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 mysqli_thread_id    (PHP 5) mysqli_thread_id     (no version information, might be only in CVS) mysqli->thread_id -- Returns the thread ID for the current connectionDescriptionProcedural style: int mysqli_thread_id  ( object link) Object oriented style (property): class mysqli  {  int thread_id } 
     The mysqli_thread_id() function returns the thread
     ID for the current connection which can then be killed using the
     mysqli_kill() function. If the connection is lost
     and you reconnect with mysqli_ping(), the thread ID
     will be other. Therefore you should get the thread ID only when you need it.
     注: 
      The thread ID is assigned on a connection-by-connection basis. Hence,
      if the connection is broken and then re-established a new thread ID
      will be assigned.
      
      To kill a running query you can use the SQL command KILL QUERY processid.
     
Return values
     mysqli_thread_id() returns the Thread ID for the current connection.
    Example| 例子 1. Object oriented style | 
<?php$mysqli = new mysqli("localhost", "my_user", "my_password", "world");
 
 /* check connection */
 if (mysqli_connect_errno()) {
 printf("Connect failed: %s\n", mysqli_connect_error());
 exit();
 }
 
 /* determine our thread id */
 $thread_id = $mysqli->thread_id;
 
 /* Kill connection */
 $mysqli->kill($thread_id);
 
 /* This should produce an error */
 if (!$mysqli->query("CREATE TABLE myCity LIKE City")) {
 printf("Error: %s\n", $mysqli->error);
 exit;
 }
 
 /* close connection */
 $mysqli->close();
 ?>
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 | 
 | 例子 2. Procedural style | 
<?php$link = mysqli_connect("localhost", "my_user", "my_password", "world");
 
 /* check connection */
 if (mysqli_connect_errno()) {
 printf("Connect failed: %s\n", mysqli_connect_error());
 exit();
 }
 
 /* determine our thread id */
 $thread_id = mysqli_thread_id($link);
 
 /* Kill connection */
 mysqli_kill($link, $thread_id);
 
 /* This should produce an error */
 if (!mysqli_query($link, "CREATE TABLE myCity LIKE City")) {
 printf("Error: %s\n", mysqli_error($link));
 exit;
 }
 
 /* close connection */
 mysqli_close($link);
 ?>
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     The above examples would produce the following output:
     | Error: MySQL server has gone away | 
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