Creating Database

Most Web applications use database to keep data. Our blog system is not an exception. In this section, we will describe how to write database-driven pages for our blog system. We will use techniques including database access object (DAO) and Active Record.

For tutorial purpose, we have simplified the requirements of our blog system so that it only needs to deal with user and post data. We thus create two database tables, users and posts, as shown in the following entity-relationship (ER) diagram.

We use a SQLite 3 database to keep our data. We first convert the ER diagram into the following SQL statements and save them in the file protected/schema.sql.

/* create users table */ CREATE TABLE users ( username VARCHAR(128) NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY, email VARCHAR(128) NOT NULL, password VARCHAR(128) NOT NULL, /* in plain text */ role INTEGER NOT NULL, /* 0: normal user, 1: administrator */ first_name VARCHAR(128), last_name VARCHAR(128) ); /* create posts table */ CREATE TABLE posts ( post_id INTEGER NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY, author_id VARCHAR(128) NOT NULL CONSTRAINT fk_author REFERENCES users(username), create_time INTEGER NOT NULL, /* UNIX timestamp */ title VARCHAR(256) NOT NULL, /* title of the post */ content TEXT, /* post body */ status INTEGER NOT NULL /* 0: published; 1: draft; 2: pending; 2: denied */ ); /* insert some initial data records for testing */ INSERT INTO users VALUES ('admin', 'admin@example.com', 'demo', 1, 'Qiang', 'Xue'); INSERT INTO users VALUES ('demo', 'demo@example.com', 'demo', 0, 'Wei', 'Zhuo'); INSERT INTO posts VALUES (NULL, 'admin', 1175708482, 'first post', 'this is my first post', 0); SQLite does not support foreign key constraint such that the constraints can still be defined but will be ignored by SQLite. Therefore, we will write PHP code to ensure that the posts.author_id field contains valid data. Also, we are exploiting the fact that the posts.post_id field is auto-incremental if we assign NULL to it.

We then use the SQLite command line tool to create the SQLite database. We create a directory protected/data to hold the SQLite database file. We now execute the following command under the directory protected/data:

sqlite3 blog.db < ../schema.sql

The database has been created as protected/data/blog.db and we shall see the following directories and files:

It is required by SQLite that both the directory protected/data and the database file protected/data/blog.db be set writable by the Web server process.