11", $REGISTERED_TIMESTAMP);
Which gives the following error:
ORA-01858: a non-numeric character was found where a numeric was expected
However, if i just don't bind $REGISTERED_TIMESTAMP
and insert the to_date
into the $query
directly - it works perfectly.
What's going on?! This is drving me mad!
You're using an Oracle statement with bound parameters. That's good because it prevents SQL injections where dangerous code is inserted into your SQL statement. However, in this case, it prevents the
TO_CHAR
function from being executed. Instead, it tries to convert the whole string into a timestamp, which of course doesnt' work.The solution is rather straight-forward: move to
TO_CHAR
function away from the bound parameter directly into the statement: